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View Article  SCIENTISTS DOUBT EXISTENCE OF DEMOCRATS
SCIENTISTS DOUBT EXISTENCE OF DEMOCRATS

The Borowitz Report

Opposition Party Could Be Black Hole, Experts Say

With George W. Bush’s approval ratings plummeting in recent weeks, the inability on the part of Democrats to capitalize on [Bush]’s waning fortunes has caused some leading scientists to postulate that the Democratic Party may not exist at all.

Dr. Marisa Drazin, a leading scientist who for years has been questioning the existence of Democrats, said today that what many have thought to be the Democratic Party may in fact be nothing more than a black hole.

“When [Bush] loses ten or twelve approval points, one would normally expect those approval points to go to the opposition party,” Dr. Drazin said. “But instead, those points have vanished into thin air, leading one to conclude that the so-called Democratic Party does not exist."

Theories about the nonexistence of the Democratic Party are nothing new, said Dr. Drazin, who pointed out that scientists first developed them during the 1988 presidential campaign of then-Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis. 

While the silence of the Democratic Party in recent weeks seems to bolster theories of the party’s nonexistence, she said, there are still some nagging pieces of evidence to the contrary, such as the perpetually outspoken DNC chairman, former Vermont Gov. Howard Dean.

“I’ve discussed the Howard Dean phenomenon with my colleagues,” Dr. Drazin said. “And it’s the consensus of the scientific community that there is no logical explanation for Howard Dean.”

(source)

View Article  Letter to Sinclair Broadcasting: 37 Cents. Taking Back Our Airwaves: Priceless
Letter to Sinclair Broadcasting:  37 Cents.  Taking Back Our Airwaves:  Priceless


