Now look back over the media's coverage of the Democratic campaign during the past several weeks. Bingo:
Mission accomplished.
By giving the primary campaign more of a horse-race feel than it
actually has, they've managed to extend it. The Rev. Wright controversy
and constant mentions of Louis Farrakhan have made Obama seem more
"scary-black." (It should be noted that Clinton has closer political
ties to a Farrakhan lover than Obama does. Her PA campaign chair Gov.
Ed Rendell said this of him: "His depth on analysis when it comes to
the racial ills of this nation is astounding and eye opening. He brings
a perspective that is helpful and honest... one of the 20th and 21st
century giants of the African American religious experience.")
Those images of Hillary doing shots in Pennsylvania were broadcast
morning, noon, and night, emphasizing her working-class image. So were
images of Obama bowling a gutterball and looking "elitist." And by
promoting Obama's alleged "ties" to Weather Underground radical Bill
Ayers while downplaying Clinton I's pardon of two fellow Underground
members, Obama was made to look more "leftist" than Clinton.
And that's not all, as they say on the late-night ads ...
Now we have the matter of Hillary's difficulty with a coffee machine.
This video has
gone viral, complete with goofy and irritating music. It shows Sen.
Clinton struggling to operate the coffee maker in a gas station. It's
become popular among Obama supporters because it shows the allegedly
"populist" Hillary's bafflement at operating a device that is familiar
to most working Americans.
Why is the coffee-machine video so
popular among Obama supporters? Because they think it would be airing
24 hours a day if their candidate had made the same mistake.
And it would.
So,
is the coffee-machine video getting airplay on the cable news shows? Not really ... well, wait: CNN
did run a piece about it, but only to
debunk
the idea that this means Hillary's out of touch. "These coffee machines
ARE finicky sometimes," says reporter Jeanne Moos, "I nearly broke one
at the car dealership ..." Yet CNN breathlessly repeated over and over
that Obama only scored a 37 while bowling, without reporting that he
never finished the game! And there was no Jeanne Moos to say "we all
throw gutterballs sometimes."
But, stop already! Isn't this all ridiculous? Isn't it trivial to
concern ourselves with whether the next president is able to go bowling
or get a cup of coffee from a vending machine?
Of course! But the media
make us
care about these things. They have an enormous ability to influence
what we think about, and they've chosen to emphasize the reality-show
aspects of this race. Then, having done that, they skew the race in
favor of different candidates in a naked display of their ability to
influence the outcome. That's the lesson of the bowling incident and
the coffee-cup video: One gets exposure and the other doesn't, because
the narrative has already been written.
In this particular reality show, they've decided who they want voted off the island next.
So what does this all mean? Is our hypothetical group real? Did
instructions come down from on high? The crystal balls are murky. But
it's clear that American media outlets are owned by fewer and more
powerful interests. And they don't necessarily have to write memos. All
they have to do is hire and promote well-intentioned but biased
reporters who don't even realize how they're distorting the news. Throw
in a couple of cooperative editors, and you've got yourself a "free
press" ready to do the bidding of its owners. And most of those owners
are Republican.
We know that the right-wing learned how to spin and manipulate the news
using outlets like Drudge and Fox. And rather than fight this system,
Clinton campaign advisors like Sid Blumenthal decided to exploit it for
their own ends. Blumenthal's
been circulating the most scurrilous right-wing attacks against Obama to a mix of friends and journalists, and some of his readers have printed them. (Blumenthal's the guy who
found the Obama campaign's idealism infuriating;
guess we know why now.) And it turns out that Rev. Wright's latest
public tirade was orchestrated by ... a Clinton supporter.
But, some Democrats will ask, don't we
want
people like than running the Democratic campaign? Won't they be more
effective at winning? Maybe - but that argument would be more
compelling if they weren't
losing. If the Clinton campaign
wanted to run such a negative campaign, it should have done so from the
very beginning. But they were overconfident. By turning ugly now, when
they're behind, they're damaging the party. And, ironically, that may
be why they're been getting such favorable media treatment lately.
If the media's first job is to cripple or take out Barack Obama, then
the Clinton campaign is just a means to that end. Whether Obama yields
to Hillary or takes the nomination in a weakened position, the
Democrats will have been wounded. And the extended race will have
provided months of extra "horse-race" stories for the media.
At that point Blumenthal et al. will find that their usefulness to the
media machine has ended and they're yesterday's news. Their tactics
won't work any more. Suddenly
Clinton will be the target again - and John McCain will be on his way to the Presidency.
Word to Sidney Blumenthal and all the other Rove-emulating Clintonites:
You're disposable tools in a bigger game. You guys, of all people,
should understand that.
UPDATE: Two alleged statements by Clinton associate Mickey Kantor
have been removed from this post. He says he never said the more
extreme statement, and there's evidence the video we saw was doctored.
So we take him at his word. Another phrase that he used, "these people
are sh*t," seemed to refer to Indiana voters but is ambiguous. (Not
that ambiguity would stop the press if they were determined to smear a
candidate by association, as the Clinton team knows all too well.)
Kantor reportedly asked that the more extreme statement not be
repeated, even as a retraction. Fair enough. We've honored that
request, and have also removed the other one. We suggest that Clinton
and McCain supporters likewise refrain from repeating scurrilous and
false remarks about their opponents in the future, even if only to deny
that they believe them.