Tuesday, February 3, 2009

The Honeymoon Continues

I came across this article on Tuesday by Jonah Goldberg,Day 15 of Obama's honeymoon: One doesn’t have to break a sweat searching for examples of the news media’s ongoing love affair with our president. In this, he is like FDR. I have to say, on some levels it was reassuring. Apparently, the country has been through all of this fawning by a press corps or sychophants, and survived. Mr. Goldberg has this to say:
Barack Obama and his supporters have been relentlessly comparing the new president to Franklin Roosevelt. At least one similarity is shockingly accurate: They were both beneficiaries of an obsequious press corps.

In part because the feeling was mutual, the reporters hated FDR's Republican predecessor, Herbert Hoover. The new Democratic president, however, left White House correspondents "jubilant," in one historian's words. Indeed, they were so charmed by his first news conference, reporters literally burst into applause when he was done. One grizzled newspaperman observed that "the press barely restrained its 'whoopees.' "

There've been no standing ovations — yet — with Obama, but there's no denying that many in the news media are clapping on the inside. Obviously, not everyone is swooning, as the news media aren't a monolith. And, yes, President Obama deserves his honeymoon. But honeymoons suggest a respectful partnership of equals. What we're seeing here is more like a gaggle of aging love-struck groupies following Jon Bon Jovi around.

That's quite the image, isn't it? Accurate, too. Come to think of it, considering Obama listens to misogynistic rappers like JayZ, maybe HE should have been the example Goldberg used. Ahem. He continues:
Though no one's idea of an objective reporter, MSNBC's Chris Matthews does express the euphoria nicely. On The Tonight Show, he told Jay Leno that the Obamas "are really cool. They are Jack and Jackie Kennedy when you see them together. They are cool. And they're great looking, and they're cool and they're young, and they're — everything seems to be great. I know I'm selling them now. I'm not supposed to sell, OK? … But the fact is, I wouldn't be an honest reporter if I didn't tell you what the spiritual experience is like of being in a Barack Obama rally." …

On Inauguration Day, Matthews came a hair's breadth from shrieking like a teenage girl at the Beatles' debut on The Ed Sullivan Show. As is often the case with crushes, what Matthews seems to like best about Obama is how he makes Matthews feel about himself — and his network. "This is the network that has opened its heart to change, to change and its possibilities," Matthews gushed.

I am providing a break here in case you need to run to the bathroom to throw up.

Okay. I'm just shaking my head at what passes for "journalism" these days, but MSNBC/NBC has demonstrated long ago that they are nothing more than a propaganda arm. No surprise. As to the bias, Goldberg writes:
One of the great tests of news media bias is when the storyline has become unfalsifiable. With George W. Bush, no matter what he did, the facts always seemed to prove he was to blame. With Obama, no matter what he does, he's always the hero. For instance, during a trip to China in 2005, then-President Bush tried to open a locked door while leaving a news conference, and the press tittered at his buffoonery. Yet last week, when President Obama walked into an Oval Office window that he thought was a door, much of the news media looked the other way — perhaps recognizing his genius at spotting where a door should have been.

Bush's love of exercise was analyzed as a troubling obsession of an out-of-touch president. Obama's fixation with physical fitness gives numerous reporters hope that he will alleviate America's obesity epidemic. In a front-page exclusive, The Washington Post revealed that on Obama's recent vacation, the Hawaiian "sun glinted off (his) chiseled pectorals sculpted during four weightlifting sessions each week, and a body toned by regular treadmill runs and basketball games."

Remember that? How people made fun of Bush for riding his bike all of the time, and for exchanging his drinking addiction to an addiction for exercise? Everyone made fun of him. Now, of course, it's cool because Obama is hip, cool, and "chiseled" (cough, choke). But it isn't only the superficial in which these differences are highlighted:
A more serious example can be found in some of the news coverage of the stimulus bill. Obama made it his top priority to get bipartisan support for his unprecedented spending bill. The president exerted enormous personal effort to sway House Republicans to his cause but failed to win a single GOP vote, and he even lost 11 Democrats. And yet the Post reported in another front-page article that the Democratic House's passage of the bill — which was always assured — "marked a big victory for his presidency a little more than a week into his term." Indeed, it's hard to see how anything short of a crushing defeat would be described as anything other than a "big victory."

