Although I haven't finished dismantling/disrespecting the media just yet, I have found myself sidetracked by the thoughts prompted by a recent article. The following excerpt is from a blog by Clay Shirky: (complete entry
here)
In 1988, Joseph Tainter wrote a chilling book called The Collapse of Complex Societies. Tainter looked at several societies that gradually arrived at a level of remarkable sophistication then suddenly collapsed: the Romans, the Lowlands Maya, the inhabitants of Chaco canyon. Every one of those groups had rich traditions, complex social structures, advanced technology, but despite their sophistication, they collapsed, impoverishing and scattering their citizens and leaving little but future archeological sites as evidence of previous greatness. Tainter asked himself whether there was some explanation common to these sudden dissolutions.
The answer he arrived at was that they hadn’t collapsed despite their cultural sophistication, they’d collapsed because of it. Subject to violent compression, Tainter’s story goes like this: a group of people, through a combination of social organization and environmental luck, finds itself with a surplus of resources. Managing this surplus makes society more complex—agriculture rewards mathematical skill, granaries require new forms of construction, and so on.
If you want to perform a "root cause analysis", to discover what the
root of any problem might be; you follow (or try to) all the breadcrumb trails back to their source(s). Perhaps the ills of media arise from a cause beyond their ability to address.
Here's a practical experiment. Take a nice clean piece of paper, 8 x 10, a standard straight ruler, and a freshly-sharpened No. 2 pencil and place them all on an appropriate writing surface. Draw a single dot on the paper. Draw a second dot and connect both dots with a single line. Draw a third dot and lines connecting it to the first two dots.
Very quickly (as you get to dots 7, 8, or 9), you're presented with a complex mass of dots and lines with the very real possibility some needed lines between dots will be overlooked.
Substitute "people" for "dots"... or ideas... or opinions. Substitute "consensus" for lines. You understand. Tainter's thesis begins to make some sense, gains a little traction in the mind.
We have created the most complex society in history, not only in this country but throughout the entire world. This sudden, electronic globalization we're experiencing, even as I write this, has spattered the landscape with so many new 'dots' and 'lines' attended by so many disconnections isn't adding to the complexity... it is compounding the complexity.
To escape Tainter's 'Curse', we'd better come to grips with the complexity. Discovering those critical 'inflection points' from which to form action plans and strategies requires factual information of high quality. We are not getting high quality information anymore.
Perhaps it IS too much to ask for media outlet altruism in providing precisely the unbiased, boring reportage when so much more money can be made simply playing to and validating the audience's existing preconceptions. Perhaps the lure of celebrity trumps the notion of humble scribe or valiant crusader. Perhaps I have unrealistic expectations.
Knowledge is Power. The lack of knowledge is... well, uncomfortable at the moment.