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Occupy Wall Street Vs. Erin Burnett: A Primer In Media Failure

First Posted: 10/06/11 03:48 PM ET Updated: 12/06/11 05:12 AM ET

Foley Square Before The March

Yesterday, Salon's Glenn Greenwald did a fairly masterful job filleting the myopic and condescending way CNN's new hire Erin Burnett chose to cover the ongoing Occupy Wall Street demonstrations. Greenwald is hardly alone in his criticism. The Baltimore Sun's David Zurawik did much the same, saying, "Two of the fundamental attributes of good journalism are curiosity and a respect for the people on whom you report. Burnett got an "F" on both those counts with her Occupy Wall Street piece." Yesterday, I pointed to Jay Rosen, who highlighted short-lived tweets from CNN's Alison Kosik, documenting the fact that the failings Zurawik notes appear to be systemic at CNN.

(New York Magazine's Sarah Frank made note of the fact that Burnett's most noteworthy segment is a fairly weak rip-off of a Saturday Night Live gag, but this probably says more about the fact that CNN is running out of ideas than it does about Burnett.)

Here's the part of Greenwald's piece that really jumped out at me:

I'd bet that these two CNN personalities...would genuinely find the suggestion that they are not objective to be baffling and offensive. That's because their world begins and ends with Jamie Dimon, Citigroup executives, and Columbus Circle corporate galas. To them, Truth is what is found in that world and nothing else. When someone like Kosik sneers at concerns over mass joblessness, hopeless debt, foreclosures, and oligarchical control of the political process, she's not being a conscious propagandist; she's just being honest. Those problems don't exist in their world except as abstractions.

True. That. This is something I've banged on about before -- the signature failing of the media, in the way they've deigned to cover the massive unemployment crisis in America, is that they treat the people who are actually unemployed as abstract concepts. The norm that the media constantly, redundantly enforces is that the unemployment crisis is an event that solely threatens the re-election hopes of politicians, to whom they crave access.

No one craves access to poor people! So they remain in the background, where they can be easily abused. You see this play out when those who are allowed to be newsmakers depict the unemployed as lazy, shiftless and living off government largesse. You need only spend ten minutes on Google to uncover enough material fact to obliterate this notion so utterly that you can objectively state these charges are wrong with a clear journalistic conscience. But you have to be nominally invested in ordinary human beings to do that. It's the desire to serve ordinary Americans with the truth that pushes you onto that task. Without it, the "unemployed are lazy" lie becomes just one more interesting point of view.

The difference between the journalism that makes an investment in the lives of ordinary people and the journalism that doesn't is staggering. When you talk to a journalist who is so invested, you hear someone who sounds like this. When you leave the confines of the Beltway to report on what health care is like for average Americans, you get stories like this. When you actually start talking to the people who are getting ground up in the economic downturn, it produces stories such as these. And if you visit the workplaces of Americans who are fortunate to have a job, you're likely to find a horror story.

Burnett, for one, doesn't fit into this journalistic milieu. Greenwald makes that evident when he points out that she "featured a video clip of herself explaining to one of the protesters that the U.S. Government made money from TARP, and then demanded to know if that changed his negative views of Wall Street."

Why on earth would that fact form the basis for having positive views of Wall Street? Let me kick this to the Daily Bail, who correctly notes that Burnett "didn't do her bailout research before she decided to ridicule protesters for not doing doing their bailout research."

According to the U.S. Treasury's own figures, available publicly to any reader, including pneumatic (we understand if you need a dictionary for that one, Erin) and arrogant CNN reporters, as of TODAY, taxpayers are still more than $95 BILLION IN THE RED on TARP. And that's including all interest and other income. There is still $122 BILLION of TARP funds that have NOT yet been paid back.

We understand that Burnett was excluding GM, but she somehow missed that AIG, alone, still owes over $50 BILLION.

Beyond that, Burnett surely knows that TARP formed a mere sliver of the taxpayer money that went toward bailing Wall Street bankers out of the jam they made for themselves. She's surely aware of the fact that as recently as August, the American taxpayers were still owed $1.5 trillion from those efforts.

