Sound and fury

the making of the punditocracy

322 pages

English language

Published 1999 by Cornell University Press.

OCLC Number:
42022348

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"Never in our history has the American political system seemed so aimless, so irrelevant, and so downright disgraceful as it does today. Television has become dominant to the point that it now not only serves as the sole viable medium for the debate of issues but has also provided the fodder for political platforms, and even budding presidential candidates. "Objective" reporting in the print media is political double-speak, but, even more important, it deprives us of the context that would allow us to make an informed judgment about a given issue. What we are left with, simply, is the punditocracy: the highly visible, extremely well-paid, and seemingly omnipresent pontificators who make their living offering "inside political opinions and forecasts" in the elite national media. It is their debate, rather than any semblance of a democratic one, that determines the parameters of political discourse in the nation today." "In his shrewd, …

5 editions

Subjects

  • Journalism -- Political aspects -- United States
  • Mass media -- Political aspects -- United States
  • Television and politics -- United States
  • Press and politics -- United States
  • Radio talk shows -- United States
  • Television talk shows -- United States
  • United States -- Politics and government -- 20th century