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Media Channel: 26 March 2000

MEDIA: MEGAPHONE FOR THE MASSES OR MORAL SINKHOLE?

Matt Drudge is the best-known brand in the online retailing of hearsay and juicy half-truth. For many in the mainstream media, he represents the worst on online journalism. But views are polarised about cyberhype or the promise of more democratic media.

By MARK DERY, editor of Online Journalist in Darwin


MEDIA coverage of the Internet is equal parts cyberhype and calamity-howling - "It's A Small World" - visions of an electronically interconnected global village on one hand, and on the other, nightmares about the Net as a hunting ground for con artists and pedophiles, an incubator of hysterias and hoaxes.

Unsurprisingly, coverage of online media is no less polarized, hailing the Net as a leveler of the journalistic playing field and damning it as a launching pad for rumormongers who play reporters on TV.

Matt Drudge is the best-known brand in the online retailing of hearsay and juicy half-truth.

A would-be Walter Winchell with a modem who publishes his "Drudge Report" from what he calls "a moldy apartment just off Hollywood Boulevard," Drudge attained overnight notoriety in 1998 when he leaked news of a Newsweek magazine investigation into allegations that President Clinton had had an affair with a White House intern.

For many in the mainstream press, Drudge is the poster boy for all that's wrong with Net journalism. He plays fast and loose with the facts, eschews old-school distinctions between hard news and entertainment, makes no apologies for his neo-conservative bias and appropriates other reporters' stories.

To the journalistic establishment, he and the online disinfotainment he represents are a grim premonition of the death of journalism in the age of instant news, when there's no time to source and ethics are roadkill on the road to the scoop.

To those who extol the Net as a utopian remedy to the fact that freedom of the press, as A.J. Liebling noted, "belongs solely to those that own the printing press," Drudge is the Tom Paine of cyberspace.

Does online journalism hold forth the promise of a more democratic media? Or is it just a bullhorn for the booboisie and the beginning of the end of journalism as we know it?

MediaChannel affiliates and other informed sources weigh in.

Copyright © 2000 Mark Derry and Asia-Pacific Network. This document is for educational and research use. Please seek permission for publication.
http://www.asiapac.org.fj/cafepacific/resources/aspac/4estate51.html


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