He meant to do that

Oh, yeah, that's the ticket. It was all part of his master plan!! Just like this:
Then there's Obama's inaugural address, which was panned as pedestrian by pretty much everyone who hasn't drunk the Kool-Aid and was received as the greatest oration since Henry V rallied the British at Agincourt by everyone else. Leave it to New York magazine's political reporter, John Heilemann, to square the circle. He conceded that Obama's speech failed to deliver the goods, inspirationwise. But, don't ya see, he meant to do that. In a piece titled, "Obama's Spare Inaugural Rhetoric Signals Strategic Mastery," Heilemann explained that the speech was "less than thrilling in itself, perhaps by design."

Apparently, the press corps has decided that antonyms are the way to go in reporting these days. Well, golly gee, I guess this is their idea of "change."

Goldberg concludes his article with the daily barrage of what Saint Obama means to do today, or what pithy little detail they can find about his personal regimen, or what he and the family eat for breakfast, which will no doubt bring about World Peace:
Since the inauguration, it seems every day brings another article about "Day 3" or "Day 7" or "Day 12.5" of the Obama presidency. And each one reads like a People magazine blog about American Idol. Everything he does signals hope for peace in the Middle East or race relations or the economy or whatever.

CNN's John King recently said "nobody disputes" that journalists are too enraptured by Obama's historic presidency; he seems to think it will wear off when the serious work of the nation kicks in.

History is not so reassuring. "You are still the most interesting person," newspaper editor William Allen White told FDR at the end of his second term. "For box office attraction you leave Clark Gable gasping for breath." (Jonah Goldberg, editor at large of National Review Online, is a member of USA TODAY's board of contributors.)

See, I think it is reassuring, because it demonstrates that the country has survived this kind of sophomoric fawning by the media before. FDR, Bush II, and now Obama. It gives me hope that at SOME point, they will realize what a grave disservice they have done this country by their lack of unbiased coverage. One can on;y hope that John King is right - maybe he'll be one of the first journalists to get off the bandwagon. One can but hope.

2 comments:

Mary Ellen said...

Reverend Amy, thank you for this post! And thank you for this...

I am providing a break here in case you need to run to the bathroom to throw up.

I needed that break.

I wish I had hope that things will change in the media, but I don't think this country can take another four or eight years of the media covering for an incompetent leader. It's scary and seeing all those quotes from the media fawning over Obama just sickens me, as much as reading the comments on blogs that support Obama with their excuses for his constant falling back on his promises. What bothers me the most, like I've told you earlier, are the blogs that are run by people of the LGBT community who are STILL making excuses for him or saying, "I'm not happy about what he did, but I'll wait to see if he changes his mind regarding gay issues later." Wait??? How much longer does the LGBT community have to wait in order to be considered full-fledged citizens of the United States with the same rights as an other citizen???

Ok...I'm getting carried away.

Obama drives me nuts, and not in the screaming like a love-sick fan kinda nuts.

Rabble Rouser Reverend Amy said...

Hey, ME!

You're welcome for the break - I pretty much need one after every time Chris Matthews speaks. What a piece of work that guy is.

MSNBC really needs to stop pretending to be a news channel.

I know - I am working HARD to hope that things will get better. I really thought that the MSM would have learned its lesson after Bush, but the pendulum just seems to have swung to the other side without bothering to stop in the middle of NEUTRALITY in reporting (as an aside, there aren't always two sides to every story, either. The MSM seems to think now they ALWAYS have to present opposing viewpoints - no, no they don't! Some of those viewpoints hold NO water, so why give them the airtime? They seem to be confused on the whole concept of accurate reporting.).

Oh, sister - you don't have to convince me abt the GLBT community still groveling for whatever crumbs get dropped our way by The One. It is a collective lack of self-esteem that people would continue to look the other way every time Obama screws us over just because he said he cares. He has done absolutely NOTHING to benefit the GLBT community. Quite the opposite, in fact. He CONSISTENTLY chooses people and actions that are offensive and counter to the GLBT community. But they keep making excuse after excuse for him. It would be sad were it not so infuriating.

Feel free to get carried away ANY ol' time, Mary Ellen! I love to hear what you think!