Ted Remington
(above) is seen by many as a pioneer in the campaign to expose Sinclair Broadcasting’s corporate excess.  This guest opinion, which appeared in the Iowa City Press-Citizen on June 4, 2004, made many eastern Iowans aware for the first time that a local station, KGAN,  was owned by a huge media conglomerate, the already-notorious Sinclair Broadcasting -  the company that refused to allow its local stations to air Ted Koppel’s “The Fallen.”  To start off Blog for Iowa’s Focus on the Media Week, here is Ted’s landmark piece.
~~~
Individual and PAC contributions by Sinclair Broadcasting Group executives to Republicans:  Nearly $250,000.

The opportunity to foist off canned editorials on eastern Iowans from half a continent away:  Priceless.

If you flip by KGAN at about 10:30 on any given night, you’ll see someone named Mark Hyman delivering his daily editorial, “The Point,” at the tail end of the nightly newscast.  Hyman is not a journalist.  He’s not a KGAN employee.  He’s not even an Iowan.  So why is he prattling away on our airwaves?

The simple answer to that is because he can.  Hyman is the vice president of Sinclair Broadcasting Group Inc., a Baltimore-based company that aims to do to local news what Wal-Mart did to local shopping:  offer low-cost, low-quality products in homogenous outlets across the country to maximize profit.  Sinclair owns or operates 62 local television stations across the country, including Iowa stations KGAN, KFXA, KFSB and KDSM.  

Part of Sinclair’s modus operandi is to gut local news operations and replace them with a one-size-fits-all broadcast.  In many markets, much of the “local” news is actually created in Sinclair’s studios in Baltimore, beamed to its stations, and presented as homegrown product.

No longer homegrown

Thus far, Iowa viewers have been spared the worst of Sinclair’s excesses, but we’ve hardly gone untouched.  If you’ve noticed that Tiffany O’Donnell anchors not only KGAN’s 10 p.m. news but also the 9 p.m. newscast on KFXA and KFXB, you’ve seen Sinclair’s handiwork.  And if business takes you to Des Moines and you feel a little homesick, just tune in to KDSM’s nightly newscast, hosted by your “local” news anchor, the indefatigable Tiffany O’Donnell.

Has O’Donnell conquered the laws of time and space in order to hold down three anchoring jobs simultaneously?  Not exactly.  Sinclair uses its stable of  KGAN talent to create a generic newscast that is shown on KFXA, KFXB and KDSM.  The good people of Dubuque have suffered most from this news cloning.  The city no longer has a newscast of its own but must do with the generic Sinclair-cast that pays virtually no attention to stories of particular interest in Dubuque.  For all intents and purposes, KFXB no longer is a local station.

Once upon a time, Sinclair could not have pulled this off.  Media ownership regulations ensured that no single company ran multiple television stations in the same market.  But the current incarnation of the Federal Communications Commission, with the approval of anti-regulation crusaders in the White House and Congress, relaxed these restrictions, delighting companies such as Sinclair, which can now scoop up multiple stations at will.

And this brings us back to the droit du seigneur that is “The Point.”  Not content to merely profit from owning scores of television stations, Sinclair’s executives use the rights of ownership to compel stations such as KGAN to run their prefab political editorials.  Regardless of how out of step such commentaries might be with the views and concerns of local viewers in specific markets, all Sinclair-owned stations must submit and provide Hyman access to their audience.

It’s true that Hyman’s editorials are predictably conservative, far to the right of the average KGAN viewer.  But that shouldn’t surprise anyone.  Given that republican politicians and appointees spearheaded media deregulation, one can understand why Sinclair’s views (and money) support GOP concerns almost exclusively.  But that’s not the problem.

It’s also the case that Hyman’s ramblings rarely rise above the level of talk-radio blather, relying on name calling, hyperbole and shading of the truth to create what passes for an “argument.”  But that’s not my primary concern, either.

Not an Iowa Discussion

What should concern all of us in eastern Iowa is that Sinclair, a corporate conglomerate based on the east coast, is exploiting a local resource.  If KGAN wants to take a right-wing editorial stance, that’s fine.  If KGAN decides to allot precious minutes of airtime to the musings of a mid-level management type rather than a bona fide journalist, that’s its prerogative.  But “The Point” isn’t a KGAN product.  It’s the brainchild of a corporation as far away from eastern Iowa in temperament and values as it is in geography.

We the people own the public airwaves, not KGAN, Mark Hyman or Sinclair Broadcasting Group.  I, for one, would welcome greater use of local broadcast time for the discussion of topical issues, but let it be a truly local discussion.  Let’s talk about school board elections, local referendums and proposed city ordinances.  Let’s talk about who we want to represent us in Des Moines and Washington.  And when we discuss national and international issues, let’s do it with an Iowan accent.

“The Point” represents a misuse of a public resource, a resource too scarce to be given away.  Certainly, there are larger issues of media conglomeration that bode ill for truly local news, and these issues need to be addressed.

But let’s begin the fight here.  Write KGAN (Sinclair Broadcasting Group Inc., 10706 Beaver Dam Road, Hunt Valley, Md., 21030) and ask them to stand up for their viewers by standing up to their bosses in Baltimore.  Better yet, write directly to the Sinclair company and tell it you will not watch its programming as long as it takes advantage of their clients:  us.

Sending a letter to Sinclair Broadcasting Group:  37 cents.

Getting back our public airwaves:  Priceless.

~~~

Ted Remington is an assistant professor of English and associate director of writing at the University of Saint Francis in Fort Wayne, Indiana. He holds a Ph.D. in communication studies from The University of Iowa, where he specialized in rhetorical studies.  He has written articles and presented papers on a range of topics, including using the Internet to teach writing, the political rhetoric of marginalized groups, and the role of rhetorical critics as political activists. He is also the author of the weblog "The Counterpoint," which features near-daily refutations of "The Point."

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Rapid Response Network - Iowa

First responders to biased, imbalanced or factually inaccurate media coverage


Iowans for Better Local TV

*IBLTV is a group of citizens from the Iowa City/Cedar Rapids area who are concerned about the decline in the quality of local television. Fight local media consolidation, as it leads to an unaccountable medium that enriches itself while disregarding the need to serve the public good.


Air America

*How to Bring Air America Radio to Your Local Community


The Counterpoint

*The rational counter to 'The Point,' 'The Counterpoint' critiques and corrects the daily editorial by Sinclair Broadcasting's corporate vice president, Mark Hyman, that is broadcast on all Sinclair-owned television stations across the country


National

FAIR: Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting

*FAIR is a national media watch group that offers well-documented criticism of media bias and censorship


Media Matters for America

*Media Matters for America is an information center dedicated to monitoring, analyzing, and correcting conservative misinformation in the U.S. media