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Bill Clinton is not "taking on the corporate media." Bill made the MSM what it is today! [View All]

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IndianaGreen Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Jan-26-08 10:01 AM
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Bill Clinton is not "taking on the corporate media." Bill made the MSM what it is today!
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Edited on Sat Jan-26-08 10:20 AM by IndianaGreen
Those suffering from Clinton nostalgia seem to suffer also from short-term memories. Bill Clinton is the father of media concentration!

Clear Channel radio stations organized "Support the Troops" rallies which were nothing more than propaganda to get public behind the invasion of Iraq.

One big happy channel?

The Telecommunications Reform Act handed over control of the radio airwaves to a chosen few. Will TV be next?

Editor's note: Second in a series on the consolidation of power and ownership in the media landscape.

- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Eric Boehlert


June 28, 2001 | Pomp and circumstance ruled at the signing into law of the Telecommunications Act of 1996. Held inside the rotunda of the Library of Congress, a bill-signing first, the ceremony featured an array of bipartisan legislators praising the comprehensive package. Newly appointed Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich heralded the act as a jobs and knowledge bill. Vice President Al Gore stressed how public interest was central to the telecommunications revolution.

After speaking by videoconference with students at Calvin Coolidge High School in Washington, Gore watched as President Clinton signed the bill using the same pen President Eisenhower did in 1957 to sign the bill that created the interstate highway system, which had been written by ex-Sen. Gore, D-Tenn., the vice president's father. Clinton then used a digital pen to sign an electronic copy to be posted on the Internet.

In his remarks that day Clinton boasted that the "landmark legislation fulfills my administration's promise to reform our telecommunications laws in a manner that leads to competition and private investment, promotes universal service and provides for flexible government regulation."

Five years later nobody doubts that the law was indeed a landmark -- not only because congressional efforts to update the country's vast communications industries for the first time since the 1930s had themselves dragged on through the '80s and well into the '90s but also because the Telecom Act, as it became known, unleashed unprecedented deregulation and media consolidation, among the most pronounced in American history.

Nowhere has that consolidation been more acutely felt than in radio -- where just two companies, Clear Channel and Infinity, now dominate the nation's commercial radio stations. The result, many longtime radio industry observers feel, has been the degradation of commercial radio as a creative, independent medium.

http://archive.salon.com/tech/feature/2001/06/28/telecom_dereg/index.html
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