In
The Movies, Journalists Are No Longer
Heroes -- Just Like Everywhere Else
A Large Majority of the American Public Feels
The Press no Longer Deals Fairly with Issues
By Casey Pittman
Freedom
of the press is a basic tenet of American society and culture,
and journalism is an institution meant to reinforce the general
public's trust in the government. Journalists have had a long
tradition of upholding that trust, and pride themselves on their
sacred bond with the public. Journalists see themselves as champions
of truth and openness, watchdogs defending the public's right
to know. Lately, though, the public doesn't agree. In the last
two decades, public opinion of the press has been on a downhill
slide. Journalists who feel they are fighting the good fight
are vilified by the very people for whom they have chosen to
fight.
More
and more people have begun to see reporters as unethical and
uncaring louts who fight for their own career advancement and
not the public good. The public perceives bias in the media.
There is a spreading belief that the media has become a servant
of corporate America, not the public.
A
Times Mirror/Gallup poll conducted in 1992 found that only 28
percent of the public feels the press deals fairly with all
sides involved in an issue, while 68 percent believe the press
tends to favor a specific side. Sixty-two percent of the public
believes news organizations are influenced by powerful organizations
and 44 percent feel the media are inaccurate in their reporting,
said David Rynecki of the Columbia Journalism Review.
In
the wake of such public spectacles as the death of Princess
Diana and presidential scandals, followed by the ensuing media
coverage, the public has formed a less than favorable opinion
of the media and its motives. As a result of these news events
and their coverage, the "diverse news the media are thrown
together into a single cesspool they all call 'tabloid journalism,'"
said Joel Saltzman, author of "Everyone Hates the Media."
Sixty
percent of people believe the media pay too much attention to
"bad news" and scandalous events, Rynecki
said, and only 35 percent believe the media are actually reporting
the stories they should be covering. The public is not only
questioning the integrity of the media organizations, but also
the integrity of the individuals who have chosen journalism
as their careers. In a 1996 Gallup Poll, only 23 percent of
respondents rated broadcast journalists' ethical standards and
honesty as "high or very high." Only 17 percent rate
print journalists as highly ethical and honest, said James Boylan
of the Columbia Journalism Review.
It
is this negative view of the journalist that is most disturbing.
James Warren, Washington bureau chief for the Chicago Tribune,
said the public sees journalists "as hypocritical, privacy-invading,
emotionally and practically remote from [the public], paternalistic
and prone to frequent error." Why do so many people view
the journalist as a bad person? Most people rarely, if ever,
have face to face interactions with journalists. They have no
basis for judging journalists' personal values. So where do
these negative perceptions of journalists come from?
There
is no single answer to this question. Negative perceptions are
the product of a barrage of complaints from many sources. Politicians,
supposedly operating under the same constitution that protects
the media, constantly berate the media for being "uncaring,
biased, arrogant, out-to-get-you-at-all-costs gutter-rakers
who care about no one and will do anything to cover a story,
no matter how damaging it may be to the principals involved,"
Saltzman said.
But
perhaps, to truly understand the erosion of the journalist's
reputation, one needs look no further than mainstream entertainment.
Late
night television personalities lampoon the media as often as
they do former president Clinton. Television series, both dramatic
and comedic, routinely portray journalists as "foul-mouthed,
dim-witted social misfits concerned only with twisting the truth
into scandal," said Matthew C. Ehrlich, author of "Journalism
in the Movies." The stereotype of the journalist as an
immoral opportunist has become so widespread it may be safe
to say it is now ingrained in popular culture.
---
One
of the most potent institutions contributing to that vast wasteland
known as popular culture is the silver screen. Since the beginning
of the 20th century, films have captured the public's imagination
and provided breaks from everyday life and reality. Films have
provided fantasy and escape for millions. But film also serves
purposes beyond mere entertainment. Films are products of their
times, and can be seen as time capsules. A film from a given
period can not only reflect the mood of society at the time,
but can influence it as well. Though audiences realize movies
aren't real, they have a certain trust in Hollywood -- a movie
may not be completely real, but it reflects real attitudes and
beliefs. An audience watching a film can leave with a new belief
or leave with their existing beliefs falsely reinforced or confirmed.
