1. GLOBAL MEDIA LORDS THREATEN OPEN MARKETPLACE OF
IDEAS
In the 1960s, Marshall McLuhan promulgated the idea of a new
"global village," a world knit together and transformed by television
and other marvels of the electronic age. His popular book, "Understanding
Media," predicted that an information network would envelop the planet, spreading
democracy and unity ... a "general cosmic consciousness." But in recent
years, information networks are circling the world with messages far from the
enlightenment and openness of a "general cosmic consciousness." A handful
of mammoth private organizations, driven by the bottom line, have begun to dominate
the world's mass media. Moreover, they confidently announce that by the 1990s
they -- five to ten corporate giants -- will control most of the world's important
newspapers, magazines, books, broadcast stations, movies, recordings and video
cassettes.
According to media scholar Ben Bagdikian, this does not bode
well for McLuhan's "universal understanding." The lords of the global
village have their own political and economic agenda. All resist economic changes
that do not support their own financial interests. Together, they exert a homogenizing
power of ideas, culture and commerce that affects populations larger than any
in history. Neither Caesar nor Hitler, Franklin Roosevelt nor any Pope, has commanded
as much power to shape the information on which so many people depend to make
decisions about everything from whom to vote for to what to eat.
At this time, the big five media corporations that dominate the fight
for the hundreds of millions of minds in the global village are: Time
Warner Inc., the world's largest-media corporation; the German-based
Bertelsmann AG, owned by Reinhard Mohn; Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation
Ltd., of Australia; Hatchette SA, of France, the world's largest producer
of magazines; and U.S. based Capital Cities/ABC Inc.
While monopolistic power may dominate many other industries, Bagdikian
points out that "media giants have two enormous advantages: They
control the public image of national leaders who, as a result, fear
and favor the media magnates' political agendas; and they control the
information and entertainment that help establish the social, political
and cultural attitudes of increasingly larger populations."
True
freedom of information requires three conditions: the opportunity to read and
watch anything available; a diversity of sources from which to choose; and media
systems that provide access for those who wish to reach their fellow citizens.
In democratic countries the first condition is generally met. But the media titans
are reducing the scope of the other two everywhere as they take over more and
more once-independent companies.
Referring to the 1960 U.N. draft Declaration
on Freedom of Information, Bagdikian suggests that it is time for the nations
of the world to meet again and make a new Declaration of Freedom of Information,
this time establishing antitrust principles that will apply at home as well as
across national borders. Otherwise, Bagdikian concludes, the basis for all liberty
-- freedom of information -- is in danger of being polluted by a new mutation
of that familiar scourge of the free spirit -- centrally controlled information.
SSU CENSORED RESEARCHER: JAMIE BARRETT
SOURCE: THE NATION 72 Fifth Avenue New York, NY 10011
DATE: 6/12/89
TITLE: "LORDS OF THE GLOBAL VILLAGE"
AUTHOR: BEN BAGDIKIAN
COMMENTS: This is the second time that the issue of media monopolies
has been cited as the top censored story of the year. In 1987, the same
author, Ben Bagdikian, warned that just 29 corporations controlled half
or more of the media business in America at the time. Bagdikian's latest
work points out that this is an international problem and a rapidly
growing one. When asked whether he felt the subject received sufficient
coverage in the mass media last year, Bagdikian said the issue was reported
in the business pages as corporate media projects and acquisitions,
but not reported as the spread of a global media network in the hands
of a few major players. In fact, Bagdikian added, the press reported
the spread of media giants into Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union
as developments of unrelieved glory. As an aside, readers should be
aware that the press often relegates important issues, which should
be of general interest, to special sections, such as business or sports,
where they don't reach everyone they should. Finally, it should be noted
that while Bagdikian is a judge, as well as source author, he did not
vote on his nominations for 1987 or 1989 (making it all the more difficult
for them to be selected as the #1 story).