And it defies credulity to think that Erin Burnett doesn't know that the deal she's touting, that allowed the "U.S. Government [to make] money from TARP," was nothing to write home about, unless the letter you're penning reads: "Dear Mom, did you hear about how badly taxpayers got hosed in the deal structure of TARP? Here's an article from Bloomberg's Mark Pittman explaining it. Here's another Bloomberg piece from Mark Fisher titled, 'How the U.S. Blew Trillion-Dollar Trade of Century.' Erin Burnett said what now?"

Since I'm generously assuming that Burnett has some passing familiarity with mainstream financial reporting and access to the same material facts as the rest of us, I suppose it raises the question, "Was Burnett trying to mislead that demonstrator?" Oddly enough, I don't think that's the case. You actually have to have an investment in someone to lie to them. Rather, I think that this is all part and parcel of the interaction between a condescending pundit and a human being they've decided to treat as an abstraction. It's Burnett saying, "This is all the explanation you deserve. This is all you're capable of understanding. This is all you're going to get."

In other words: "You don't merit my best work." And from what I've seen in terms of how the financial crisis' impact on ordinary Americans is covered, "You don't merit my best work" seems to be the guiding philosophy.

Ordinary Americans have found themselves dropped in a world of stark terms and desperate choices, and those who are lucky to be treading water or doing well are nevertheless just as likely to know someone very dear to them who are in the jaws of this crisis. Faced with this reality, what do you imagine actual people might do to try to cut through the veil and stop getting treated as abstractions? Well, for starters, they might take to the streets. The media is awash in confusion, even now, about what the Occupy Wall Street "agenda" is, and what the demonstrators are "demanding." I'd say their demands begin with "acknowledge our existence," and move on to "make a nominal investment to covering what is happening in our lives."

At a minimum, they've a right to demand that much. After all, the folks gathered in Zuccotti Park are probably keenly aware that some mass movements have been deemed deserving of corporate media sponsorship and co-branding.

Speaking of: Hey, CNN! When have you scheduled the Occupy Wall Street/CNN 2012 debate?

READ THE WHOLE THING:
Erin Burnett: Voice of the People [Glenn Greenwald @ Salon]
CNN's new host Erin Burnett: Smug, superficial and acting like she knows [Z on TV]

[Would you like to follow me on Twitter? Because why not? Also, please send tips to tv@huffingtonpost.com -- learn more about our media monitoring project here.]

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Yesterday, Salon's Glenn Greenwald did a fairly masterful job filleting the myopic and condescending way CNN's new hire Erin Burnett chose to cover the ongoing Occupy Wall Street demonstrations. Green...
Yesterday, Salon's Glenn Greenwald did a fairly masterful job filleting the myopic and condescending way CNN's new hire Erin Burnett chose to cover the ongoing Occupy Wall Street demonstrations. Green...
 
 
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01:33 AM on 11/22/2011
Erin Burnett WORKED FOR Golman Sachs and Citigroup. She is currently ENGAGED TO a Citigroup executive. Her facts are WRONG about TARP. This is not journalism.
01:37 AM on 11/22/2011
To clarify, Erin Burnett's work is not journalism. This particular HuffPo piece about Erin Burnette was not what i was calling into question. Erin Burnett is the definition of bias.
09:18 AM on 11/21/2011
one of burnett's chief drawbacks is that she talks too fast. specifically, she talks @warp speed to either fit in more or to hide stories. compare that with rachel maddow, jon stewart or charlie rose, who speak as if they truly want to engage the viewer as well as their guests. that burnett also has an overt wall street bias further separates her from her audience. while cnn deserves recognition for hiring a pundit who is a woman, it does itself no favors by choosing someone of burnett's calibre.
02:48 AM on 11/10/2011
she has a nose, face and teeth like my pet rat
04:11 PM on 11/07/2011
I liked her on cnbc. liked not love. shes no maria b. I always wondered if she was above avg, but not smart. Well she got her chance to show the world that she has been gettin by more on her looks than her brains. If she had any insight she would have viewed her edited occupy wall st show and said no way, dont air. I wasn't expecting 60 mins qty from her but it was impish, childish, rubbish! I would be embarrassed to put that on my blog. Now the only question on everyones mind is, whos ---- did she suc this time to get a show and how long before they are both fired?
05:36 AM on 10/28/2011
I watched Erin's first show and was surprised about her comments about the "Occupy Wall Street" protesters. I liked her on CNBC and was looking forward to seeing her on CNN. My question is this Erin: why would you say something on your first show to piss off the majority of the people (including me) who tuned in to watch your show? You are very smart and pretty but whatever, it is your opinion and your show.