Journalists
have been important characters in film as long as movies have
been around. From The Front Page (1931) to Citizen
Kane (1941) to All the President's Men (1976) to
The Insider (1999), the movie industry has been fascinated
with the journalist as a character. The portrayals of journalists
weren't always negative. Many early films featuring journalist
characters romanticized the profession, but certainly respected
the journalist's importance in a democratic society, Saltzman
said.
Films
like Foreign Correspondent (1940), Deadline U.S.A.
(1952) and The China Syndrome (1979) illustrated the
journalist as an idealist, as the crusader who was "gruff
and hard-bitten yet unwilling to yield to cynicism, intolerant
of bullies and crooks and always ready to fight for the right,"
said Christopher Hanson of the Columbia Journalism Review
and author of "Where Have All the Heroes Gone?" Journalism
reached a high point in the public eye, as well as in film with
the 1976 film All the President's Men, starring Dustin
Hoffman and Robert Redford as Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein,
the two reporters responsible for uncovering the Nixon Watergate
scandal. Critics praised the film. The country saw journalists
as heroes -- fighters for the public's right to know. More students
wanted to become journalists, and enrollment in journalism schools
increased sharply after the Watergate scandal. Enrollment at
the University of Texas School of Journalism tripled. The two
famous reporters were portrayed as "embodying the best
of American values," Hanson said.
But
in recent years, Hollywood has discarded the image of the crusading
journalist. They are now portrayed as callous or reckless cynics,
Ehrlich said. Movies have implied that journalistic objectivity
now serves commercial purposes and that their work does more
harm than good, he said.
And
the public buys it.
---
Film
is a strong medium, and Hollywood's ability to make movies realistic
has made it even stronger. Most movies ask audiences to suspend
disbelief willingly, and audiences oblige -- but not completely.
Audiences may realize that although dramatic action sequences
and plot twists are not real, it is hard to discount the attitudes
and beliefs of characters, including attitudes and beliefs about
journalists and the media. Audiences are learning from movies
that journalists are "morally indefensible
preying
on people's vanity, ignorance or loneliness, gaining their trust
and betraying them without remorse, all in the name of the public's
right to know," Ehrlich said.
The
number of films taking this approach increased dramatically
in the 1990s. Some of the most popular and widely viewed movies
of that decade contained strong negative views of the media
in general and even stronger negative portrayals of journalists
as individuals. Three such films are To Die For, Scream
and Mad City. An examination of the portrayals of journalists
in these three films illustrates how Hollywood influences the
public's views about journalists.
In
order to discuss the negative portrayals of journalists in these
three films effectively, it is necessary to develop criteria
for evaluating what is and what is not a negative portrayal.
These criteria can be developed through examination of three
of the most prevalent stereotypes and complaints about journalists.
The
first criterion for a negative portrayal is untrustworthiness
and dishonesty. Many people believe that journalists are not
to be trusted, that their lives are pretense meant to take advantage
of an unsuspecting public. The journalist is a snake that will
turn on its victim as soon it has gotten everything it can get
from him. It has been said that journalists rank as low as or
lower than serial killers and lawyers in sincerity and trust,
Hanson said. According to Hollywood, journalists are back-stabbers
interested in "twisting the truth," Ehrlich said,
and aren't more trustworthy than used car salesmen and con artists.
The
second criterion is a shameless attitude of self-promotion.
In the American culture of capitalism, it is generally expected
that individuals are trying to get ahead of each other. But
in journalism, a field where Ehrlich said individuals have "extraordinary
power to do harm," ambition has become a negative personality
trait. Like it or not, journalism is a business, and there is
pressure on employees to raise circulation and ratings. Profit
is important in any business, but in a business where peoples'
lives can made public, ambition becomes more sinister.
The
final criterion is tied to the character's choice in which stories
he or she will cover, and what aspects of those stories he or
she will emphasize. A common complaint is that the media tend
to cast the spotlight on sensational stories, opposed to important
stories with more social value. The public sees journalists
as constantly searching for a story meant to boost ratings (and
their own careers), while ignoring more relevant stories.
There
is a consensus that the news has adopted a new purpose: to entertain
rather than inform. The plethora of tabloid magazines and news
shows has begun to convince serious news organizations that
drama sells. During the presidential scandal, "the sheer
volume of space and time devoted to the sexual aspects of the
Lewinsky affair has displaced other important stories, and trivialized
the discussion of the fate of the president," said Richard
Lambert of the Columbia Journalism Review. This sentiment
is expounded on in film. Journalists are often portrayed chasing
down stories laden with sex and violence, or stories that could
topple prominent individuals. They often spend massive amounts
of time hounding innocent people, employing underhanded methods
and even breaking the law to break a story with no redeeming
value.
