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3,500 ATTEND MEDIA REFORM CONFERENCE; LABOR MEDIA LARGELY ABSENT
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
(Minneapolis Labor Review)3,500 ATTEND MEDIA REFORM CONFERENCE; LABOR
MEDIA LARGELY ABSENT
By Steve
Share, editor,
Minneapolis Labor
Review
MINNEAPOLIS — The
National Conference for Media
Reform came to Minneapolis June 6-8,
attracting more than 3,500 participants
from across the nation. The conference, hosted
by the advocacy group Free Press,
celebrated recent victories in the fight to
oppose increasing corporate
consolidation in media ownership while at the
same time highlighting continuing
threats to a free and independent
media.
“A strong, independent,
diverse
media is the key to a strong, vibrant
democracy,” said Congressman Keith Ellison
(D-MN), one of the keynote speakers. “It’s
not a mistake that the First
Amendment has in it freedom of the press. Who
else has a job in the Bill of
Rights?”
The conference
featured speeches by media legends Bill Moyers
and Dan Rather, as well as workshops
highlighting the work of grassroots media
activists who are pioneering new digital
media.
Many of the conference
speeches and workshops were filmed and/or
recorded and may be found on-line at
www.freepress.net <http://www.freepress.net>
.
One workshop focused on media
and the 2008 elections.
“We want
a media that makes democracy function, rather
than a media that makes us want to
run away from elections,” said journalist
John Nichols, editorial page editor
for the Capital Times in Madison, Wisconsin
and a frequent contributor to The
Nation. “The passion for personality
journalism causes the major media to
dismiss major issues.” He added: “We’re
not just seeing bad media. We’re seeing
a daily assault and battery on
democracy.”
“Media is the
ability for us
to talk to one another,” said author David
Sirota, whose new book, The Uprising,
chronicles a new wave of citizen activism
sweeping the nation. With the internet
and the explosive popularity of new media like
You Tube, “we now have the chance
to be our own media.”
“We
really need to go on the offensive,” said FCC
commissioner Jonathan Adelstein, one of the
final speakers at the conference.
“We need to battle the ever-growing
commercialization of the American media.”
Adelstein emphasized the key fight to maintain
internet neutrality and preserve
open access to the internet.
The
2008 elections will be a historic
moment when media is driving politics, said
another one of the final speakers,
Van Jones, president of Green-for-All, a
national organization promoting “green
collar” jobs. “You wouldn’t have had FDR
without radio. You wouldn’t have had
JFK without television. You wouldn’t have
the next president, whose name I
cannot say, without the
internet.”
Robert McChesney, one
of the founders
of Free Press, celebrated the growth of the
media reform movement from its first
conference five years ago. At that time, he
said, his ideas seemed like “science
fiction.” Now, he said, “we’re going to
win.”
Labor media long have been
one of the counterweights to corporate media,
but this writer saw little sign of
labor at the three-day
conference.
The only labor speaker
appeared to be
Linda Foley, president of the Newspaper Guild,
who spoke on a panel about the
challenges facing traditional big city
newspapers.
Among the many
organizations with booths in an exhibit hall
at the conference, only two
represented labor — The National Writers
Guild and CWA-NABET.
The
absence of organized labor at the conference
was frustrating, said John See,
from the Labor Education Service at the
University of Minnesota, who served on a
local planning committee for the conference.
Labor’s absence, he said, “wasn’t
for lack of trying.”
The next
National Conference for Media Reform will
be coming up in 18 months. The conference
planners choose workshops and speakers
from submitted proposals. “There’s plenty
of time for us to get our ideas on the
table,” See said.
