Old Media Doesn't Die, It Just Fades Away
A quintessential opinion piece explaining the fall of a bankrupt generation by Victor Davis Hanson is required weekend reading.
Another article essential to understanding the on going Rathergate debacle is in The American Thinker . It's a comprehensive timeline of events leading up to the scandal.
When you've finished the above piece from The Thinker, go the most current sequel, also at The American Thinker . They're on top of it
Commentators have envisioned Rather's fall as symbolic of a "paradigm shift" and the "end of the era" — an event that has crystallized the much larger and ongoing demise of the old establishment media. Allegories from the French Revolution and the emperor without any clothes to the curtain scene in The Wizard of Oz have been evoked to illustrate Rather's dilemma and the hypocrisy of all that went before. We have come a long way since the 1960s: The once-revolutionary pigs taking over the manor are now bloated and strutting on two legs as they feast on silver inside the farmhouse.
First CBS went into denial; then it tried to smear its critics; next it emulated the Nixonian two-step; and finally it stonewalled altogether, hoping that the 24-hour news buzz would fade before it ultimately did. Meanwhile, more and more Americans yawn and have already switched the channel to cable news. We keep waiting for Mike Wallace on Sunday's 60 Minutes to stare down Dan Rather on the set of Tuesday's 60 Minutes, sticking his mike in Dan's face, springing on him a long list of his previously unknown sins, capped off with the zoom shot on a fidgety, sweating Rather, as the tick, tick, tick fades into a primetime commercial.
Another article essential to understanding the on going Rathergate debacle is in The American Thinker . It's a comprehensive timeline of events leading up to the scandal.
When you've finished the above piece from The Thinker, go the most current sequel, also at The American Thinker . They're on top of it
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