The Media Show: The Changing Face of the News, 1985-1990.

AuthorStokes, Geoffrey

The Media Show: The Changing Face of the News, 1985-1"0. Edwin Diamond. MIT Press, $19.95. From his twin perches at New York University and New York magazine, Ed Diamond has been watching the media for a good many years now. I have occasionally bumped into him as we've covered the same story (most recently, the Daily News strike, during which most of his reporting was indistinguishable from the official management line), and on one memorable evening a few years back, we were bear-baited together on the Morton Downey Jr. show. One of the pioneers of serious media criticism, he works hard at what he does, and though I often-to-usually disagree with him, I take him seriously. But this is not a very good book. It is a loosely connected series of short-attention-span takes on the behavior of the media-mostly American, and mostly TV, with print and the Soviet Union present largely for purposes of comparison-over the second half of the eighties. Particularly in network television, this was a time of corporate conglomeration followed by-at least in the news divisions-corporate cheese-paring. Though The Media Show lacks the vacuum-cleaner exhaustiveness of Ken Auletta's telling of the same story, the processes and outcomes of rampant bottom-linism are generally well reported. What is lacking, as the book's breezy, TV-ish title suggests, is something approaching a theory. Especially in dealing with yesterday's news (and the book is largely composed of recycled...

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