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					Originally Posted by nevergaveitathought  they may be for sale but only to agents and actors they agree with and admire | 
	
 
Apologies for the long read. I won't apologize if it is too challenging to read for some. Not my problem. I       expect most don't have much free time to keep up with French       Sociologists or the culture of the art world, let alone much of       any French or English history these days and how it relates to the current sorry state of today's journalism. 
The           Generation that Wrecked the Media
      There's a reason journalism sucks.
Leighton         Akira Woodhouse
     When I was in grad school, my favorite social theorist (we had       those in grad school, or at least I did) was the French       sociologist Pierre Bourdieu. I bring this up not just to flaunt my       intellectual pedigree, but also because I think he’s worth talking       about at this particular moment in the history of American mass       media. Bourdieu’s analytical framework is, in my view, extremely       useful for understanding some of the reasons we as a civilization       are steadily losing our grip on reality.
      
      Bourdieu’s most significant intellectual contribution, I think       it’s fair to say, was to our understanding of how elites construct       their perceptions of the world. A lot of sociologists spend their       time observing the poor, oppressed and marginalized (Bourdieu       would have something to say about why), like anthropologists       surveying an interesting and exotic culture on a distant       continent. Bourdieu took the same approach, but shifted his gaze       back to the intelligentsia itself: specifically to artists and       intellectuals (in particular, to academics), and more generally to       the larger universe of what we call today “the professional       managerial class.”
      
      Like a good sociologist, Bourdieu was primarily interested in       power. Nowadays, the concept of “power,” when wielded by       academics, gets a bad rap as some kind of postmodernist woo woo,       largely due to a misunderstanding of Foucault. But Bourdieu’s       conception of power is intuitive enough to be familiar to any MBA       student. He regarded power as capital: the resources you amass       that enable you to amass yet more resources. In economics, this       conception is elementary. Bourdieu’s insight was to perceive the       logic of markets and capital at work in all of our social       interactions, no matter how non-capitalist.
      
      The more non-capitalist the enterprise, in fact, the more       revealing are Bourdieu’s accounts of the market mechanisms at       work, because these enterprises tend to be the ones that put a       great deal of effort into maintaining the illusion that there are       no market forces at work at all. Indeed they depend entirely on       that illusion to function.
      
      The most obvious example of this paradox is the art world.
      
      Everyone understands that there is a commercial market in art that       conforms to the conventional rules of any other commercial market.       Yet still, the monetary value of any particular work of art       depends, in part, on its being regarded by its creator, its       seller, its buyer, and every other actor in the marketplace as       somehow, essentially, non-commercial. Even while participating in       the vulgar buying and selling of art, everyone sort of buys into       the idea that despite the price tag on it, an artistic work is       metaphysically different from any other commodity. It is a unique       and transcendental object that is much more than the sum of its       crass material parts — that’s what makes it “art,” and that’s what       makes it expensive. Its value as a commercial object depends,       precariously, upon its existence as an object that stands outside       of commerce.
      
      Indispensable as the commercial market may be to the material       perpetuation of the artistic profession, the values of that market       — the values that are reflected on a painting’s price tag — are       the values of a world that is alien to that of art. When defined       by its most faithful practitioners, art is about beauty, meaning,       and truth. It isn’t merely an instrument for trade or decoration,       it is an end in itself. It is ”art for art’s sake.” 
      
      Commerce, on the other hand, is about whatever sells. Its function       in the creation of art is merely contingent, a regrettable fact of       life. To the extent that commercial values influence art, they are       corrupting (Warhol’s subversion of this conceit merely highlighted       the central role it played in the ideology of the artist). This is       one reason why commercially unsuccessful artists always have the       convenient option of regarding their commercially successful       rivals with open suspicion, and consoling themselves with the       reassurance that their own lack of commercial success is in fact a       testament to their artistic integrity.
      
      So within the art world, you have, on the one hand, values that       are intrinsic to that world, and on the other, values that wield       an influence upon it but that are of a foreign origin — in this       case, values from that extraterrestrial planet of money and       commerce. And within the artistic professions and the industries       that orbit it you have people who are variously aligned with one       set of values versus the other. Where a person stands in this       continuum depends upon numerous factors, including what their job       is (artist, collector, agent), where they are in their career, and       what choices they’ve made.
      
