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The US media system is broken, and our democracy is worse for it. From the Trump administration defunding the Corporation for Public Broadcasting to ABC suspending Jimmy Kimmel to seemingly gain the favor of the Federal Communications Commission, we’re seeing more and more examples of the press’s growing inability to resist both state and corporate capture. Just today, Netflix announced its deal to buy Warner Bros., a move that would create further corporate concentration in an already unbalanced sector. A new Roosevelt report explains how we got here, and why the only way out is through serious policy transformation that restructures the media landscape.
The crises facing journalism today—mass layoffs and closures, corporate consolidation, collapsing public trust, and more—were not inevitable. They’re the direct result of a pro-corporate policy framework that has conflated deregulated markets with a free press and treats information as a commodity instead of a public good, as Roosevelt’s Bilal Baydoun, Shahrzad Shams, and preeminent media scholar Victor Pickard argue.
“[N]ewsrooms accountable first and foremost to investors will sell out their accountability function to survive,” the authors write in an essay for The Nation. “We must free journalism from the impossible mandate to turn a democratic obligation into a profitable business model.”
As today’s economic crises and political attacks worsen, the authors call for “public-service journalism and the media policy that sustains it” to be “recognized as core components of a redemocratization project.” Because without an informed citizenry and a media ecosystem dedicated to serving the public interest, authoritarianism will only grow stronger.
Read the report: The Political Economy of the US Media System: Excavating the Roots of the Present Crisis
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