washingtonpost.com
In Other, Non-Dog News . . .
By E. J. Dionne Jr.
Friday, August 31, 2007; A15
Who could not laugh about the news that Leona Helmsley left her dog "Trouble" a $12 million trust fund while cutting two of her grandchildren out of her will? The queen of mean, as the tabloids called her, commanded that when "Trouble dies, her remains shall be buried next to my remains in the Helmsley mausoleum." But maybe Helmsley's obsessions aren't as different from our own as we'd like to think. Consider the contrast between the extravagant coverage afforded Michael Vick for his guilty plea on a federal dogfighting charge and the scant attention given a new Census Bureau finding that the number of Americans without health insurance had risen by 2.2 million, to 47 million. The number of Americans under 18 without health insurance increased to 8.7 million. The Census report was a one-day story largely buried on the inside pages. So do we care more about dogs than uninsured kids?
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Why is it that the poor -- and, for that matter, the struggling middle class, too -- disappear in the media, barricaded behind our fixation on celebrity, our titillation with personal sin and public shame, our fascination with every detail of every divorce and affair of every movie star, rock idol and sports phenom? The hiding of the poor is systematic, according to a new study of 38 months of nightly news broadcasts on CBS, NBC and ABC by Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR), a left-of-center organization devoted to media criticism. "With rare exceptions, such as the aftermath of Katrina," the study found, "poverty and the poor seldom even appear on the evening news -- and when they do, they are relegated mostly to merely speaking in platitudes about their hardships."
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To do justice to the networks, they provided extraordinary coverage of Hurricane Katrina in 2005... But the Katrina coverage stood out precisely because it was the exception. It took a hurricane to sweep poor people into the news -- and they didn't stay there long. There is another lesson from Katrina: that covering poverty and inequality makes for compelling journalism. At its best, broadcast news shines its powerful beacon on problems we have ignored and injustices we can remedy. On May 21, 1968, CBS News broadcast "Hunger in America," a documentary reported by the legendary Charles Kuralt and David Culhane. One of the viewers that night was a U.S. senator named George McGovern.
"It was 1968, and I remember saying, 'Why are they looking at hunger in the United States?' "
"I said to my family that was watching the documentary with me, 'You know, it's not that little boy who should be ashamed, it's George McGovern, a United States senator, a member on the Committee on Agriculture.' " From that moment arose one of the most fruitful bipartisan alliances in congressional history: South Dakota Democrat McGovern teamed up with Kansas Republican Sen. Bob Dole to reform food stamps and expand other nutrition programs. To this day, McGovern and Dole are working together in the cause of ending hunger. Celebrity stories will always be with us. It's more challenging and infinitely more important to tell the next story of the boy or girl living in the shadows that will shake our consciences and change our country.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/30/AR2007083001405.html