That being said I have watched the show a lot the first four weeks and I think it is pretty good. Hopefully she can travel over to the Middle East and do some reporting there.

Maybe the "Occupy Wall Street" protesters can hold up a large sign saying this: "US multinational companies increased employment overseas by 2.4 million people in the 2000's, even as they cut their U.S. workforces by 2.9 million. Overall, big-name firms employed 21.1 million people in the U.S. in 2009, and 10.3 million abroad."

I read this in the Wall Street Journal about 6 months ago. Millionaires who are CEO's running these companies realize this and are in business to make as much money as they can so they send more jobs overseas. This is a BIG, BIG problem.
10:40 PM on 10/27/2011
Erin Burnett is a dirty American.
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yoursotruly
Youth is Wasted on the Young.
05:03 PM on 10/24/2011
,

1. I am pretty certain that OWS is nonprofit and is accused of being anti-profit.
2. I am quite certain that OWS is nonpartisan, in fact, the protest is against Wall Street and not politicians, they don't have a Party, don't support a candidate, and don't even seem focused on registering or energizing people to get involved in electoral politics.

Seems like a lot of assumption are made about OWS that are not necessarily accurate, that's fine for pundits but not for people making decisions about firing their employees.
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breakingpoint
War is a Racket - Smedley Butler
04:55 PM on 10/23/2011
who wouldn't want this?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5O_Ao9w1u7c
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11:01 PM on 10/19/2011
No more television news for me, period. It's too much like drinking Nescafé.
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BroadwayJoe
Lib-Prog Fighter & Patriot on a Mission
11:54 AM on 10/11/2011
First of all, I think Greenwald hit the nail on the head Zurawik. These people live in bubbles.

I wanted to throw my remote at the TV when Burnett when that segment came on. She was already irritating but her sneering dismissal of OWS was infuriarating.

I know Burnett's show will fail (there is no doubt) so that will be her punishment. But what about the other closed-minded media personalities?
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laura r
05:47 PM on 10/10/2011
GOP Rep Peter King: "We Can’t Allow More Coverage Of Occupy Wall Street, Or They Will Win"
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laura r
04:49 PM on 10/10/2011
Excellent Article.

I agree. The Media has missed the mark. Here in Silicon Valley, I have not met a person who does not agree with this movement. Yes, there are a lot of us who support them, but are not able to go there because we have jobs. But, if there was a petition to support them, the media would really see how many people are for the Wall Street Occupy.

All that's necessary for the forces of evil to win in the world is for enough good men to do nothing.
Edmund Burke
03:13 PM on 10/10/2011
She's auditioning for Fox. She was passed over for Today, and now has her sights set on Fox and Friends.
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laura r
04:51 PM on 10/10/2011
Here's the deal with Erin-- Double joy for CNN reporter Erin Burnett as she gets engaged to Citigroup executive and launches new show.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2043523/CNN-reporter-Erin-Burnett-gets-engaged-Citigroup-executive-David-Rubulotta.html
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BroadwayJoe
Lib-Prog Fighter & Patriot on a Mission
11:55 AM on 10/11/2011
How fitting. She has always been a corporate/Wall St cheerleader. Her show will fail.
12:51 PM on 10/10/2011
So the protesters are against TARP?

Well, so was the Tea Party.

Something they seem to have in common.