Utilizing
these criteria, it is possible to evaluate the portrayals of
three journalist characters in three popular films of the 1990s.
The movies To Die For (1995), Scream (1996) and
Mad City (1997) all include characters who are journalists
and who are portrayed in a negative light. These three films
are good examples of influential negative portrayals of journalists
because their popularity, along with the star power accompanying
them, adds credibility to the misconception that journalists
are bad people who irresponsibly wield the power to destroy
lives.
---
The
first film to be examined for negative portrayals of journalists
and the media is the 1995 dark comedy To Die For, starring
Nicole Kidman. This film, directed by Gus Van Sant, was the
subject of much discussion about the nature of the media and
the journalist. Kidman's character, Suzanne Stone Maretto, has
been described as "one of the most amoral, calculating
film villainesses in recent memory, stopping at nothing, including
murder, to catapult herself from cable weather girl to the next
Diane Sawyer," Hanson said.
Suzanne
definitely meets the first criterion for a negative portrayal
of a journalist. She is absolutely and completely untrustworthy.
She lies and schemes to manipulate other people into doing what
she wants. She does it so well that authorities can't legally
link her to the murder of her husband.
In
the movie, the ambitious Suzanne takes it upon herself, while
working for a local cable channel as a weather forecaster, to
make a documentary about teens and their opinions. She begins
interviewing three outcast teens and gains their trust and friendship.
Suzanne even enters into a sexual relationship with Jimmy (Joaquin
Phoenix), the dim-witted leader of the three friends. She tells
him she loves him, that she only wants to be with him. She's
already cheating on her husband, a basic breech of trust, and
eventually uses sex to manipulate Jimmy into killing her husband.
She lies to him, appealing to his male protectiveness by implying
that her husband, Larry (Matt Dillon), physically abuses her.
She plants the idea of murder in Jimmy's head so subtly that
he believes it is his own idea. After Jimmy and his friend Russel
(Casey Affleck) kill her husband, she wants to have nothing
to do with them. She at first pretends to have no knowledge
of their activities. After being questioned by suspicious police,
she lies to the world on television about Jimmy and Russell's
motives in killing her husband. Suzanne tells the world that
the two teens got her husband hooked on cocaine, and that when
he decided to go clean, they killed him. With this lie she has
betrayed not only the impressionable teens she set up, but also
her late husband and his memory.
There
is no doubt that Suzanne fits the second criterion -- she is
obsessed with her own self-promotion. She tells her in-laws
that she wants to be the "next Barbara Walters." She
wants a career in journalism not because she has an urge to
find the truth and inform the public, but because she wants
to be a star. "You're not anybody in America if you aren't
on TV," she tells the audience. She puts her career before
her personal life. She marries an Italian-American man, the
doomed Larry Maretto, not out of love, but because she wants
to "explore ethnicity." She compares her marriage
to that of Connie Chung and Maury Povich.
Every
move Suzanne makes in To Die For is calculated to further
advance her career, even the murder of her husband. After his
death, she intends to use her story to make money and obtain
high profile jobs. She shows no real remorse at her husband's
death, and sees the documentary she was making on the teens
as a meal ticket. "The bright side of it is that I would
have in my documentary an extremely marketable commodity,"
she tells the audience.
To
Die For is overwrought with sensationalism. Suzanne goes
to great lengths to keep the frenzy alive after her husband's
death, and does her best to add to the drama surrounding her
case. The night of her husband's murder, the media show up at
her home in hordes. The police tell her she doesn't have to
talk to them, yet she fixes her hair, puts on a false sad face,
and steps outside to greet the reporters and photographers crowding
her front lawn. She even allows the media to attend Larry's
funeral, where she does her best to ham it up and create drama
by playing a tape of the song "All By Myself." Suzanne's
attempts are successful, despite Larry's family's suspicions
and accusations. Suzanne manages to create a media frenzy around
herself. Yet her career never advances. In the last few minutes
of the film, a man hired by Larry's family kills Suzanne and
hides her body beneath the ice of a frozen pond. She blindly
walks into his trap, believing he wants to offer her a job in
the national spotlight.
