Reposted from:
http://www.tothecenter.com/news.php?readmore=11696
For four hours one sunny afternoon in October, a floating quilt of tin
foil, Visqueen, and duct tape captivated a bored American news media.
One z-list reality star, looking to jump to c-list reality star, took
his too-honest six-year-old on a media blitz that made Obama look
unambitious, and was given two days of sit-downs and exclusives and
front-pages from our largest news outlets.
Three days later, Ashton walked out of a Colorado courthouse to tell us
what we’d all just started to figure out: we had indeed been Punk’d.
Suddenly, the only story the media wanted to cover more than Balloon
Boy was Balloon Boy’s awful, dishonest, lying, cheating, pathetic,
poor, and now criminal father. By the end of the day, commentators were
talking about taking Richard Heene’s kids away, and the whole bored
American nation had turned against him.
If Heene learns anything from this incident (although that seems very
unlikely), it should be that there is no greater crime in the eyes of
the self-proclaimed “Fourth Branch” than to make that very institution,
the noble, honest, Constitution-protected Press, look foolish. They are
the gatekeepers: they dictate the national consciousness.
However, some rogue members of the mighty Press have been brazen enough
to criticize themselves and their colleagues for the coverage of the
incident. Linda Holmes wrote on
NPR.com that the incident demonstrated
that the modern media is more concerned about reporting with certainty
than reporting with truth.
Speaking of media reaction to young Falcon’s now-famous comments to
Wolf Blitzer – “We did this for a show” – Holmes said: “It's just a bit
disheartening to see, less than 24 hours after the last time so many
people labored under a misunderstanding of the circumstances of this
same situation, that there's so little reluctance to jump to a
conclusion about what's going on now. Surrounded by coverage and
surrounded by guessing, it's gotten very hard to shrug your shoulders.”
The media shift from saying something factual to just, well, saying
something has been in the spotlight since the 2000 election, when CBS
and NBC famously declared that Florida – and the presidency – had been
taken by Al Gore, only to later give them to W., only to eventually
admit that they really had no clue who won.
NBC’s own report on the incident stated that “Being right, not first, is what matters.”
But despite countless Poynter criticisms and SNL parodies and lost
viewers, being first is still the standard for which most news outlets
seem to strive. Just watch your local evening news, which is the only
news medium that is still a regular financial success across the board.
“First at Five!” they say. “Your first look, from Channel 6!” “The 13
crew was first on the scene!” Ever hear a commercial for “CBS 10,
always correct!” Or how about, “WTHR 13, we report the truth!”
The bottom line is that this is a want-it-now culture. We text because
we can’t wait until after we’re done driving home to tell our sister
how our date went. We buy mortgages we can’t afford because it’s unfair
for our friends to have nicer houses than us. If our pizza isn’t in our
stomachs within 30 minutes of us deciding we’re hungry, we demand a
refund. The dangers of car accidents, impending foreclosures, and
crappy pizzas don’t cross our demanding minds.
So who cares whether the kid was actually in the damn balloon? The
truth came out – in the Internet age, it always does. (Ask Mark
Sanford.) There was a time when the common man had little access to
information outside his own tiny existence. There was a need for Walter
Cronkite and Bob Woodward, those willing to dig a little and take a
little time, if it meant getting the story right.
But those days are long past. We don’t need a report of what happened
at Lakehurst anymore; we’re watching the flames live. The real tragedy
of this all isn’t the fall of Big Media; Big Media still exists, it’s
just run by us. The tragedy is that after millions of us are led on a
wild-goose chase across the Colorado landscape, after a balloon that we
would have known probably couldn’t even lift off with a boy inside had
we stopped to call one physicist, is that we’re all dumb enough to
applaud and ask for more.