{"id":6698,"date":"2007-02-26T16:43:22","date_gmt":"2007-02-26T08:43:22","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.quezon.ph\/?p=6698"},"modified":"2013-10-21T16:53:26","modified_gmt":"2013-10-21T08:53:26","slug":"the-explainer-media-and-campaigning","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.quezon.ph\/2007\/02\/26\/the-explainer-media-and-campaigning\/","title":{"rendered":"The Explainer: Media and campaigning"},"content":{"rendered":"
That was a scene from \u201cCitizen Kane.\u201d Orson Welles, playing a thinly-disguised version of the famous publisher William Randolf Hearst. The crusading publisher and media and their causes is an enduring image to this day.<\/p>\n
So in current campaign, what role should media be playing? And more importantly, can it play that role?<\/p>\n
I\u2019m Manolo Quezon. The Explainer.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
I.<\/strong><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Whenever a public discussion takes place, a lot of things have to be assumed, if our time isn\u2019t going to be spent endlessly explaining everything, which leaves no time to discuss anything new. When I talk about a cat, for example, I assume you know what a cat is; and as it is for simple things, so should it be for even more complicated things.<\/p>\n But because our educational system, in many ways, isn\u2019t what it used to be, there are terms media throws around that neither media nor you, the audience, don\u2019t take time to think through.<\/p>\n Take the term by which media and its observers love to use, to refer to itself- \u201cthe fourth estate.\u201d What does it really mean? We have to go back to revolutionary France to figure this out.<\/p>\n King Louis XVI was running out of funds, and like many kings before him, he decided to convene a parliament to vote him more funds. In France, the parliament was called the Estates-General, and it was composed of three classes of men, because women weren\u2019t politically in the picture. These classes were:<\/p>\n The Church, The Nobility, And Commoners, though these were really uncommon men whom today we\u2019d call the middle class. All three eventually came together in opposition to the king, and toppled him. They did so because of the newspapers and political scandal sheets of the times.<\/span><\/p>\n Wikipedia provides an interesting observation by Edmund Burke. He observed that \u201cA Fourth Estate of Able Editors, springs up,\u201d and Thomas Carlyle popularized the term and explained it in this manner:<\/span><\/p>\n Whoever can speak, speaking now to the whole nation, becomes a power, a branch of government, with inalienable weight in law-making, in all acts of authority. It matters not what rank he has, what revenues or garnitures. the requisite thing is, that he have a tongue which others will listen to; this and nothing more is requisite. The nation is governed by all that has tongue in the nation: Democracy is virtually there.<\/i><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Using the term \u201cFourth Estate\u201d then, is a kind of code, or short hand, for some pretty serious ideas.<\/p>\n First, it means the press \u2013the old fashioned term that includes today\u2019s print, broadcast, and online medias- is necessarily a power unto itself and views itself as such;<\/p>\n second, that because it\u2019s on par with other, more traditional authorities, it must necessarily compete with, and even oppose, those powers.<\/p>\n Third this means that the press is dependent on the public, which in a sense, also depends on the press to inform it on what\u2019s going on.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Just this weekend a gathering took place, called Media Nation 4.1. It\u2019s the fourth time members from media set aside considerations of competition, and talked among themselves about they\u2019re doing their job. If you\u2019d like to know more about it, do take the time to visit\u00a0http:\/\/khanterbury.blogspot.com\/2007\/02\/media-nation-41.html<\/a><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Rachel Khan\u2019s blog<\/p>\n http:\/\/unholyhours.blogspot.com\/2007\/02\/reports-from-dollhouse-part-1.html<\/a><\/p>\n Or Frank Cimatu,<\/p>\n http:\/\/www.inquirerbloggers.net\/atplay\/<\/a><\/p>\n Or see the coverage of Inquirer.net through Joey Alarilla,\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n