Who'll Unplug Big Media? Stay Tuned
Robert W. McChesney & John Nichols
The media reform movement has made a few inroads, but there's still a long way to go.

Robert W. McChesney & John Nichols
The media reform movement has made a few inroads, but there's still a long way to go.
Michael J. Copps : Federal Communications Commission (FCC)
As we struggle for media democracy, let's take encouragement from the early actions of the FCC.
Jerold M. Starr : John McCain
A Pittsburgh public television activist explains how McCain broke the rules while doing the bidding of a media mogul.
Robert Scheer : Journalists & Journalism
It's absurd for the New York Times to cast him as a tool of corporate media, when he's been in the forefront of trying to rein it in.
If FCC chairman Kevin Martin prevails, Americans will be stuck with one-size-fits-all media and a downsized democracy.
Jeffrey Chester : Internet & New Media
Google's bid to acquire DoubleClick will make it the most powerful player in interactive marketing on the planet. But it poses threats to our privacy, politics and democratic aspirations for the Internet.
Eric Alterman : Wall Street Journal
Will Rupert Murdoch's play to own and operate the Wall Street Journal have a silver lining for liberals?
Barbara Ehrenreich : Media Analysis
The Philadelphia Inquirer is planning to run an editorial column sponsored by Citizens Bank. What's next--the Phillip Morris column on health issues?
The jury selection for the trial of a Canadian press baron accused of looting shareholder earnings reveals popular discontent with the corporate elite.
Clint Hendler : Publishing Industry
No matter what you think of The New Republic's politics, the public sphere will suffer if the magazine becomes homogenized by its new corporate owner.
K.A. Dilday : Journalists & Journalism
Beset with financial woes, a labor-management power struggle and an aging leftist readership, the legendary French newspaper is on the brink of extinction.
Nicholas von Hoffman : Journalists & Journalism
In cities across America, reporters are being laid off, TV stations are cutting back coverage and the newspaper industry is crumbling to dust. When it all shakes out, will Wikipedia be as good as it gets?
Eric Alterman : Journalists & Journalism
Journalism's in crisis, crushed by Wall Street and tarnished by a failure of nerve. As newspapers die and fake news proliferates, who will provide reliable information vital to a functioning democracy?
Kristal Brent Zook : Federal Communications Commission (FCC)
FCC commissioners heard testimony in New York this week about how media consolidation stifles diversity, grassroots community and the creativity of independent musicians and artists.
John Nichols : Federal Communications Commission (FCC)
It's official: Revelations that the FCC suppressed reports on the danger of media consolidation prove the agency is overwhelmingly biased in favor of big media.
Jeffrey Chester : Internet & New Media
With Congress poised to pass legislation that rewrites the Telecom Act, here are ten action items for a media reform agenda.
After a decade of strategic mergers, impulsive couplings and messy divorces--the birth of new media--this chart shows that national media landscape still bears the oversized footprints of a handful of giant corporations.
Mark Crispin Miller : Journalists & Journalism
The press that once went hoarse over Monica Lewinsky's dress is largely silent over the Bush regime's vast abuses of power.
Americans overwhelmingly oppose media consolidation, but the FCC is poised to further relax media ownership rules.
In the guise of giving us what we want, media giants have created a culture defined by untrammeled greed, the worship of power and a ruthless disregard for the public good.
Markos Moulitsas Zúniga : Internet & New Media
The fight over media consolidation is anachronistic. Progressives should focus instead on mastering the tools of new media--it's here, not in the corporate boardroom, where the new media wars will be fought and won.
Corporations used to disguise their attempts to masquerade as "indie," but now they've become invisible to the naked eye.
National media are increasingly catering to the highly mobile, globalized, mostly white middle class, leaving those who can't afford access to slip into a separate and unequal world of second-class information.
Paul D. Miller : Internet & New Media
The music industry lives in fear of downloadable media, but artists have the vision to re-engineer our collective psyche.