---
Another
film portraying a journalist negatively is the 1996 horror film
Scream, directed by Wes Craven. Playing a significant
role in Scream, Gale Weathers (Courtney Cox) is an investigative
reporter for KQIS, a local network affiliate. At the beginning
of the film, Weathers has gained some bit of notoriety for her
coverage of the trial of Cotton Weary, a man who was convicted
of raping and killing a local woman named Maureen Prescott one
year earlier. Weathers believes the wrong man was convicted,
and says so publicly. She is in the process of writing a book
that explains her theories and she hopes will help to exonerate
the convicted man. Weathers returns to the small town where
Maureen Prescott lived to cover a series of murders. Each of
the victims is somehow connected to Sidney Prescott (Neve Campbell),
Maureen's daughter. Other characters quickly react to Weathers
negatively. Sidney refers to Weathers as "that little tabloid
twit," and at one point punches her in the face for no
reason. It soon becomes apparent that Sidney's rage is justified
as Weathers begins utilizing every underhanded trick in the
book to get her story, and doesn't understand why she is viewed
so negatively by the other characters in the movie. "People
treat me like I'm the antichrist of television journalism,"
she says.
Weathers is sneaky and untrustworthy. She pursues the story
of the killings relentlessly and will deceive anyone in order
to succeed. Most notable are her successful attempts to manipulate
and use Dewey, a local deputy who isn't the sharpest knife in
the drawer. Dewey is nice, trusting and gullible -- a perfect
pawn for Weathers' purposes. She flirts with him and flatters
him in order to get information about the police investigations
into the murders. Weathers' manipulation of Dewey suggests it
is standard practice for journalists to take advantage of naïve
people.
Weathers
is also concerned with promoting her career. Her main interest
in the story is the fact that the "true killer" of
Sidney's mother could be the same man killing Sidney's friends.
If this is true, she could gain fame for proving Weary's innocence.
She makes it a personal mission to clear his name and have him
released from death row. "If I'm right about this, I could
save a man's life," she tells her cameraman. "Do you
know what that would do for my book sales?" The relentlessness
with which she pursues the story is not a pursuit for the truth.
At least that is not her first priority -- she makes it obvious
that her goal is to advance her career.
Sensationalism
is Gale Weathers' forte. She is already trying to fan the flames
on a "finished" case by writing a book about Weary's
trial. Soon after the murders begin, she publicly offers the
theory that there is a connection between the murder of Maureen
Prescott and the current murders of teenagers. She has absolutely
no evidence or basis for saying this. She hopes for the murders
to continue, or at least to continue to be newsworthy. At one
point she is trying to pump Dewy for information about the police
investigation, and suggests they are dealing with a serial killer.
She's hoping for a major story. Dewy replies that the killer
hasn't murdered enough people to be officially classified as
a serial killer. Weathers replies wryly: "Well, we can
hope can't we?" She wants to prolong the life of the story,
as well as inflate its importance.
Weathers'
theory is proven correct at the end of the film, but her muckraking
tactics are what the audience remembers.
---
The
final film that portrays both the media and an individual journalist
negatively is the 1997 film Mad City. Dustin Hoffman,
who once portrayed a crusading reporter in All the President's
Men, is Max Brackett, a veteran reporter working for a network
affiliate in a small California town. While reporting a "fluff
piece" at a local museum, Brackett gets trapped inside
when a former museum employee, Sam Baily (John Travolta), takes
the curator and a group of children hostage. Seeing his chance
to break a sensational story, Brackett begins reporting on the
unfolding situation from inside. He eventually becomes a central
figure in the direction of events, crossing the line between
objectivity and subjectivity.
Brackett
starts off as an untrustworthy and sneaky character. He lies
to the police about the seriousness of the situation, telling
them Sam is much more dangerous than he actually is. Brackett
convinces Sam he has the disgruntled employee's best interests
at heart, but he is lying. He really wants to control and prolong
the situation. Under the assumption that Brackett wants to help
him, Sam takes his advice on everything from releasing hostages
to ransom demands. Brackett consistently lies to Sam, and convinces
him to tell his family to talk to nobody in the media except
for Brackett himself. He claims this will be better for the
family and Sam, but in reality he just wants exclusive interviews.
