1st Edition

The Fair Reader An Extra! Review Of Press And Politics In The '90s

By Jim Naureckas, Janine Jackson Copyright 1996
    272 Pages
    by Routledge

    272 Pages
    by Routledge

    Why did major news outlets virtually ignore the only cost-effective plan for universal health care coverage—even though polls showed the plan had majority support? Why did leading journalists go out of their way to attack Bill Clinton’s rivals in the 1992 Democratic primary—while focusing unprecedented attention on Clinton’s personal life? Why do establishment media consider falling unemployment to be bad news? In the tradition of I.F. Stone and George Seldes, the contributors to The FAIR Reader probe the often mysterious connections between press and politics in the 1990s. The essays are filled with startling information about the critical issues of our time—from the Gulf War and the Clarence Thomas hearings to the debates over health care reform and NAFTA—documenting the deceptive, one-sided mainstream reporting that leaves the public in the dark. Particular attention is paid to the election of 1992 and the Clinton administration, showing how the media promoted, undercut, and finally shaped Clinton to fit a media agenda, the book demonstrates that systematic media bias poses a threat to the democratic process and the free flow of information to the U.S. citizenry. FAIR, founded in 1986, is the national media watch group dedicated to the principle that independent, aggressive, and critical media are essential to an informed democracy. In the nine years since FAIR was launched, it has gained national recognition for its well-documented studies of media bias, its challenge to powerful media figures like Rush Limbaugh, and its award-winning journal of media criticism and politics, Extra!. The FAIR Reader collects Extra!’s most incisive reporting on journalism and politics in the ‘90s. It will be invaluable to anyone interested in decoding the media agenda behind the daily news.

    Introductions -- The Bush Years -- Bending Over Bushwards -- Rallying ’Round the Flags: The Panama Invasion -- Creating the New Hitler: The Gulf War -- The ’92 Election -- The Primaries: Limiting Choice -- The Presidential Campaign: Unfair to Voters -- Race and Gender in the ’92 Election -- Clinton and the Media Agenda -- Promises to Break: The New Administration -- The Scandal Beat -- Trade: NAFT’s Manifest Destiny -- Health Care Reform: The Single-Payer Taboo -- War and “Peacekeeping”: Intervention in the Clinton Era -- In Search of Scapegoats -- Teen Mothers and Other Young Monsters -- The Crime Scam -- Economic Losers -- Beyond Clinton -- Contracting the American Spectrum: The ’94 Election -- Appendix

    Biography

    "Jim Naureckas is the editor of Extra!, the magazine of FAIR. A graduate of Libertyville High School and Stanford University, he got his first job in journalism covering the Iran-contra scandal for In These Times. He is the coauthor of The Way Things Aren’t: Rush Limbaugh’s Reign of Error (New Press). Janine Jackson is FAIR’s research director and the cohost of FAIR’s syndicated radio show CounterSpin. She writes a monthly column on labor and media for the Labor Resource Center at Queens College. Jackson graduated from Sarah Lawrence College and the New School for Social Research."