a note from McChesney.

I'm using his book in a 400-level multimedia course I'm teaching; he's
doing a guest teleconference with us. I don't consider the message
spam . . . though as a call to specific action over a specific cause,
it might be taken as boarderline by some of the kind folks on this
list. 


I hope that you don't find the intrusion .  . . well ...  intrusive.


thanks



Begin forwarded message:


<excerpt><bold><color><param>0000,0000,0000</param>From:
</color></bold>Robert McChesney <<info@mediareform.net>

<bold><color><param>0000,0000,0000</param>Date:
</color></bold>February 11, 2004 11:44:18 AM CST

<bold><color><param>0000,0000,0000</param>To:
</color></bold>info@mediareform.net

<bold><color><param>0000,0000,0000</param>Subject: </color>Tell
Congress to stop what's really indecent about the media: consolidation.

<color><param>0000,0000,0000</param>Reply-To:
</color></bold>rmcchesney@mediareform.net


Congress is having high-profile hearings to debate the crisis in
American media.


Media concentration? Nope -- indecency.


Spurred on by Janet Jackson's Super Bowl antics, Congress has decided
to try to address the issue of television's 'race to the bottom.'
Their answer? Increasing token fines on broadcasters that push the
envelope with explicit content.


We need your help to get Congress to focus on what's truly obscene:
Big Media getting any bigger.


The Super Bowl half-time show is just the latest example of synergy
gone wild -- CBS (which aired the game) and MTV (which produced the
half-time show) are corporate cousins in the Viacom media empire. And
last summer, the FCC passed rules that will allow media giants like
Viacom to get even bigger, narrowing the range of debate and stifling
minority and independent voices. It has to stop.  Members of Congress
are focused on the media today--we've got to tell them what really
matters to us.


We need you to call your representative in Congress. Urge him or her
to co-sponsor House Joint Resolution 72, the resolution of disapproval
that would roll back the new FCC rules. We need you to tell them that
the real solution to the problems of our media has to address the root
cause: the growing concentration of media ownership.


Click here for your representative's information and detailed
instructions: http://www.mediareform.net/callcongress.php


Forward this to everyone you know who cares about fostering a truly
democratic media.


----------------

Last summer, the Federal Communications Commission passed rules that
would allow media giants like Viacom to get even bigger, not only
speeding along the 'race to the bottom' but narrowing the range of
debate, focusing on celebrity over policy, reducing elections to horse
races, stifling minority viewpoints, and barraging us with advertising.


Millions of Americans last year told Congress and the FCC that we're
asking for more trouble if we allow the FCC's relaxation of media
ownership limits to stand. That decision allows a single company to
buy multiple TV stations, eight radio stations, the biggest newspaper,
and the cable system in a given community. Media concentration has led
to less children's programming, cuts in newsroom staff, a decline in
minority-owned media, and the stifling of independent voices.


Congress tried and failed to solve this problem in 2003.  We cannot
allow them to ignore the issue in 2004.  It's up to us to get our
representatives to commit to truly democratic policies--like reversing
the FCC's media ownership decision.


Right now is a critical moment. Take 3 minutes and make a difference.


Sincerely,


The Free Press Team


P.S.: While most of the action today seems to be taking place in
Washington, the real story is actually unfolding in Philadelphia.
There, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit will hear oral
arguments today regarding the new FCC rules. For the most recent
information regarding this groundbreaking case, visit
http://www.mediareform.net/media/philadelphia.php .


P.P.S.: Stay up to date on news relating to media reform with our free
daily headline service. Sign up at
http://www.mediareform.net/news/deliveries.php . Give it a try; both
subscribing and unsubscribing are easy.


-------------

To discontinue receiving these messages, go to
http://www.mediareform.net/remove.php .




</excerpt>Edward Lee Lamoureux, Ph. D.

Director, Multimedia Program and New Media Center

Associate Professor, Speech Communication

1501 W. Bradley

Bradley University

Peoria IL  61625

309-677-2378


