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AMUSING OURSELVES TO
DEATH Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business Neil Postman Viking Penguin, 1985
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Author and media critic Neil Postman died in October, 2003. This is his 1985 groundbreaking book. Postman taught at New York University for
38 years and died at the age of 73. He
wrote 20 books, including The Disappearance of Childhood. "The Disappearance of Childhood" examined
television's harmful effects on children through the onslaught of
information. 'Technopoly" explored the tyranny of technology. Over the
course of his career, in fact, Postman relentlessly questioned technology's
impact on our lives.” (Jim Benning) Some of the following themes seem familiar (and perhaps
overly negative) now, but they represented fresh thinking in 1985. In Brave New World people are controlled by
inflicting pleasure. (viii) Las Vegas is the symbol of our national character and
aspiration. (3) The invention of the clock took men’s eyes from eternity
to current events. (11) “Our metaphors create the content of our culture. Our media are our metaphors.” (15) “The content of our public discourse has become dangerous
nonsense.” (16) The best things on TV are its junk. TV is trivial when it tries to be serious. Our ideas are given form by TV, not print.
(17) Printed works deal with ideas.
Reading encourages rationality.
(50-1) How often does the morning news alter your plans for the
day? It has no significance to
you! “The news elicits from you a
variety of opinions about which you can do nothing….” (68-9) The only use left to news is to
entertain. (76) “A myth is a way of thinking so deeply embedded…that it is
invisible.” “Television has gradually
become our culture.” “The
peek-a-boo world it has constructed around us no longer seems even strange.”
(79) “We have so thoroughly accepted its definitions of truth, knowledge, and
reality that irrelevance seems to us to be filled with import, and
incoherence seems eminently sane.” (80) TV is transforming our culture into one vast show
business. The average network shot is
3.5 seconds. There is always
something new to see, devoted entirely to entertainment. It is now the natural format of all
experience and all subject matter is entertaining. The news is not to be taken seriously. Several minutes of news should give us
many sleepless nights – but newscasters don’t even blink. Neither do we. (86-7) “Thinking does not play well on TV.” There’s not much to see in it. TV always aims for applause, not
reflection. TV must suppress content to
accommodate visual interest. TV sets
the format for all discourse.
Americans exchange images, not ideas, argue with good looks and
celebrities, not propositions.
(90-93) Any murder can be erased from our minds by, “Now
this….” (99) Newscasters are a “cast of talking hair-dos.” (100) Nixon was dishonored not because he lied on TV but because
he looked like a liar on TV. (102) TV does not suggest a story has implications, for then
people might think about it and miss the next TV story! “Pictures have little difficulty in
overwhelming words and short-circuiting introspection.” (103) TV news is vaudeville – no logic, reason, sequence, or
consistency. (105) Americans are the best entertained and least informed
people in the West! (106) We have emotions, not opinions. We are disinformed via misleading information – misplaced,
irrelevant, fragmented, superficial.
“We are losing our sense of what it means to be well informed.” (107) “Ignorance is always correctable. But what shall we do if we take ignorance
to be knowledge?” (108) All coherence has vanished and therefore all
contradictions have disappeared. The
public has adjusted to incoherence and been amused into indifference. (110) “Whereas television taught the magazines that news is
nothing but entertainment, the magazines have taught television that nothing
but entertainment is news.” (112) Religion is presented as entertainment. The preacher is tops, even above God. This has more to do with TV than the
preachers. We succumb to the
weaknesses of the medium. The media
affects the meaning. (116) You will wait a long time to hear a TV preacher preach on
how difficult it is for a rich man to get into heaven! They get the audience by offering what
people want. A close-up TV face in
color is close to idolatry. (121-23) If politics is like show business, then the important
thing is to appear honest, clear, excellent, that is good advertising.
(126) An American of age 40 has seen more than 1 million
commercials. TV commercials are not
about the products but the consumers.
Commercials tell us all problems are solvable, fast, through
technology. (128-30) On TV the politician offers an image of the audience, not
himself. (134) We are being rendered unfit to remember. Know all today. You don’t need history.
(137) TV doesn’t ban books: it just displaces them. Amusement pacifies the masses. (141) |
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