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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: OPED: But Really, What Was Sold?
Title:US: OPED: But Really, What Was Sold?
Published On:2000-01-21
Source:Washington Post (DC)
Fetched On:2008-09-05 05:49:51
... But Really, What Was Sold?

It's hard to quarrel with the free-speech sentinels who have decried the
recently revealed arrangement under which the federal government was
covertly working with the networks to boost the quotient of anti-drug
material in their entertainment programming. Yet somehow one wants to
quarrel with them. Their rhetoric is so uninflected, so full of a knee-jerk
suspicion of anything authored by government; so certain that Big Brother
represents the greatest danger we will ever face.

The deal (disclosed in salon.com), in which the networks earned back
advertising time they owed to the government for public service
announcements by demonstrating that particular episodes of their shows had
advanced anti-drug themes, was "reprehensible beyond words," thundered
Andrew Jay Schwartzman, president of the nonprofit Media Access Project.
Merrill Markoe, a former lead writer for "Late Night with David Letterman,"
called the deals "a horrifying slap in the face of freedom of speech."

Can it really be so alarming to think that Uncle Sam is undermining the
creative integrity of "Sabrina the Teenage Witch"? I know, I know, that's
not the point. The point is the Thin Edge of the Wedge. Today, "Beverly
Hills 90210"; tomorrow, the world.

Of course it should make us uncomfortable to think of the government
spending our own money to influence us secretly. While the propaganda in
question here was distinctly benign, and the networks hardly had to be
coerced to trade their artistic sovereignty for money, the deal crossed a
line that does indeed disturb.

But I wish my fellow liberals could at least entertain the possibility that
there might be gradations of harm in this realm. It makes some difference,
for example, that in most cases the government was rewarding after the fact
shows that were produced in blissful ignorance by writers and directors and
producers who had never heard of the arrangement. That the networks could
deliver the goods without telling the people who actually make the shows is
ample testament to the modesty of the whole deal.

The truth is that most of these shows would be producing pretty much the
same episodes anyway. Think about it: Any public relations cause for which
a majority-Republican Congress will earmark $1 billion over five years is
bound to be almost exactly congruent with the social attitudes that make
sense to the suits at the networks, who aren't looking to create fare that
will repel the big advertisers.

Drug use, you may have heard, is frowned on these days; lately it is one of
the few uncontested zones in our perennial culture wars. Should the
government ever want to undertake mind control on a more controversial
topic, we may be sure that the networks' larger self-interest would exert a
balancing pressure.

Clearly, advance script consultation, which happened in a few cases, is a
more sinister practice than a network's sending in a tape of a show, after
the fact, for government credit. And of course the episodes in question
should have carried some sort of notice indicating that the show was aired
in cooperation with the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy.

But few have noted the irony that this entire collusion is an example of
the flexible, smart government we all claim to want. Originally, the ONDCP
was assigned a $1 billion budget to create anti-drug public service ads.
Lest this look like a taxpayer-funded bonanza for the networks (and for
newspapers such as The Washington Post, which will earn $181,366 in
advertising revenue from the ONDCP this fiscal year), Congress stipulated
that any media outlets that accepted the ads would have to donate a
matching amount of advertising time or space--in effect, to sell their ads
for half price.

When the program began, in 1997, the networks were happy to get this
reliable money stream. But as their ad revenues from other sources -
especially free-spending Internet companies - rose over the past two years,
they began to grumble. So the ONDCP agreed to credit anti-drug program
content instead.

In doing this, the drug office was acting on extensive research showing
that a message embedded in a program is of much greater efficacy than a
message that is pitted against the rest of the ad clutter on TV. Your tax
dollar at work! One almost pities the air of baffled pride with which the
ONDCP greeted the sudden tempest over its good works.

Most of all, it seems myopic not to see this controversy in the context of
the other, more powerful forces that shape the state of popular
entertainment. The First Amendment advocates' hyperbolic reaction to a
small, highly technical threat of government coercion invites an irritated
counterreaction: It must be nice to play defense all the time, to slap back
the unseen hand of the feds and then sleep your blameless sleep. I'd feel
more sympathetic if I saw anyone on my side exerting a tenth as much
passion over the violence and the sex and the lust for goods that the iron
fist of the market insistently pounds into the lives of my children.

Apples and oranges, you say. Perhaps. But it's short-sighted--no, it's
culpably naive - for liberals to enter the 21st century loudly arguing that
the biggest threat to our freedoms of mind comes from the most stable
democratic government on the face of the earth.

It's the market, stupid.
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