I was working on a post for the beginning of January titled "The Posts I Didn't Write This Year," hoping to sum up the industry news that had happened over the previous months that I hadn't written anything about for the blog. I generally like to give big news stories some time and distance before I say anything, because I am not a journalist, but a third-rate commentator, and throwing in my barely-informed two cents is a lot less helpful than pointing people toward the actual discourse being conducted by smarter people. Also, frankly, it takes me longer than most to get a handle on what is actually going on.
However, I do have an interest in keeping track of how the media landscape and technology are changing and transforming with the times, especially where the news is concerned. And in the past few months, things have gotten very bad very quickly. I kept delaying the post as more kept happening, and having to rejigger the analysis. I'm at the point where if I don't post something now, I'm just going to keep rewriting the post forever, beyond any shred of topicality.
So, I wrote a post, roughly a year ago, titled "The News is Bad," where I talked about the rightward shift of CNN and the Washington Post curbing political opinions. At the time of writing, former CNN contributor Don Lemon and other members of the media were just arrested for reporting on a protest in a church in Minneapolis. How did we get here? Well, here's a quick rundown of the biggest media-related items from the past five months:
After the death of Charlie Kirk in September, "Jimmy Kimmel Live" was suspended for a week over the host's innocuous comments about the MAGA response, and Nexstar and Sinclair stations further preempted the program for a few additional days. This was part of an ongoing campaign by extremists to turn Kirk into a martyr figure, and use his death as an excuse to silence his critics and target his perceived enemies. The backlash against Kimmel's suspension was swift and the financial fallout to the broadcasters was apparently significant enough to stave off any similar censorship attempts.
Things really ramped up in October, when David Ellison appointed right-wing news commentator Bari Weiss, who has no journalism experience, as the editor-in chief of CBS News. There was a showdown in December over her attempt to pull a "60 Minutes" segment called "Inside CECOT," which quickly leaked, and was finally aired a month later. Ratings have dropped for all CBS News shows, as Trump has sought to use the organization as a propaganda outlet, and Weiss was recently caught encouraging staffers to quit. As for Ellison, he's currently trying to buy Warner Brothers, despite a deal already in place for an acquisition by Netflix. The Trump administration has signalled that they're willing to help him.
The major American newspapers continue to be in pretty dire straits. The Jeff Bezos-owned Washington Post is undergoing massive layoffs, and the DOJ seized documents from a Post reporter's home a few weeks ago. The Trump administration has continually been hostile to the press, threatening editors and reporters over any perceived negative coverage. The chilling effect on reporting has been apparent across the board, especially with the recent coverage of the extrajudicial ICE killings in Minnesota, where the White House pushed a false narrative that blamed the victims for their deaths.
Over on the platform formerly known as Twitter, owned by Elon Musk, the Grok AI was found to be generating lewd pictures of real minors in December, and no meaningful action was taken to curb this. What's worse, despite some hand-wringing and threats, almost no major private or governmental organizations did anything in response. There have been some signs of a user exodus, but this seems to have been spurred mostly by content creators trying to protect their work from being fed into the AI grist mill.
Tik-Tok passed into the hands of Trump-friendly new owners this month, and immediately started censoring topics and banned a prominent Palestinian reporter. This deal was so that Tik-Tok wouldn't be banned in the US outright. A Kafkaesque new terms of service agreement has users looking for a replacement, but none have emerged yet.
Finally, due to the Trump administration clawing back funding, The Corporation for Public Broadcasting is officially shutting down. So far, this is affecting weekend news broadcasts and access for rural stations. And if you haven't heard yet, production of "Sesame Street" is moving from HBO to Netflix starting this year.
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