Brackett's
deceptions of Sam aren't his only improprieties. At one point,
while creating a montage piece featuring interviews with people
who know Sam, Brackett manipulates the tape of an interview
with Sam's high school principal. The principal says Sam is
a bad person and is totally responsible for the situation. Brackett,
through tricky editing, manipulates the tape to a point where
it sounds as if the principal is blaming the poor education
system, not Sam, for his actions. The meaning of everything
the principal says is reversed. This raises questions of trust
in the press. The audience asks itself: If this is possible,
how can we trust anything the media say?
Brackett
is concerned with promoting his own career. Brackett used to
be a respected correspondent for the network. After an on-air
confrontation with the anchorman, he was demoted and shipped
off to a small affiliate. Brackett wants to regain his network
status, to once again be seen on the national news. He feels
that by being a central figure in the hostage story, and by
having sole access to the hostage taker, he will be able to
"get back to New York." This story is his big opportunity.
"I was up. I was down. Now I'm up again, thanks to you,"
Brackett tells Sam. He is well aware of his opportunity, and
he's not the only one. Mrs. Banks, the museum curator, questions
his motives for returning to the museum after Sam has let him
go. "Is that because this insanity benefits your career?"
she asks him. "I would hope so," Brackett replies.
Bracket's
machinations are successful. His broadcasts begin airing nationwide.
He and Sam get a full hour interview on Larry King Live. The
network offers Brackett his own investigative reporting show
with full editorial control and a hefty salary. Brackett's efforts
at shameless self-promotion have paid off.
The
key to Brackett's success is his quest for sensationalism. The
story is the events unfolding, not the people who are involved
and whose lives are at stake. He advises Sam every step of the
way, not with the goal of ending the situation, but to prolong
the story and generate talk of the story in the public. At the
beginning of the situation, Sam accidentally shoots his friend
Cliff, a security guard. Cliff stumbles out of the museum wounded,
the cameras broadcasting the whole incident live. The station
cuts the feed and Brackett gets angry. He demands to know who
cut the feed, and insists that the man's pain be broadcast.
He knows that violence and blood sell, and wants to show every
little detail of the tragedy. He repeatedly puts words in Sam's
mouth, and tries to get Sam to admit on camera that he entered
the museum with the intent to hurt someone. When Sam questions
his motives, Brackett takes advantage of his naïveté
by explaining to him how famous he is going to be. "You're
the best show in town!" he tells Sam.
Despite
all of Brackett's character flaws, he is "redeemed"
in the end. He begins to care genuinely about Sam's well-being
and even defends him when the network anchor portrays Sam as
a deranged and dangerous man. He has actually taken the time
simply to talk to Sam and listen to him. He has gotten to know
Sam as a man and not simply a news event and thus sees the whole
situation in a new, more sympathetic light. Brackett does everything
he can to bring the situation to a calm and peaceful end, and
he stops caring about ratings and career advancement. After
convincing Sam to release all the hostages, he tries to bring
Sam out peacefully.
Sam realizes the mistakes he has made and the extent to which
he has gone. He commits suicide. Brackett is devastated and
repeats the words "We killed him. We killed him."
The "we" he is speaking of is the media.
Brackett
has learned a valuable lesson. He has regained his "humanity."
Therein lies the problem. This film implies that journalism
is a field where humanity is a liability. Mad City suggests
that journalists are basically immoral people and that a journalist
with a conscience will not be successful.
---
Each
of the three movies touches on this same principle: Morality
impedes successful reporting. In To Die For, Scream
and Mad City, journalists make conscious choices not
to care, to emphasize the sensational and to lie in order to
promote their own careers.
It
is not unreasonable for audience members to watch these three
movies and movies like them and infer that perhaps all journalists
share this mentality. That is not to say audiences are stupid
or gullible, but that such consistent repetition lends credence
to their views and beliefs. And there is repetition. Over and
over, it is implied that journalists are basically immoral and
unethical people who deserve their comeuppance.
Hollywood
now routinely portrays journalists as uncaring and selfish people
exploiting the general public in order to promote themselves.
In To Die For, Scream and Mad City, journalists
must either reform themselves or die. Being a journalist is
a condition that is to be cured. There are no nice journalists
in these films. There are no respectable, ethical and honest
journalists in these films.
In
the 90s, Hollywood created a new stock character -- the insensitive
lout with no sympathy and no integrity. And, to the dismay of
journalists everywhere, the public bought it.