NY Times Disdains Biased Media Owner -- A San Diego Conservative Charger
David Carr of The New York Times wrote an unintentional laugh line for Monday's paper: "There is a growing worry that the falling value and failing business models of many American newspapers could lead to a situation where moneyed interests buy papers and use them to prosecute a political and commercial agenda."
No! Could you believe a newspaper would follow a political agenda based on what its owner wanted to do? Where have we ever heard of that before, say, with an owner who told Daddy he thought the Americans should be shot in Vietnam? But wait: in San Diego, it's that other, somehow less professional bias: Union-Tribune owner Douglas Manchester is "anti-big government, anti-tax and anti-gay marriage. And he’s in favor of a remade San Diego centered around a new downtown waterfront stadium and arena."
Carr does say something quietly by being shocked that there is no bias denial going on, as is required in the hallowed halls of the Old Media:
The oddest part? Mr. Manchester and the chief executive, John T. Lynch, who also owns part of the paper, are completely open about their motives.
“We make no apologies,” Mr. Lynch said by telephone on Friday. “We are doing what a newspaper ought to do, which is to take positions. We are very consistent — pro-conservative, pro-business, pro-military — and we are trying to make a newspaper that gets people excited about this city and its future.”
This passage was also hilarious:
Many of us grew up in towns where the daily paper was in bed with civic leaders, but the shared interest was generally expressed on the editorial page. Occasionally, appropriate lines of inquiry would be suspiciously ignored in coverage, but the news pages were just that, news.
At The U-T, which was known as The San Diego Union-Tribune when it was owned by the Copley family, that pretense was obliterated from the start. Mr. Manchester was no stranger to politics, having contributed $125,000 in support of Proposition 8, which bans gay marriage in California, and suffering some boycotts at his hotels as a result.
Maybe that was true in Missoula, but anyone who grew up in New York never found "just news" on the front of The New York Times. Carr concluded by worrying that the conservative U-T bias will dominate the town:
In a sense, it’s back to the future for newspapers, to a time when they didn’t make much money but could enrich their owners by advancing their agendas in other areas. But papers were legion then; even midsize American cities supported many varieties — liberal and conservative, morning and afternoon, pro-business and pro-socialist.
In San Diego, there’s a strong weekly, The San Diego Reader, and a great news Web site, Voice of San Diego. But The U-T has the brawn and ubiquity of a daily newspaper. As the only game in town, it seems determined to not just influence the conversation, but control it.
Even in this piece, Carr can't admit that the unlabeled media properties he's pushing as "great" are the leftist ones. Naturally, the Reader agrees with his bias entirely: “David Carr, media columnist for the New York Times, precisely pinpoints what is wrong with the Union-Tribune's current ownership and management in a column slated to appear tomorrow (June 11).”
Voice of San Diego pounded the Times line, and hard: "The paper has become more partisan, provocative and petulant, drawing the attention of media analysts who say it's an important national case study to see whether ideologues like Manchester are solely interested in the newspaper industry because they can use it for their personal political gain."
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Comments
Nice And Interesting
Submitted by Crystal Gouldey on Mon, 06/11/2012 - 7:49am.
David Carr your all the post are very interesting and informative which give me so much ideas.
Admins
Submitted by Radical1979 on Mon, 06/11/2012 - 8:15am.
We've got a bspmmer here!
Member 4 hours when comment made
Submitted by Chaitealover on Mon, 06/11/2012 - 3:34pm.
How about spending a little time here to learn what this site is about before posting an advertisement as a comment and praising the person this article is criticizing?
Chai
Soo... ?
Submitted by dmntd1 on Mon, 06/11/2012 - 8:47am.
I guess the infiltration of the media and academia by the left is being squarshed with the realization that the right can do the same thing (but, dare I say, do it better?).
We dare not tempt them with weakness. For only when our arms are sufficient beyond doubt can we be certain beyond doubt that they will never be employed.
It's the usual leftist childish nonsense about the sandbox
Submitted by drsamherman on Mon, 06/11/2012 - 9:36am.
of public opinion and information.
The left is clinging to the obsession they have with controlling the terms of public discussion through their stranglehold on most major news sources, and conservatives are starting to enter that arena. The leftists do not like it, and they hence offer the usual complaints that they are not biased, that they have no agenda, etc.
Perhaps the worst self-delusion I see among the leftists controlling major media is the fantasy that they are somehow given a "sacred public trust" to be "dispassionate, unbiased and advance social justice" with their blatant propaganda. They not only mangled that "sacred public trust" decades ago, but they buried its rotting corpse in a shallow grave where the public can see and smell its decomposition. The leftists try like anything to dissemble, deflect and dodge, but there it is--passionate (more like obsessive), unbiased (feh...like Mussolini was "ubiased") and advancing their own careers and openly entering into fights when their ideas, endorsements or positions are challenged. Let the right do the same and they have a temper tantrum the likes of which used to earn the offender a good spanking.
The only story here
Submitted by Tugboat Phil on Mon, 06/11/2012 - 9:43am.
is anyone that still remains in the "published" news business, expressing shock over this. Most every print newspaper or magazine that is an established name in the trade is steadily losing readership. Much of it is because of the ease and speed of electronic news sites. But the dinosaurs that leaned heavily to the left lost many of us years ago because of their inability to disguise their political views.
Whenever the nearest "local" paper, the Roanoke Times, has people at the entrance to Lowe's or Home Depot handing out free papers, I always ask them the same question; "Have you changed your editorial staff in the last year?" When they say No, I politely decline the gift.
Not only is David Carr another lib NY Slimes writer..
Submitted by NJRightWinger12 on Mon, 06/11/2012 - 11:26am.
But he was a lousy QB, too! Is he still playing? Or has he moved onto greener-read:liberal-pastures?
Gee,
Submitted by Chaitealover on Mon, 06/11/2012 - 12:26pm.
I may just start reading the U-T again. I gave it up years ago because of its liberal bias, I'd love to see the newspaper in this military town actually supporting the military.
Chai