WHAT’S ABOUT TO HAPPEN TO CNN
For the journalists at CNN—everywhere, really, but especially at CNN—now is an appropriate time to become very afraid.
All of the U.S. media that is not right wing media has a problem on its hands by the name of Donald Trump. Specifically, the problem is that Trump is obsessed with his own press coverage, thin-skinned, vindictive, and (here is the new part) in charge of the United States government. This gives him a fun new array of tools with which to persecute the press, from the FCC to Congressional allies to the Supreme Court to the bully pulpit. A man who has spent decades sending individual reporters angry, scrawled notes about their stories is now in a position to directly or indirectly punish media outlets that displease him. Yes, we have a First Amendment. But all publications must ultimately bend to financial pressures, and most publications are owned by large companies concerned with the bottom line, and it takes little imagination to see the ways in which Donald Trump could use his shiny new levers of power to lean on media companies and make their lives very unpleasant. Every media outlet will tell you that they do not respond to such outside pressure, but their owners most certainly do.
Yesterday, Trump held an off-the-record meeting with a bunch of TV reporters and executives. Many of them hilariously believed the meeting would be a standard sort of “get to know you” affair to establish agreements for covering the new president; what it was instead, according to various reports, was an opportunity for Trump to harangue them all about how poorly they covered him in the primary. One source told The New Yorker, “He truly doesn’t seem to understand the First Amendment… He thinks we are supposed to say what he says and that’s it.”
Let’s look at the case of CNN. Trump loathes CNN. Politico reports that he “singled out” CNN in yesterday’s meeting, and labeled them “the worst.” There can be little doubt that Donald Trump, a man with the temperament of a child, a narcissist who neither knows nor cares about decorum or precedent, is rubbing his hands with glee at the prospect of making CNN pay for all of their imagined offenses against him over the years.
Last month, AT&T struck a deal to buy Time Warner for $85 billion. This would be one of the biggest media mergers of all time. It cannot happen without government approval. On the campaign trail, Donald Trump, wearing his populist hat, immediately came out against the merger, saying “Deals like this destroy democracy.” Since the election, though, Trump has hired advisers who would seem to be friendly to such a merger, and analysts now believe the deal could get approved after all, if Trump’s personal grudges are outweighed by pro-business advisers.
So if you are a CNN journalist, ask yourself: Do you believe that the CEOs of Time Warner and AT&T value your editorial integrity more than they value this $85 billion merger?
If the answer is “no,” you better get yourself a union.
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