I recently finished reading French-Czech writer Milan
Kundera’s novel Immortality. It
proved fascinating for its unconventional narrative, insight into the human
condition, philosophical reflections, and social critique. While it’s hardly a
good indication of the overall book, a passage describing the recent history of
journalism leapt out at me.
To summarize the narrator, journalism early in the 20th
Century, back when Hemingway was on the beat, was about drawing near to the
facts, asking questions with pen in hand, noting down what you were told, and then
faithfully conveying it through print or radio, and later television. Ask
a question, receive an answer, pass it on. This first stage of modern
journalism strikes me as somewhat passive.
Later, journalists learned there was power in asking
questions. Kundera raises Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein’s investigation into
the Watergate scandal and the way it eventually led to a president resigning
from office. Despite the Nixon administration’s attempts at a cover-up, the two
dug until they uncovered the defining political misdeeds of modern times.
Journalists learned to ask the tough questions, and the answers could have
a powerful effect.
The legacy of this
second stage of journalism is visible today in every television or radio interview
covering topics even remotely debatable. Have you ever watched Stephen Sackur
on the BBC program HARDtalk? This is
my least favorite style of interview, but there’s a lot of it going around. Sackur
seems to have gotten his job for the alarming way he can begin every sentence
with “but.” “But your opponents would say . . . ” “But doesn’t that strike you as a
little . . . ” “But surely you don’t believe that . . . ” “But I have a quote from you here
that says . . . ” I long for just a moment when a statement can simply stand.
When it is balanced, aggressive journalism has its merits, but when
Immortality was first published in
1988, this second stage of modern journalism was just getting warmed up and
would soon slough its objective skin. The following decades have seen journalism
and activism mixed thoroughly through the rise of radio talk show hosts, 24-hour
cable news, and the Internet’s bewildering array of blogs, articles, blurbs and
worthless tidbits. This type of journalism is so active it only asks questions
so it can then provide the answers itself.
The worst of this is represented by Fox News Channel, but
other networks are guilty as well. The only facts they are interested in are
those that support their interests, and when the facts aren’t on their side,
they’re willing to peddle fantasy. Kundera’s second stage of journalism has reached
the point of propaganda.
Which brings me to what I believe is a third stage--or
mode--of journalism. I believe the antagonistic mode of the journalist’s interview
has evolved into a curious performance in which the two sides pretend to engage
in a duel in Q&A form but all the questions and answers are known by both sides
from the start. The next time Wolf Blitzer interviews someone on Capitol Hill
or out on the campaign trail, he and his guest should come to me so I can write
up their exchange ahead of time and spare them the trouble of coming up with something to say.
And that’s what makes the farce complete. We the audience
collude in this cover-up of truth. We know the questions and we know the
answers, so nothing is coming to light and nothing results. It’s like watching
an episode of an old sitcom for the umpteenth time. It isn’t funny anymore, but
at least we know what comes next.
Immortality isn’t
really about journalism--it’s about life and love, with significant doses of big
ideas--so I feel bad about focusing on a brief aside for a
blog about something as bleak as the state of mass media today, but there you have
it. Maybe I’ll have more uplifting things to say after reading Kundera’s better
known novel The Unbearable Lightness of
Being.
In my honest opinion, reading is a means to opening the mind to the things within ourselves we need to understand. The fact that a small part of a larger novel, has started a thoughtful itch, means that there was a particular annoyance you have been feeling that needed an outlet. It got you thinking about it and opened you mind to research it a bit. Nothing wrong with that, and I believe the author would be pleased that it caused such a reaction.
ReplyDeleteI agree that the media has gotten out of hand and become the one thing they were fighting so hard at the beginning to prevent. The hiding of important issue, the skewing of the truth and the propagation of personal opinion. If we only had a means to quantify intent when someone chooses a profession. Police officers and peace keepers would only be interested in protecting people, Politicians would only be interested in letting the voice of their constituents be heard, and journalists would only be interested in reporting the unabridged truth.