To borrow a line from Atrios, why is David Brody on my TV?
Yesterday’s Meet the Press panel reminded me of a children’s game: One of these things is not like the other. Five media figures sat around the table: Tim Russert, the NBC News bureau chief; David Broder, a Washington Post veteran journalist sometimes called the “dean” of the DC media establishment; Ted Koppel, the former host of Nightline and a man with a half-century of journalistic experience, Margaret Carlson, a fixture of the DC media scene, with stints at Time, The New Republic, the LA Times, and CNN; and David Brody, a correspondent for a crazed TV preacher’s “news” program.
While progressive voices have been effectively absent from the Sunday morning shows in recent years, Russert has now invited the Capitol Hill correspondent for TV preacher Pat Robertson’s Christian Broadcasting Network on for political analysis four times in as many months. That’s crazy.
But wait, you say, maybe there was a good reason this time. Over the last week, talk about the religious right’s role in the GOP presidential primary process has been everywhere. Dobson & Co. are threatening the party, and the political world is reconsidering exactly how much power the religious right has right now. Brody’s experience at CBN suggests he may have valuable insights into this hot topic.
Except, not so much. Despite ample talk about the presidential race, Russert and Brody never even brought up the subject. As Digby noted:
No mention in the entire round table of the Dobson op-ed in the NY Times, no mention of the threatened schism on the right. Even though they had a “journalist” from the religious right media there at the table, they didn’t say a word about the unrest among the powerful christian conservatives. Why not?
I honestly have no idea.
To reiterate a point I raised several weeks ago, there’s a problem with Brody repeatedly being seated in one of the venerated chairs of the nation’s most-watched Sunday morning show, but it’s not really his fault.
I occasionally check in on Brody’s blog, which isn’t a bad site. It clearly leans to the right, but I wouldn’t describe it as reflexively conservative. Given the presidential candidates’ interest in wooing evangelical Christian voters, Brody even gets some very high-profile national figures to speak with him.
But let’s not lose sight of the context here. Brody is employed by CBN, Robertson’s “news” network. Brody offers political coverage on The 700 Club, most of which is a broadcast featuring a greedy, crazed televangelist offering hate-filled tirades against anyone who doesn’t think like he does. (On Sept. 13, 2001, 48 hours after the Twin Towers fell, viewers of The 700 Club got to hear why Americans “deserved” to be attacked. Robertson has also explained why terrorists should destroy the State Department, why mainline Protestant denominations are “the spirit of the Anti-Christ,” and why he has the ability to move hurricanes with his mind.)
Meet the Press, by making Brody a regular, is treating the Christian Broadcasting Network as a legitimate outlet. It shouldn’t.
Evangelical news looks and sounds much like its secular counterpart, but it homes in on issues of concern to believers and filters events through a conservative lens. In some cases this simply means giving greater weight to the conservative side of the ledger than most media do. In other instances, it amounts to disguising a partisan agenda as news. Likewise, most guests on Christian political talk shows are drawn from a fixed pool of culture warriors and Republican politicians. Even those shows that focus on non-political topics — such as finance, health, or family issues — often weave in political messages. Many evangelical programs and networks are, in fact, linked to conservative Christian political or legal organizations, which use broadcasts to help generate funding and mobilize their base supporters, who are tuning in en masse. Ninety-six percent of evangelicals consume some form of Christian media each month, according to the Barna Research Group….
CBN’s founder, Pat Robertson, who started this trend in the late 1970s by converting the 700 Club into a 60 Minutes-style magazine, says he originally considered making it a music showcase. But he decided news and talk would bring more viewers. “News provides the crossover between religious and secular, and it bridges the age gap,” he explains. Robertson continues to see news and current affairs as a means to an end. “If you buy a diamond from Tiffany’s the setting is very important,” he says. “To us, the jewel is the message of Jesus Christ. We see news as a setting for what’s most important.” …
Many Christian broadcasters attribute the success of their news operations to the biblical perspective that underpins their reporting in a world made wobbly by terrorist threats and moral relativism. “We don’t just tell them what the news is,” explains Wright of the NRB. “We tell them what it means. And that’s appealing to people, especially in moments of cultural instability.”
Robertson pays Brody to tell “them what it means,” as part of a broader evangelistic enterprise. What’s wrong with that? Nothing in particular. CBN exists to evangelize, convert, raise a lot of money from Robertson’s fans, and give a demagogue a platform to spread nonsense.
But now, apparently, Meet the Press wants to treat CBN as just another network. It’s mystifying.
Does The 700 Club have so many viewers that its political correspondent demands recognition? Not really; ratings wise, the show has a fairly small audience. Does Brody’s blog have so many visitors that he’s become a major political player? No, as of earlier this summer, the Brody File was drawing about 75,000 visits a month. I know of several dozen liberal political bloggers who have far, far more traffic, none of whom will ever be invited onto a Sunday morning show.
I guess that’s really the bottom line here. Meet the Press has a cadre of regulars, which apparently now includes Pat Robertson’s political correspondent. All the while, progressive voices have been locked out of the Sunday-show circuit altogether.
It’s enough to make one wonder why there’s so much whining about a “liberal media.”