By Jay D. Homnick on 9.29.04 @ 12:04AM
The big media moguls wanted Campaign Finance. They got it. Now they’re finished.
N. MIAMI BEACH -- Ouch, a real live conspiracy. Indeed if Bertie
Wooster said "I fancy that the campaign blokes are mixing it up
with the tabloid chaps", Jeeves would have one sure response:
"Rather."
Now, I am a confirmed hater of Conspiracy Theory. No, not the
movie in which Mel Gibson and Julia Roberts passionately cross
paths. I mean the whole black-helicopter Rockefeller Rothschild
Bildesberger Zionist-Occupied-Government new-world-order fever
swamps of militant paranoia. I so resist stipulating facts not in
evidence that I devote my spare time to finding Nicole Simpson's
real killer.
But even paranoids have enemies, even beekeepers get hives, even
roofers get shingles, and even a skeptic can have an epiphany. The
triple play combo of Burkett to Mapes to Lockhart to Rather did
some fancy footwork but fell short on the legwork. We all know BS
when we C it. It's as plain as the nose on Jane Pauley's face (and
why is she making the true dough?), a conspiracy of the meatier
variety.
And who is responsible? Simple. It's the CFR. The Council for
Foreign Relations? Oh, no. Those guys are more chuckle factory than
wily wonks. I'm talking about Campaign Finance Reform. Sometimes
what goes around comes around right in the first go-round.
The McCain-Feingold Bill, signed into law by President Bush in
some convoluted reverse psychology strategy, places all sorts of
limitations on campaign adverts, advertently shrinking the power of
media buyers. This in turn creates a vacuum which is automatically
filled by the media owners. And that tells you all you need to know
about the media's unabashed backing of the unconstitutional
McCain-Feingold, rendering it so popular that the President feared
that if he would veto he would be finito.
So now here we are, the very first Presidential contest under
the new regime, and the media moguls are gleefully rubbing their
hands, anticipating the coronation of their guy. And what a guy!
Yale vs. Yale, which we can sell as smart Yale vs. dumb Yale. Skull
and Bones vs. Skull and Bones; we make it nice club guy vs. snotty
club guy. Lib vs. Con, been there done that, that's boring, but
what puts our guy over the top is War Hero vs. City Slacker.
And so there we were, on the brink, the cusp, the precipice,
ushering in the new era. A new age of government of the media, by
the media, for the media. (Better than Clinton's "of the peephole,
by the peephole, for the peephole.") All it lacked was a portentous
piece of foolscap to wave in front of the camera and Bush would
wear the fool's cap. The media monopoly would hold him to just
four, taking him from Pennsylvania Avenue to Luxury Tax, stuck
between Park Place and Boardwalk.
It should have worked. It could have worked. Years ago, their
musty documents would have passed whatever muster an incurious
print media would demand. But here is where irony meddled with
their filings.
BECAUSE YOU SEE, they were right, nature abhors a vacuum, and
killing the ads left a vacuum which they were standing by to fill.
But they forgot a basic principle of both economics and physics.
Namely, that the space left open is a magnet for new entrepreneurs
in business, new predators in biology, new forces in physics. And
it is very difficult to predict the character of the newly arriving
players.
Close down a crack house, you may get a brothel. If you didn't
like the smells from the Thai restaurant, wait until the Pakistani
cuisine comes instead. Divorce your spendthrift wife and get three
high-maintenance girlfriends. Banish the cat for messing on the rug
and get a family of mice. And how about the guy who solves his
midlife crisis with a motorcycle and winds up a paraplegic?
So sure enough the ads are shrinking and the old media is
standing by to spread their wings but, lo and behold, all that
lebensraum got sucked up by a new media. (To all the purists who
think "a media" is incorrect, go dangle a participle and let us
have our fun.) And these guys do their homework. Drudge will do the
drudgery. The bloggers are loggers, too, doing the heavy lifting of
tedious research. One CBS guy complained about being critiqued by
"guys in pyjamas"; the mantle of journalism is now available in
wool for $2499 or in flannel for $24.99.
As Mrs. Mantis told the late Mr. Mantis, beware of what you prey
for. How deliciously ironic that the network guys who could
outshout P. J. O'Rourke get upstaged by the PJ guys. They forged a
tale to put Bush in the dock, and now they are being chased through
the bush for their forged docs. Rather and company thought that by
pushing McCain-Feingold they would succeed in air piracy, instead
they are caught promoting cons. Outraged they shout: "It's a
conspiracy!"
topics:
Economics, Business, Constitution, Law, Pakistan