| The New Yorker
2003-03-03
What Liberal Media?, by Eric Alterman (Basic; $25). Alterman,
a columnist for The Nation, says that, to the extent that
the liberal media still exists, "I work in the middle
of it, and so do many of my friends. And guess what? It's
filled with right-wingers." His thesis, a response
to recent books by the conservatives Ann Coulter and Bernard
Goldberg, is that liberal media outlets take pains to feature
opinion from all across the political spectrum (and are
in some cases veering rightward); meanwhile, the right-wing
media—a well-funded empire of radio stations, TV shows,
and magazines—pursues an overtly partisan agenda.
A polemic is nothing without passion, and Alterman's argumentative
vigor is engaging, although his focus sometimes drifts,
and he can happily spend an entire paragraph upbraiding
Howard Kurtz for having said that William Kristol's being
a Mets fan proves him to be "contrarian." Like
most media commentators, Alterman probably overestimates
the influence of media commentators, but the meticulous
care with which his arguments are sourced and footnoted
is in commendable contrast to the efforts of some of his
more fire-breathing conservative opponents. |