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Grow Some Labia's avatar

Don't underestimate the contribution of 24-hour news, with the advent of CNN and an exponential increase in cable movie channels in the '80s. Before CNN, news came from half hour to one hour news shows in the morning and evening, and from the local newspaper, and the radio. If you wanted more news than that you subscribed to various magazines and periodicals. But the news WAS more balanced then, as the Fairness Doctrine was still in place, mandating equal time for political candidates, which Reagan got rid of because old-school conservative snowflakes were tired of having to listen to and present views outside their constipated bubble.

Because CNN had to fill 24 hours a day now with news, we got a lot more attention on the important stuff, but also a lot of stupid crap too, including people and stories which should never have been on the news. That was also the dawn of the beginnings of reality TV, like the live rescue of a little girl who'd fallen down a hole in the ground, and later, the OJ chase.

Nut groups like the KKK took advantage of this and created news with rallies & marches & so forth because they knew it would make the news. Whatever was outrageous and eye-catching leads. Or as Don Henley sang back then, "We all know that crap is king, give us your dirty laundry!"

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Steve QJ's avatar

Yep, 100%. The 24-hour news cycle was the beginning of a lot of this insanity.

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Chris Fox's avatar

Don't confuse the CNN of the modern entertainment network ("children with incurable disease and lost puppies" — Paddy Chayevsky) with it first few years. The erary years under Ted Turner were glorious. No just around the clock news but excellent commentary and interview shows; I watched Crossfire and Freeman Reports every day. Pat Buchanan was a brilliant interviewer and Lou Dobbs was the most professional anchorman ever, showing no trace of the bigotry that defines him now.

The Happy World of Entertainment shows were few, easily skipped, and only took up a small part of their day.

Needless to say, Things Went Bad, The Happy shows started taking more time, the commentary became shallower, Tom Braded got old and Fred Barnes took his place, then took Buchanan's. The rightward shift is more recent and by than television was long since out of my life.

The last decade would have been enormously different with the original CNN.

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