      Naturally, trade-offs are involved in these alignments. If you’re       an artist and you find yourself largely lining up with the values       of commerce (but never too aligned with them, as your buyers need       to continue to consider you a Serious Artist to sustain their       belief in the monetary value of your work), you may find yourself       well-remunerated for it, and you may achieve a certain level of       fame. However, in the process you may lose a certain caché, an       intangible sense of authenticity that is highly prized within the       insular world of art. You can have commercial success, but you       cannot at the same time claim to belong to the avant-garde. You       can have one, you can have the other, or you can have neither, but       you can’t have both. It’s against the rules.
      
      In its broadest strokes, such is the structure, Bourdieu argued,       of every field of professional practice, including — and this is       where I find him particularly useful for understanding the moment       we’re living through — the media.
      
      When I came of age, in the nineties, everyone used to complain       about the commercialization of journalism. This was a time when       the TV networks still dominated the news business, but were vying       for control with the upstart cable news networks. The brutal       competition for ad dollars to sell SUVs and Gillette razor blades       led to new lows in the desperate search for ratings, from nearly a       year of nonstop, wall-to-wall coverage of the OJ Simpson trial to       the cringeworthy spectacle of Ron Burgundy lookalikes at oversized       desks reporting on cum stains and vaginal penetrations by cigar in       the Oval Office.
      
      As in the art world, the complaint was that the kind of tabloid       shlock that enticed commercial advertisers was a debasement of the       lofty journalistic standards upheld by such historical       journalistic luminaries as Edward R. Murrow and Walter Cronkite:       the values of accuracy, fidelity to fact and freedom from bias —       “journalism for journalism’s sake,” if you will. It was the values       of the market intruding upon and corrupting the inherent values of       journalism.
      
      Today, the advertiser-driven revenue model for media is broken,       and you don’t hear that particular complaint so much anymore,       except maybe occasionally as an artifactual aspersion born of       habit. The media are no longer so beholden to their corporate       sponsors, that revenue stream having been swapped, with mixed       success, for a subscription-based model. Journalists under the age       of 50 no longer pine for a return to the purer values of       pre-commercial journalism as embodied by the composed, objective       style of Walter Cronkite. On the contrary, the most strident       voices are calling for an explicit rejection of those values.
      
      Wesley Lowery, the crusading journalist who began his extremely       high-profile career reporting on the riots in Ferguson, Missouri       after the shooting of Michael Brown, is now at CBS News, the       network that was once home to both Murrow and Cronkite. But Lowery       specifically rejects the “model of professed objectivity” of those       historical giants, in favor of a standard based on what he calls       “moral clarity.”
      
      Moral clarity is a slippery concept that Lowery illustrates mainly       with anecdotes and hypotheticals, but it seems to amount to       bringing a reporter’s or an editor’s personal political worldview       into the framing of a story — calling a politician’s words       “racist” if the reporter deems them to be so, for example, or not       running an op-ed if its publication could have what an editor       judges to be negative social consequences.
      
      Like the incessant pressure to produce ratings in order to sell       commercials in the 1990s, these new standards that Lowery has       proposed are not the native values of journalism; they are foreign       imports. They are the values of politics and activism.
      
      In The Rules of Art, Bourdieu described the emergence of the       bohemian lifestyle in nineteenth century Paris, which was what       incubated the “art for art’s sake” values of the art world. In the       first half of that century, the French secondary school system had       expanded much more rapidly than the French economy had. That left       a surplus of young men from the bourgeois classes with secondary       school educations, but with a dearth of employment prospects in       line with their middle-class aspirations.
      
      French secondary schools had traditionally educated the children       of aristocrats, and they still focused primarily on the classical       humanities favored by the aristocracy. This fresh batch of       downwardly-mobile, would-be elites had thus been trained in arts       and letters, and so, lacking the opportunity to enter stable       careers in government administration, they entered the literary       and artistic professions that were available to them.
      
      They led a precarious existence, renting out squalid garrets and       living hand to mouth. But as a cohort, they became a community,       and as a community, they created a culture. That culture made a       virtue out of the necessity of their immiserated existence,       celebrating poverty as the liberating condition for authentic       artistic expression. They lived not for money, they convinced       themselves, but for art. The artistic act was not just a means to       an end of economic prosperity, but was its own life-affirming       justification, and they were living that principle without       compromise. The Parisian bohemians cultivated the starving artist       ethos that’s familiar to us almost two centuries later.
      
      Something similar, I suspect, is happening today, in the United       States, in the media industry. For generations, a four-year,       liberal arts education has been regarded as the golden ticket to       upward mobility for middle class families and working class       families aspiring to ascend into the middle class. For most of       that time, the promise has more or less been kept, even as, for       decades, we have seen gradually diminished returns on increasingly       expensive tuitions. Despite those strains, higher education still       consistently paid for itself in the form of higher promised       incomes for decades to come.
      
