Jarvis On NewsNight

The following is the text of a comment I posted to Jeff Jarvis’ blog, Buzzmachine, on his recent appearance on CNN NewsNight to discuss the recent Michael Moore film. His viewpoint has received quite a bit of criticism – unfairly, I believe.

Though I am a fan of Moore, if only for his attempt to try to change something (I do believe he is genuinely interested in having a positive impact on society), I do have to agree with Jeff’s assessment of the film and Moore’s style of film-making. Moore’s films do appear to resort to the same selective use of facts on their issues as the targets of their scrutiny (the NRA, big business, Bush and the Republicans).

However, I would argue that without resorting to an extreme viewpoint (not only in this film, but also in Bowling for Columbine), Moore would never be heard. Period. I’m not saying that’s a good thing – just the way it appears to work with US media audiences.

Speaking as a Canadian who only recently moved to the US, I have found the news and the viewpoints presented in the US media to be very insular, internally-focused. I didn’t have access to the CBC for four months and basically didn’t hear about anything except for local news, Washington news, or Iraq news. I’m pretty sure there was other stuff going on in the world that was just as bad, just as important, just as worthy of my attention.

The viewpoints being presented in the media are extreme, and complex issues are often distilled to sound-bites that depict difficult issues in black-and-white terms with no room for thoughtful consideration or analysis. They are not conversations. I don’t think I’ve ever heard anyone in the media present their viewpoint in a fashion that suggests they are interested in creating solutions or negotiating – no one has the guts to say “You know what, I’ve reconsidered what you’re saying, and I think you might have a point. Maybe I’m wrong on X.”

I am reminded of Moore’s segment in Bowling for Columbine, where he interviewed one of the producers of Cops. The producer said he couldn’t produce a similar show focusing on white-collar crime, because no one would watch it – it wouldn’t be interesting enough for the audience. Perhaps Moore came to a similar conclusion early in his film-making career – he freely admitted to putting his own spin on the facts on The Daily Show earlier this week. There is no doubt he is intelligent and creative, but perhaps providing a fair and balanced examination of the issues would win him no audience at all, no opportunity to shock us into thinking, to perform a cerebral resuscitation. Without resorting to extreme views, we would be left with only one point of view to consider.

That leaves the responsibility for thoughtful consideration up to us, the public. We have two extreme viewpoints – I believe the truth lies somewhere in between. If we’re going to talk, let’s talk – not just shout at each other.

Non-DRM Constitution

Yesterday, John Beimler pointed Comrade Cory over at Boing Boing to this DRMed version of the US Constitution. Someone must be doing well – it’s apparently Amazon’s 965th highest ranked item. I can only hope that’s only for electronic book sales, otherwise there are a lot of stupid people in this country.

Putting aside the irony of restricting access to a government document with digital rights management software, they’re not the only ones trying to make a buck this way. Hell, even I slapped an Amazon Associates referral ID on the link above – if you’re stupid enough to buy a DRMed copy of a public document from Amazon, I deserve a cut! And arguably, there is some minute amount of value that someone must derive from being able to get a Microsoft Reader copy of the Constitution right now. It’s possible. I guess.

But if you don’t like DRM and you really need the US Constitution (or any other document for that matter) on the go, there’s an easy way to solve this problem: make your own! And make the publisher’s market disappear while you’re at it! Doing this will take you about ten minutes:

  • Install (soul-sucking) Microsoft Word 2002 or later, assuming if you haven’t already succumbed by way of peer pressure.
  • Download and install Microsoft’s Read in Reader conversion plug-in.
  • Open Word and cut’n’paste the contents of you favorite version of the US Constitution into a new document.
  • Click the Microsoft Reader button on the toolbar.

(Or if you’re against The Man, but horribly lazy, you could just download this version I created. And no, I’m not the author of the US Constitution – I’m just really into flagrant self-promotion.)

Voila! Instant un-DRMed version of the US Constitution suitable for reading with Microsoft Reader! Of course, this does beg the question: did I just effectively circumvent the copy protection mechanism and violate the DMCA? Oh well!