In this collection of courageously irreverent columns, critic Norman Solomon details the most recent excesses and failures of America's self-censoring mainstream media. The “deceptions” of the media that he alludes to are not simply those that have to do with selectivity of sources or an obvious imbalance in the information offered but also those more clever forms of media distortion that derive from subtle shadings in the use of words, the preferential use of favorable modifiers, and the calculated instruments of denigration.
Norman Solomon is an American journalist, media critic, antiwar activist, and former candidate in 2012 for the United States House of Representatives.
Solomon is a longtime associate of the media watch group Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting (FAIR).
In 1997 he founded the Institute for Public Accuracy, which works to provide alternative sources for journalists, and served as its executive director until 2010.
Solomon's weekly column, "Media Beat", was in national syndication from 1992 to 2009.
This is a collection of short essays first published in 1997 and 1998, on themes of media consolidation, and how news subjects are chosen and framed (or ignored) in collusion with power. There are also some well-aimed left-hooks at the Clinton administration.
However, although Solomon's commentary is breezy and engaging, the collection is of necessity somewhat superficial, and in places the analysis becomes repetitive. Indeed, when compared with Nick Davies' devastating investigation of the UK newspaper industry published ten years later, Solomon's observations are actually somewhat pedestrian.
There are, though, some useful references to other sources, and there is an element of reportage when Solomon writes about his interactions with figures in the media (one of the more interesting articles includes a personal reminiscence of George Seldes).
Two pieces are lengthier and more substantial than the others: an acidic appraisal of Katharine Graham's memoir, and a survey of how think-tanks work with media. The latter was prompted by Rupert Murdoch’s association with the Cato Institute, although Murdoch has less of a presence in the book overall than Barry Diller.