The classical version
of vertical integration is the steel company who owns the ore mines and the
railroads. They are responsible for finding the ore, mining it, transporting it
to the steel mills and shipping finished products to customers. There is
nothing wrong with this as long as there are other steel companies who can
compete and keep prices in line.
The media version of
vertical integration is to control production and distribution of “news” and
“entertainment” content offered in newspapers and magazines and on TV, radio
and movies. There are several dangers here. The media in the US has adopted
socialist, globalist goals using political correctness to shame citizens into
supporting things that can kill our economy. It is the vanguard for liberal
political propaganda. This doesn’t ring
true in the US, because we are dependent on a robust free market economy, not
socialism.
The decline of the
socialist liberal media is a problem for this industry. There are several reasons for this decline.
The first is the “in your face” propaganda that wears thin. The next is the
betrayal of the “free press” to print the truth. Finally, a “free press” should
not have published “values” that promote a socialist form of government that always
fails. It is clear that the liberal media is the publicist for the Marxist
Democrat Party.
TV content is at a low
point, because of the dumbing down and propagandizing of entertainment content.
Promoting false content has left a void they fill with distractions that are
not that entertaining. Filling air-time with distractions and trivia and
calling it news is useless to listeners.
When I read the
newspaper, I scan the headlines and hone in on news that affects our economy. I
am interested in facts.
I rely on the internet
to capture the facts that newspapers leave out. Websites like Wikipedia are
often behind on updating their myriad of postings, but I can still get facts
that are close enough to answer my questions and reach conclusions that are closer
to the truth.
I watch PBS, the
History Channel and CSPAN. The historical documentaries are valuable
supplements to our abysmal revisionist public school coverage of history. It
covers actual US historical information in context with the economics and
behaviors at the time. The musical
presentations on PBS are excellent and entertaining. I keep Fox News, Fox
Business News and Bloomberg News channels on while I am doing my internet
research and writing this blog.
There is very little
candor in TV News. Most of the time, News channels are airing filler. Time is
taken up with endless speculation and coverage of every disaster they can
find. There is no real debate of serious
issues. There is lots of “he says, she says” gossip. There is endless coverage
of politicians visiting each other and lots of speculation about what they
might have talked about or might do. When real facts are broadcast, they are
glossed over.
What we know is that
Democrats will use air time to recite their political talking points, will not
answer questions and look happy to have the air time. We also know that
Congress uses Roberts Rules of Order to avoid answering questions.
I watch a few good
movies when I can find them. I like “Decades” to see the “Laugh in” and “Ed
Sullivan”. I like movies by Woody Allen and Mel Brooks and movies like Police
Squad, Airplane and other great comedies. I like the Greg Gutfeld Show and
Monty Python.
I don’t watch “Zombie”
movies. I don’t watch the grouping of 30 second ads that appear 6 at a time.
That gives 3 minutes to check the other channels. I don’t watch sitcoms,
reality TV, Jerry Springer, MSNBC or the View. I don’t watch movies that are
broadcast in Spanish. If I see another obscure pharma ad on TV I will scream.
I would like to see
cable TV move to allowing us to pick the channels we get, but I understand that
their “one-size-fits-all approach allows them to spread the expenses. I doubt
that allowing media distributors to merge with content providers will help. I
believe there isn’t any difference between AT&T’s CEO and Board and Time
Warner’s CEO and Board. If we allow them to merge, they won’t make anything
better.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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