Two weeks of media melodrama bracket a tumultuous election that shook up American politics, putting a spotlight on the people who presumably report on the spectacle but more and more are out there strutting on the stage.
Keith Olbermann will be back from the on-camera dead tomorrow night after his constituency, and many journalists, showered NBC with Tea Partyish rage. But there should be no unalloyed joy over his resurrection, which only confirms what critic David Carr calls “the Foxification of the cable universe.”
Olbermann’s return will correct an absurdity but do nothing for what Jon Stewart calls Sanity. As Carr points out:
“The shift of audiences toward cable news outlets–with their manifest agendas–as sources of truth and transparency may have something to do with a credibility gap that now confronts more mainstream news outfits. Lately, the idea of objective journalism has been on a pretty rough ride (that means you, CNN), with viewers deciding to align themselves with outlets that share their points of view–warts, agendas and all.”
Stewart’s rally was held on the weekend before the voting. Significantly, when the President appeared on the Daily Show just before it took place, he ruefully suggested that the reminder was coming two years late.
Looking back on 60 Minutes yesterday, Obama remarked that “this country doesn’t just agree with The New York Times editorial page…”