The Right Opinion
Protesters Occupy the Liberal Media
When the Tea Party movement erupted in the spring of 2009, the media elites dismissed them as corporate-generated "Astroturf" noise. They found them barely worth covering, even to besmirch them.
But when the Occupy Wall Street protests began on Sept. 17, the liberal media was quickly bombarded with complaints from the left that the media were ignoring this massive "news" story. NPR Executive Editor Dick Meyer said the early protests "did not involve large numbers of people, prominent people, a great disruption, or an especially clear objective." So the protesters went out and blocked the Brooklyn Bridge and drew 700 arrests -- voila, a national story.
Contemplate this: The Occupy Wall Street folks drew more broadcast network stories in the first nine days of coverage (with 24 stories) than the Tea Party drew in the first nine months (with 19 stories).
NBC's Michelle Franzen was the first promoter - OK, she calls herself a reporter -- on the scene. "Protesters fed up with the economy and social inequality turned out en masse over the weekend," she announced on "Today" on Oct. 3. "Voicing their discontent and marching for change." Her expert source, Columbia professor Dorian Warren, dutifully proclaimed the Wall Street protests were "a liberal version of the Tea Party" that "could potentially carry over into the 2012 elections and get people to the polls."
So let's get this straight. The protests were like a stumbling little fawn trying to find its legs. They'd been in existence for about two weeks, and NBC was already suggesting the "potential" for what the Tea Party achieved in 2010 -- a massive Democratic wave election in 2012. Journalists are either easily impressed or very energetic practitioners of wishful thinking.
ABC's Dan Harris followed that night to offer his tributes. "This past weekend, 700 people were arrested when they stormed the Brooklyn Bridge. Now major unions are joining in, as are celebrities like Susan Sarandon and Alec Baldwin, and similar protests are popping up across America." It might seem a little funny -- and noteworthy -- to have a protest against the mega-rich with mega-rich movie stars standing around, but it fits the media's "prominent people" standard, so never mind.
This provides a crystal-clear contrast with the first Tea Party events in 2009. "There's been some grassroots conservatives who have organized so-called Tea Parties around the country," NBC's Chuck Todd noted on the April 15, 2009, "Today," but "the idea hasn't really caught on." On ABC, Dan Harris warned viewers that "critics on the left (wonder who?) say this is not a real grassroots phenomenon at all, that it's actually largely orchestrated by people fronting for corporate interests."
The first rhetorical shot that started the Tea Party is credited to CNBC analyst Rick Santelli on Feb. 19, 2009, when he accused the government of "promoting bad behavior" for "losers" who wouldn't pay their mortgages and raised the possibility of a "Chicago Tea Party." CNBC calls it "The Shout Heard 'Round the World," but at the time NBC and the other big three network shows completely ignored it.
The first New York Times story on the Tea Party on Tax Day 2009 came with a sneer: "All of these tax day parties seemed less about revolution and more about group therapy ... people attending the rallies were dressed patriotically and held signs expressing their anger, but offering no solutions."
But when the Times put "Occupy Wall Street" on the front page on Oct. 1, there were no people in need of therapy, and the marchers' lack of solutions was, well, charming. The reporters began like they were writing a movie script. "A man named Hero was here. So was Germ. There was the waitress from the dim sum restaurant in Evanston, Ill. And the liquor store worker," they wrote. "The Google consultant. The circus performer. The Brooklyn nanny." They represented a "noisy occupation" that "lured a sturdily faithful and fervent constituency willing to express discontentment with what they feel is an inequitable financial system until, well, whenever."
These protesters had the Times at "Hello." Journalists who desperately want Obama's re-election are grasping at the narrative of a growing liberal protest movement to mobilize the left into action against the Republicans. They're not just grasping that narrative, they're writing it.
They keep asking what former New York Times Editor Bill Keller is asking: "Is The Tea Party Over?" Keller keeps the party line that the "Tea Party gospel" includes "their sacred right to breathe carbon emissions, swim at polluted beaches and dump their health crises at the emergency room." To the Keller's of the world, the Tea Party is the vampire that won't sleep, and the Occupy protesters are the garlic, which of course is an inappropriate odor.
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7 Comments
wjmccrindle
Wednesday, October 12, 2011 at 9:45 AM
The occupiers are complete idiots, an incoherent rable consisting of marxist dope smoking losers. What a joke, they want a free lunch, arrest the vagrants and they can eat jail food. Liberals are insane, immorral, and hopefully going to get removed from office in another year.
Drifter
Wednesday, October 12, 2011 at 11:45 AM
The masquerade is over and the so-called (by the media) anti-war movement has come out in the open now as what they always were, the anti American movement: CODEPink, ANSWER, firedoglake (progressive blogspot), OccupyWallStreet United for Peace and Justice Veterans for Peace, Velvet Revolution, World Can’t Wait, and many, many others. http://october2011.org/organizationsThis is just a partial listing of subversive organizations, working in these protests to provide cover for the Obama administration and bring our freedom and our country down. These are the groups that the Obama administration endorses! These are the groups that the MSM hides out and helps! As long as the media can keep us fixated on these dolts, they think that our attention will be distracted from the complete failures and outright criminal actions of the grotesque group that, now controls our government.Let's hope that the financing for this doesn't turn out to be our tax money, as it did in Fast & Furious!
Convet
Wednesday, October 12, 2011 at 6:48 PM
The media's irrelevant. I haven't seen it's programming in a decade. From what I've been told, I haven't missed much.
BoFromTexas
Wednesday, October 12, 2011 at 11:35 PM
While the media has been enthusiastic in attempting to discredit the Tea party with absolutely inane assertions, such as we are the ones who use emergency rooms to take care of our non-emergency medical needs, swim at polluted beaches, support the filthy rich, etc., ad nauseum, the media has had to actually create from whole cloth a reason for all these idiots being in New York contributing excrement, trash, unqualified opinions about nearly everything, fulfilling their lifelong aspirations of re-living 1968, and generally being a nuisance to the working folk of New York. It was quite informing to hear one of these persons, a young man who identified himself as a professional sociologist (and therefore qualified to comment with authority on virtually any subject under the sun) who spoke some 200 words or so to a TV reporter, and failed completely to say anything at all. The so-called TV reporter should have said, "Hunh?", but instead treated the guy as if he had said "As for me, give me liberty or give me death!" This is a bunch of pot heads living off their their parents or in-laws, are losers, law breakers, disrespectful, clueless as to political philosophy, oblivious to the bloody obvious, and the best part is that they probably will not vote next November. Too lazy to get to the polls. The rich guys like Soros, Michael Moore, and others like them need to read "A Tale of Two Cities" and figure out which group they are in, and when they get marched to the guillotine by this adoring rabble. Perhaps Soros and his ilk think they will get a pass? Not bloody likely with that New York mob.
Ol'Joe
Thursday, October 13, 2011 at 10:36 AM
The green/mother earth movement and socialism are one and the same. The latter adherants use the tree-hugging nihilist idiots of the world as pawns in their accumulation of power and their enablers work in Hollywood. If they would open their eyes they would know the socialists' prime example, soviet Russia, was not a green earth lovers' garden of Eden?
p3orion
Thursday, October 13, 2011 at 2:11 PM
"This is a bunch of pot heads living off their parents or in-laws, are losers, law breakers, disrespectful, clueless as to political philosophy, oblivious to the bloody obvious, and the best part is that they probably will not vote next November. Too lazy to get to the polls."Don't sugar-coat it, Bo, tell us what you REALLY think!
Mad dog
Thursday, October 13, 2011 at 2:20 PM
Take the guns from "Fast and Furious" and put them to good use on the flea party leftists!