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To: PJ-Comix; abb
Michael Crichton: Always ahead of his time.

From the article:

I am the author of a novel about dinosaurs, a novel about US-Japanese trade relations, and a forthcoming novel about sexual harassment - what some people have called my dinosaur trilogy. But I want to focus on another dinosaur, one that may be on the road to extinction. I am referring to the American media. And I use the term extinction literally. To my mind, it is likely that what we now understand as the mass media will be gone within ten years. Vanished, without a trace.

There has been evidence of impending extinction for a long time. We all know statistics about the decline in newspaper readers and network television viewers. The polls show increasingly negative public attitudes toward the press - and with good reason. A generation ago, Paddy Chayevsky's Network looked like an outrageous farce. Today, when Geraldo Rivera bares his buttocks, when the New York Times misquotes Barbie (the doll), and NBC fakes news footage of exploding trucks, Network looks like a documentary.

[Snip]

The media are an industry, and their product is information. And along with many other American industries, the American media produce a product of very poor quality. Its information is not reliable, it has too much chrome and glitz, its doors rattle, it breaks down almost immediately, and it's sold without warranty. It's flashy but it's basically junk. So people have begun to stop buying it.

This was simply too good not to put in this thread.
27 posted on 11/05/2008 1:04:29 PM PST by Zakeet (Pray for Barry - Psalm 109:8)
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To: Zakeet

I know this is very presumptive of me to argue with someone of Michael Crichton’s intellect, but I don’t think the media ever has produced a product called “news.” What they are is an information distribution system. News is merely distributed information.

The internet is a technologically superior distribution system against which paper and electronic broadcast cannot compete. And it has the additional advantage of instant feedback.

All just my opinion, of course.


31 posted on 11/05/2008 1:18:05 PM PST by abb ("What ISN'T in the news is often more important than what IS." Ed Biersmith, 1942 -)
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