March 4, 2003

HOIST ON HIS OWN PETARD:

God, Satan and the Media (NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF, March 4, 2003, NY Times)
Claims that the news media form a vast liberal conspiracy strike me as utterly unconvincing, but there's one area where accusations of institutional bias have merit: nearly all of us in the news business are completely out of touch with a group that includes 46 percent of Americans.

That's the proportion who described themselves in a Gallup poll in December as evangelical or born-again Christians. Evangelicals have moved from the fringe to the mainstream, and that is particularly evident in this administration. It's impossible to understand President Bush without acknowledging the centrality of his faith. Indeed, there may be an element of messianic vision in the plan to invade Iraq and "remake" the Middle East. [...]

I tend to disagree with evangelicals on almost everything, and I see no problem with aggressively pointing out the dismal consequences of this increasing religious influence. For example, evangelicals' discomfort with condoms and sex education has led the administration to policies that are likely to lead to more people dying of AIDS at home and abroad, not to mention more pregnancies and abortions.

But liberal critiques sometimes seem not just filled with outrage at evangelical-backed policies, which is fair, but also to have a sneering tone about conservative Christianity itself. Such mockery of religious faith is inexcusable. And liberals sometimes show more intellectual curiosity about the religion of Afghanistan than that of Alabama, and more interest in reading the Upanishads than in reading the Book of Revelation.


This is priceless. Here's how the Times has handled the evangelicals in just two particularly notorious recent examples that we've noted:
The first was a really despicable slur by Bill Keller, labelling the entire Christian right "bigots", The Soul of George W. Bush (Bill Keller, NY Times) :
Nor can Mr. Bush be claimed by the culture warriors of the Christian right, although he gave them John Ashcroft and occasionally throws them a steak. The president is not a bigot, or a pessimist.

the second a rather breathless front page piece about Christian radio stations crowding out NPR, Religious and Public Stations Battle for Share of Radio Dial (BLAINE HARDEN, September 15, 2002, NY Times)
The Rev. Don Wildmon, founding chairman of a mushrooming network of Christian radio stations, does not like National Public Radio.

"He detests the news that the public gets through NPR and believes it is slanted from a distinctly liberal and secular perspective," said Patrick Vaughn, general counsel for Mr. Wildmon's American Family Radio.

Here in Lake Charles, American Family Radio has silenced what its boss detests.

It knocked two NPR affiliate stations off the local airwaves last year, transforming this southwest Louisiana community of 95,000 people into the most populous place in the country where "All Things Considered" cannot be heard.


which prompted this from the Times editors, Some Things Considered (NY Times,9/17/02):
Every devoted radio listener has experienced it at some time or another--a favorite station changes its format. The effect is unsettling. Last year, National Public Radio listeners in Lake Charles, La., experienced something even more alarming.

Nice the way they just assume that folks in Lake Charles must have found it "alarming", eh?

Now, these may not necessarily be indicators of liberal bias at the Times; they may just demonstrate grotesque insenitivity to the religious beliefs of a plurality of Americans. But, whichever is the case, surely Mr. Kristoff's crusade against the "sneering tone"of media coverage of Christians should begin at home, shouldn't it?

Posted by Orrin Judd at March 4, 2003 12:37 PM
Comments

Since you're writing about music today, allow me to tell an anecdote from the red-hot liberal sheet I mentioned I used to work for -- the one with all the ministers in the newsroom.



After a long struggle, I finally got the paper to try to report on the religious music concerts that were regularly selling out the civic auditorium (15K seats), the only shows except Kiss to do so.



I hate that kind of music (mushy) though I dote on the spirituals and gospel I was raised on. But it seemed

newsworthy to me.



Trouble was, we could not find any reporter, among nearly a hundred, capable of writing the story. So we went back to reporting in detail on string quartets that drew 67 people and ignoring concerts that drew 15,000.



Liberal bias? Anti-religion? I don't think so. We covered football but not bowling, though way more people in Iowa bowl than play football.

Posted by: Harry at March 4, 2003 2:55 PM

Well, that's just bad journalism.

Posted by: oj at March 4, 2003 4:28 PM

Add to that the demonization of Hatfill, the idolization of Al Arian,

the constant allusions to NRA types

as terrorists, and Somalia 'technical

war lords

Posted by: narciso at March 4, 2003 11:32 PM

Actually, I live in Lafayette, just down the road from Lake Charles. I listen fairly often to KRVS, which is one of the stations he kicked off the air in Lake Charles (they had a repeater station there). It is one of the two or three stations in the area that has shows dedicated to Louisiana music. (The two non-public-radio stations in the area that do so are either low-power, hard-to-pick-up, or AM. Public radio stations are also the only ones that carry classical music.



If the only classical music station in your area was forced off the air by a religious station owned by out-of-staters (and S. Louisiana is much more Catholic than it is evangelical), wouldn't you
be disturbed?

Posted by: Phil Fraering at March 5, 2003 12:39 AM

Oh, I forgot to mention: KRVS is also the only station around that has jazz programs.

Posted by: Phil Fraering at March 5, 2003 12:50 AM

Phil:



The only classic music station in our area was NHPR, but they ditched the format and went to all talk. I'm "alarmed" .

Posted by: oj at March 5, 2003 7:30 AM

TO put things in a little more context: NPR _News_ aggravates me, partly because of their political bias, and partly because I listen to classical late at night, when I can't sleep. And they interrupt the music for news breaks. Like at 2 in the morning. To wake you up right when you're about to fall asleep, and tell you that Mr. Rogers died of cancer. I think that could have waited until morning, personally.



I just don't like the idea of throwing the baby out with the bathwater.

Posted by: Phil Fraering at March 6, 2003 1:46 AM
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