15,000 journalists and still a dearth of coverage

The most serious problem confronting the American news media today is neither creeping political bias nor the tensions between new and old technologies. Those topics may obsess media critics, but their significance pales alongside the greater issue, which is corporate managers' growing inability to distinguish between the public's interest -- fascination with entertainment and celebrity -- and the public interest -- a deference to the common good.

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The situation with this week's Democratic National Convention in Boston is a window on what this failure of discernment may imply for the future of the mainstream press. It is difficult, of course, to argue that any event attended by 15,000 journalists is in any sense under-covered. But an ever-growing number of those journalists are employed by newspapers, magazines, and radio and television stations whose ever-smaller number of corporate owners expect them to function first and foremost as "business units."

This process of acculturation is most advanced among the three broadcast networks -- ABC, a Disney property; CBS, which belongs to Viacom; and NBC, a division of General Electric. Their combined audience of almost 30 million is vastly larger than that of any other broadcast outlet, and, unlike cable subscribers, they receive their broadcasts free.

How much convention coverage are they providing?

An hour a night -- over three of four nights.

Jim Lehrer, the public television anchor, put the situation precisely at a preconvention panel at Harvard on Sunday. "We're about to elect a president of the United States at a time when we have young people dying in our name overseas," he said. "We just had a report from the 9/11 commission which says we are not safe as a nation, and one of these two groups of people [Democrats or Republicans] is going to run our country. The fact that you three networks decided it was not important enough to run in prime time, the message that gives the American people is huge."

So too were the sentiments conveyed by the three network anchors in an extraordinary series of interviews with the New York Times.

ABC's Peter Jennings spoke of his frustration with his network's truncated broadcasts. "This is clear to my bosses, it's clear to my colleagues; I think you'll find the same thing in every [network] newsroom. Could we, should we be doing more than one hour a night in prime time? The answer is yes."

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