On reflection, that a major
news outlet would devote substantial airtime – not a snippet – to such
triviality and promote the permanent disfigurement of young people is a good
segue to larger question: Who decides what’s news?
A few years ago, I had the
honor as then-publisher of The Kentucky Gazette to serve on a three-member
panel with the editorial page editors of The Courier-Journal and the Lexington
Herald-Leader to discuss the role of the media in making public policy.
The panel was part of a
two-day retreat for governmental affairs managers and lobbyists at Lake
Cumberland State Park near Jamestown, sponsored by Kentucky Forward, then an
affiliate of the Kentucky Chamber of Commerce.
The panel discussed whether the
media is the Fourth Branch of government? Should members of the media be
required to register as lobbyists? And should the media interfere with the news
or simply reflect it?
I expressed my view that the most noble purpose of a newspaper is to
report the news, not create it; as it is the most noble purpose of government to
advance the standard of living of its citizens, not redistribute their earnings.
Well, that was not the way The
Courier-Journal’s liberal editor, David Hawpe, saw the world. He told the
audience that his paper was proudly a player in the political process, bent on
shaping the direction of the state. Not just reflecting the news, creating it. Hawpe
said he believed “the purpose of government is to redistribute the wealth.”
Hawpe is an honorable person, whom
I have always respected, because he is sincere and consistent in his
principles. As editor, he was not content with telling the news, he wanted to
tell it and fix it all at once. His vision was as crooked as a pig’s tail.
He told the audience something even
more astonishing, an extension of the media wanting to shape the news. He said
(I paraphrase), “Nothing is news until his newspaper (or others in the media)
decide it’s news!”
And that takes us back to the UK
fan given his “15 minutes of fame” by the TV station for disfiguring himself
with a large tattoo of a basketball player on his leg: Someone at the station made
a decision on what news is.
Woe, the power of the press! —
Lowell Reese