Is your local TV news providing enough local election coverage?
By Jon Bartholomew Posted on Mon Oct 27, 2008 at 03:31:17 PM EST
Is this you watching local public affairs coverage?
This is a big election year. There will be records broken all over the United States for voter turnout, individual campaign contributions and campaign volunteer hours. The public has gotten involved at levels never seen before. But the way it seems on television, you wouldn't know there is much more than a Presidential race and a question about the balance of power in Congress.
Unfortunately, while there are thousands of races for city council, state legislative seats, ballot measures and school board all across our country, the local TV stations have given them short shrift. When you consider that it is your school board, your city council and your state legislature that is going to impact your day to day life more than who is in the White House, it's a real shame that so little attention is devoted to local issues.
FCC Investigating Pentagon Propaganda Campaign
By Jon Bartholomew Posted on Wed Oct 08, 2008 at 02:35:53 PM EST
We have a new update on the Pentagon Propaganda story we previously reported on here and here.
Congressional Quarterly is reporting today that the Federal Communications Commission is investigating this matter. The story says, "The FCC is looking into whether TV networks and certain on-air analysts broke the law by failing to disclose to viewers that the apparently independent analysts were in fact part of a Pentagon-funded information campaign, a spokesman for the commission said."
Is this the "Internet Election"?
By Jon Bartholomew Posted on Thu Aug 28, 2008 at 12:26:57 PM EST
This morning at the Big Tent, Air America and MSNBC's Rachel Maddow hosted a discussion with Dr. Eric Schmidt, CEO of Google. The subject of the talk is how the internet is impacting the 2008 elections.
Maddow started out with pointing out that for the last several elections, broad claims have been made that the internet was making a major difference - but has it? Eric Schmidt responded that it is becoming more and more the case. His example of how the internet has recently made a big difference was how in the 2006 Senate races the GOP candidate in Virginia used the word "macaca" to describe a person of color, and it got around on Youtube, which may have been the pivotal point in that election. The viral nature of that video made a big difference in the shift of power in the US Senate.
Is that just increasing? It seems to be the case. More and more citizen journalism is emerging, and here at the Big Tent that is certainly evident.
The Power of the Alternative Media
By Jon Bartholomew Posted on Wed Aug 27, 2008 at 05:45:49 PM EST
I have to give a lot of credit to the American public. As the mainstream media headed down in quality, we the people decided to take action and instead of just whining or resigning ourselves, we decided to create our own media.
There is no better example of that than here in Denver right now. The hundreds of bloggers at the Big Tent, the public access show producers crawling all over town with cameras, and the alternative media are all doing what the mainstream media isn't.
While the big cable news networks are focused on parsing the words in speeches to try to determine the impact on the horse race for president, the citizen media is out there reporting on everything from what is going on with the police in Denver during the DNC to how well the "greenness" of the convention is working.
Media Symposium at the Big Tent
By Jon Bartholomew Posted on Tue Aug 26, 2008 at 11:43:39 AM EST
FCC Commissioner Adelstein and Common Cause President Bob Edgar at the Big Tent
Today is the Common Cause sponsored Media Symposium at the Big Tent in Denver. The goal of the day is to bring issues of media reform to the alternative media that is gathered here at the Big Tent as well as to many of the DNC delegates who are in town.
We have gotten started today with an address by FCC Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein (introduced by Common Cause President Bob Edgar). Commissioner Adelstein made a clear call for stopping and reversing media consolidation, increasing media diversity and protecting net neutrality.
He specifically called for the tax certificate for minority media ownership, which we called for in our recent plan for media reform in a new administration.
As the day moves forward, come back to view more reports on the day's activities at our media symposium.
Kicked to the curb
By Josh Zaharoff Posted on Mon Aug 25, 2008 at 08:58:39 PM EST
Check out the footage of Glenn Greenwald and Jane Hamsher attempting to talk to attendees of a swanky AT&T sponsored party last night.
AT&T's name is littered across both the DNC and RNC party lists as a host of lavish receptions as well as a major donor to both conventions' Host Committees. AT&T has a lot at stake in Congress in 2009. Smells wrong.
Enviros for clean elections?
By Josh Zaharoff Posted on Mon Aug 25, 2008 at 08:30:21 PM EST
Kennedy and others at the Big Tent in Denver
Earlier today I sat in on a panel at the Big Tent on climate change. Featured among the panelists was Robert Kennedy Jr., along with Prof. David Orr and others.
While the conversation focused on global warming and the policy solutions--capping carbon emissions, ending the subsidies for fossil fuels like coal and gas, investing in renewables, and strengthening our electric grid--the panelists were in agreement and a couple, including Kennedy, got into the political reasons why we haven't made progress on virtually any of those fronts.
At the Big Tent
By Jon Bartholomew Posted on Mon Aug 25, 2008 at 01:03:46 PM EST
dozens of bloggers at the Big Tent in Denver
I am sitting here in Denver at The Big Tent seeing something that could not happen without net neutrality.
At this event (which we co-sponsored) there are hundreds of citizen journalists using the new media to create real time coverage of the Democratic National Convention, coverage about the coverage, commentary about it, commentary about the commentary, etc. The Internet's neutral nature is what allows this to thrive.
There are people here blogging for scores of different major websites like Daily Kos and Slate.com and smaller websites like www.turnmaineblue.com. There are people using videocameras to create content to post to youtube and other video websites. And through the online forums as well as the personal interaction here, we are seeing the same kind of "newsroom" collaboration that we are losing at the newspapers all across America as big corporations like News Corp gobble up local papers and force them to cut back on reporting and just fill their papers with nationally produced content.
The kind of collaboration you saw in "All the President's Men" is alive and well, and it's here in the Big Tent. But as I said earlier, without net neutrality, this could all go away.
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