The end is near.
As near as your remote control, at least. All you have
to do is turn on, tune in and drop any pretense of news. CNN
Presents, the networks award-winning weekly documentary, has
done just that. Its given up just reporting the news of the day.
Now its predicted it three years into the future.
That was special correspondent Frank Sesnos strategy
on March 19. He claimed his report, We Were Warned: Tomorrows Oil
Crisis, was a dramatic scenario. Those were TV news code words
for something even a child would understand they made it up.
Viewers received an hour-long mixture of hype and
fantasy about the combined threat from a fictional storm and
terrorists who apparently watched the Weather Channel for kicks.
Sesnos disclaimer was just as bad. We can hope it never happens,
but its entirely plausible, he told the audience in somber tones.
In effect, CNN was setting up a perfect storm of its own. If there
are real oil supply problems in the future, the network can say we
told you so while blaming evil oil companies and foolish consumers
for the problem.
The show was set in the year 2009, as the category 5
Hurricane Steve threatened Houston and the Gulf. Sesno portrayed it
as this years monster storm, with winds more than 200 mph. It hit
and devastated the oil industry, sending gas prices shooting above
$6. And things went down hill from there, with gas hitting $8 and
the world economy literally running out of gas.
CNNs timing was perfect. Spring is the beginning of
driving season for most people, and gas prices do tend to rise.
Currently, the average price per gallon is about $2.50, a
significant increase from just a few weeks ago. Thanks to threats
from both Iran and Venezuela to cut off oil, the prices are already
high. A March 13 BusinessWeek analysis estimated that the world
paid the Persian Gulf oil states an extra $120 billion or so last
year because of the premium in prices due to fear of unexpected
supply disruptions. CNN should get kickbacks from OPEC for feeding
that fear premium.
That kind of useful information was left behind as the
network introduced the show as the Best Documentary Series
according to the International Documentary Association. Apparently,
the competition in that category included Battlestar Gallactica,
because the CNN program was the same kind of science fiction minus
the robots. The slide beginning the program stated clearly: The
program you are about to see is set partly in the future. Many of
the events have not happened yet But they could
They already have on FX. Watchers of schlock shock TV
can probably recall the June 5, 2005, FX Networks movie Oil Storm,
though they would be just as happy to forget it. That mock-umentary
looked back on a virtually identical series of catastrophes that
piled on top of one another. It probably will be viewed as the
worst disaster on American soil, ever, proclaimed FX, and viewers
were left to wonder then and now whether that referred to the
movie itself.
In both dramas, al Qaeda was lying in wait,
anticipating the next big hurricane either the Category 5 that CNN
fantasized about or the amazing Category 6 they received on FX. To
hear Sesno spin his yarn, the impact from the storm was made far
worse because of al Qaeda, who have been waiting patiently for this
moment ever since they saw Hurricane Katrina in 2005. If thats
really the case, then the terror group should change its name to the
Weather Underground. (Oops, thats taken.)
America has seen this all before. Hollywood brought us
images of oil conspiracies in 1975s Three Days of the Condor 30
years before George Clooneys Syriana. The Last Chase with Six
Million Dollar Man star Lee Majors portrayed an America where the
gas had run out in 1981. Nothing has changed. Right in the middle
of CNNs latest end-of-the-world flick was an advertisement for the
Discovery Channels Perfect Disaster six-part series.
But that was Hollywood, not an allegedly respectable
cable news network. Sesno used to be a regular on CNN. He once
served as White House correspondent, anchor, and Washington bureau
chief. These days he is a professor of public policy and
communication at George Mason University, where his bio claims he
teaches how the media affects the creation of public policy.
Working in conjunction with CNN, he just gave Americans
a perfect lesson in setting an agenda and he did it the good
old-fashioned way. He made it up.
Dan Gainor is a career journalist and The Boone Pickens Free
Market Fellow. He is also director of the Media Research Centers
Business & Media Institute
www.businessandmedia.org.
The Science Fiction Slant on News
March 22nd, 2006 2:00 PM
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