Focus On The Corporation
by Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman
Why Newsweek is Bad for Kids
Did you see the cover story of Newsweek magazine last week? The cover story
is titled, "Why TV is Good for Kids."
What are we to expect from Newsweek next week?
Why Soda Pop is Good for Kids.
Why Sedentary Living is Good for Kids.
Why Obesity is Good for Kids.
Some things are good for kids.
Reading is good for kids.
Love and caring is good for kids.
Teaching is good for kids.
Running, playing basketball and baseball and tennis and swimming are good
for kids.
But don't try and insult us by telling us that sitting in front of a TV is
good for kids.
Why, against all common sense, is Newsweek going to try and convince us
that television is good for kids?
Well, one reason might be: Newsweek is owned by the Washington Post
Company, which owns a sprawling cable company and six broadcast stations
around the country.
Of course, nowhere in the article does Newsweek tell us this.
And how does Newsweek try and convince us that TV is good for kids?
They trot out an expert, Daniel Anderson, a professor of psychology at the
University of Massachusetts, who claims that TV is good for kids.
But what Newsweek doesn't tell us is Anderson is a paid consultant to a
variety of television networks and advertising interests.
His clients include: NBC, CBS, Universal Pictures, Sony, General Mills, the
Leo Burnett ad agency, Nickelodeon and the National Association of
Broadcasters.
The article says that TV is a good thing because kids learn from television
and parents are "looking for TV to help them do a better job of raising
kids."
But Frank Vespe, executive director of the TV TurnOff Network
(www.tvturnoff.org), points out that the article misses a crucial issue:
The average American school child spends more time in front of the
television each year--about 1,023 hours--than in the classroom--about 900
hours.
"This amount of television--more than twice what anyone thinks is a healthy
amount--has negative consequences for health, education, and family time,"
Vespe said.
This amount of television watching actually hurts children.
Vespe points to studies documenting how kids gain weight from watching TV,
and that TV reinforces sex roles and stereotyping.
Voracious TV-watching kids turn into voracious TV-watching adults. The
average American watches four hours a day, 1460 hours a year, about two
full months, 24 hours a day, every year.
Newsweek did run a one-page counterpoint ("No It's Not") to its "TV Is Good
for Kids" eight pager.
The "No It's Not" counterarticle is written by a mom who points out that
the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends no television for children
younger than two and a maximum of two hours a day of "screen time"--TV,
computers or videogames--for older kids.
We rang up the author of the "Why TV Is Good for Kids" article, Daniel
McGinn.
McGinn immediately points out that at the end of his article, he did write
that the expert, Anderson, advised on a handful of television shows during
their conception.
"People who help create television shows get paid to do so," McGinn tells
us.
Well, yes, but Anderson gets paid to do much more.
According to his own bio, Anderson has been paid by NBC and by General
Mills to consult "on television viewing behavior."
And he's been paid by the Leo Burnett ad agency to consult on "children's
cognitive processing of television."
That's a touch more than helping to "create television shows."
We asked Newsweek's McGinn why he didn't inform his readers that Newsweek
is owned by the Washington Post which owns a cable company and six
broadcast news outlets.
"Newsweek is owned by the Washington Post," he says. "I'm not sure what the
Washington Post owns today."
You mean you don't know that the Washington Post Company owns television
outlets?
It's right on the company's web site: WDIV in Detroit, KPRC in Houston,
WPLG in Miami, WKMP in Orlando, KSAT in San Antonio, and WJXT in
Jacksonville.
The Post also owns Cable ONE, the owner and operator of cable television
systems serving subscribers across the country.
Earlier, McGinn left a message on our machine saying he was willing to talk
with us "at whatever length."
At this point, though, McGinn decides the conversation has gone on long
enough.
"Who do you write for?" he asks. We tell him.
"Have a great day, bud." And he hangs up.
Russell Mokhiber is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Corporate Crime
Reporter. Robert Weissman is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based
Multinational Monitor. They are co-authors of Corporate Predators (Monroe,
Maine: Common Courage Press; see http://www.corporatepredators.org). To
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(c) Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman
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