      Then, suddenly, in 2008, the floor fell out from under the US       economy, dumping the job market into the sewer for the next       several years. Cohorts of humanities-trained liberal arts college       graduates made the traditional post-college pilgrimages to New       York, Los Angeles and San Francisco, only to be forced to settle       for barista jobs and unpaid internships instead of the entry-level       career-track jobs they had been led to believe awaited them. The       lucky few among them that found gainful employment crowded into       the ballooning tech sector, one of the only bright spots on a       dismal landscape. And a handful of them entered the suddenly       hyper-competitive, though still rapidly sinking, New York media       industry.
      
      The media sector having been gutted and degraded for years by the       same economic forces that continued to inflate the tech bubble,       liberal arts college graduates who, a generation before, would       have been corralled into junior copy editing jobs suddenly found       themselves qualified for positions as deskilled and casualized       staff reporters and columnists, albeit at substantially eroded       salaries. This new, premature generation of high-profile media       professionals then imprinted upon the industry at large a       worldview that had been shaped by the particular experience of       their specific cohort — the experience of sudden, unexpectedly       downgraded economic aspirations.
      
      As with the Parisian bohemians, the collective experience of       economic recession at the very start of the careers of the       educated American millennials engendered a generational culture       with its own, distinctive value system, one that mythologized       their misery. Unlike their nineteenth century counterparts,       however, the educational training of this cohort was not imbued       with the glorification of classical literature and art; it was       steeped in the hyper-political consciousness of the modern       American university.
      
      It was with this sensibility that they made a virtue of the       necessity of their precarity. Rather than invent an ethos of       artistic liberation borne of poverty, as the bohemians had, they       imagined their experience of economic alienation and unfulfilled       aspiration as one of collective marginalization and oppression,       and held up that misfortune as a badge of honor. They saw in their       own economic and social dislocation the heroic struggles of       oppressed racial minorities, as well those of women, gays, and       other groups whose histories of liberation they had been taught       about in college. They found dignity and pride in their relative       unhappiness, and oppression and injustice in the world that had       made them so unhappy.
      
      If the ethos of the Parisian bohemians was the ethos of the       artist, the ethos of this American cohort was the ethos of the       political activist. Those among them who flocked into mass media       jobs, both at legacy institutions like The New York Times and       digital upstarts like Gawker, Jezebel and Vox brought with them       this set of values, which were just as extrinsic to the native       values of journalism as the commercialism of the 1990s was. Later,       when The New York Times updated its technology infrastructure to       compete with its scrappy digital rivals, it lured in yet more       members of this cohort from tech sector jobs. These new hires had       even less connection to the traditional values of journalism than       those who came into the profession straight out of college — and       they pushed the activist ethos at The Times further still. Among       the pitchfork-wielding Times employees calling for the head of       James Bennett, the opinion editor who had published an infamous       piece by Senator Tom Cotton calling for last summer’s riots to be       put down with the National Guard, were coder monkeys and user       interface designers and app developers who were scandalized by the       discovery that some of the older Times journalists saw their jobs       as providing the reading public with a diversity of perspectives,       rather than advocating on behalf of a particular political       ideology.
      
      This is where we are left today. We are left with a media industry       increasingly untethered from the values that its most devoted       practitioners had once defined for themselves, and that is instead       beholden to values borrowed from a different enterprise of human       activity altogether, that of political activism. We are left with       a media that measures the newsworthiness of an article by its       perceived political consequences, that sees it as within its       mandate to literally rewrite history and then teach the revised       version to school children, that dismisses basic facts as fantasy       if they are perceived to be politically useful to malevolent       actors, that tells partisan audiences what they want to hear no       matter its veracity and just buries its mistakes and its lies when       they are proven as such.
      
      It’s a media industry that mistakes its own, parochial view of the       world, one shaped by its members’ particular biographical       experiences, for a set of universal truths about injustice and       oppression, truth and falsehood, right and wrong. Its hallmark is       the self-importance and self-certainty of the activist, who comes       to the world not with questions, but with answers and an agenda       for change. It is self-righteous and incurious, rigid and       intolerant, quick to moralize and slow to empathize. It is running       on the fumes of the credibility it had amassed in its earlier       instantiation, and it is, increasingly, of no use to anyone not       already aligned with its agenda and bought into its vision of       social transformation. It’s the misdirected outrage of a jilted       generation, inflicting its vengeance upon the rest of us.