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Break up Microsoft? Then how
about the media “Big Six”?
By Norman Solomon
The push by federal regulators to break up Microsoft
is big news. Until recently, the software giant seemed untouchable
—and few people demanded effective antitrust efforts against
monopoly power in the software industry. These days, a similar
lack of vision is routine in looking at the media business.
Today, just six corporations have a forceful grip
on America’s mass media. We should consider how to break the
hammerlock that huge firms currently maintain around the windpipe
of the First Amendment. And we’d better hurry.
The trend lines of media ownership are steep and
ominous in the United States. When “The Media Monopoly” first
appeared on bookshelves in 1983, author Ben Bagdikian explains,
“50 corporations dominated most of every mass medium.” With
each new edition, that number kept dropping —to 29 media firms
in 1987, 23 in 1990, 14 in 1992, and 10 in 1997.
Published this spring, the sixth edition of “The
Media Monopoly” documents that just a half-dozen corporations
are now supplying most of the nation’s media fare. And Bagdikian,
a longtime journalist, continues to sound the alarm. “It is
the overwhelming collective power of these firms, with their
corporate interlocks and unified cultural and political values,
that raises troubling questions about the individual’s role
in the American democracy.”
I wonder what the chances are that Bagdikian —or
anyone else— will be invited onto major TV broadcast networks
to discuss the need for vigorous antitrust enforcement against
the biggest media conglomerates. Let’s see:
· CBS —Not a good bet, especially since its merger
with Viacom (one of the Big Six) was announced last fall.
· NBC —Quite unlikely. General Electric, a Big
Six firm, has owned NBC since 1986.
· ABC —Forget it. This network became the property
of the Disney Co. five years ago. Disney is now the country’s
second-largest media outfit.
· Fox —The Fox network is owned by Rupert Murdoch’s
News Corp., currently number four in the media oligarchy.
And then there’s always cable television, with
several networks devoted to news:
· CNN —The world’s biggest media conglomerate,
Time Warner, owns CNN —where antitrust talk about undue concentration
of media power is about as welcome as the Internationale sung
at a baseball game in Miami.
· CNBC —Sixth-ranked General Electric owns this
cable channel.
· MSNBC —Spawned as a joint venture of GE and
Microsoft, the MSNBC network would see activism against media
monopoly as double trouble.
· Fox News Channel —The Fox cable programming
rarely wanders far from the self-interest of News Corp. tycoon
Murdoch.
Since all of those major TV news sources are owned
by one of the Big Six, the chances are mighty slim that you’ll
be able to catch a discussion of media antitrust issues on national
television.
Meanwhile, the only Big Sixer that doesn’t possess
a key US television outlet —the Bertelsmann firm based in Germany—
is the most powerful company in the book industry. It owns the
mammoth publisher Random House, and plenty more in the media
universe. Bertelsmann “is the world’s third largest conglomerate,”
Bagdikian reports, “with substantial ownership of magazines,
newspapers, music, television, on-line trading, films, and radio
in 53 countries.” Try pitching a book proposal to a Random House
editor about the dangers of global media consolidation.
Well, you might comfort yourself by thinking about
cyberspace. Think again.
The dominant Internet service provider, America
Online, is combining with already-number-one Time Warner —and
the new firm AOL Time Warner would have more to lose than any
other corporation if a movement grew to demand antitrust action
against media conglomerates.
Amid rampant overall commercialization of the
most heavily trafficked websites, AOL steers its 22 million
subscribers in many directions —and, in the future, Time Warner’s
offerings will be most frequently highlighted. While seeming
to be gateways to a vast cybergalaxy, AOL’s favorite links will
remain overwhelmingly corporate friendly within a virtual cul-de-sac.
Hype about the New Media seems boundless, while
insatiable old hungers for maximum profits fill countless screens.
Centralization is the order of the media day. As Bagdikian points
out: “The power and influence of the dominant companies are
understated by counting them as ‘six.’ They are intertwined:
they own stock in each other, they cooperate in joint media
ventures, and among themselves they divide profits from some
of the most widely viewed programs on television, cable and
movies.”
We may not like the nation’s gigantic media firms,
but right now they don’t care much what we think. A strong antitrust
movement aimed at the Big Six could change such indifference
in a hurry.
Norman Solomon is a syndicated columnist. His
latest book is “The Habits of Highly Deceptive Media.”
Source: FAIR:
www.fair.org
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