Missing in Action: Media Images of Real Workers

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Los Angeles Times

August 30, 1999

Commentary

By Matt Witt

As the Labor Day weekend ap­proaches, we will see adver­tisements for back-to-school sales, reports on holiday traffic deaths and recipes for backyard barbecues. 

What we won't see is much reporting on the lives of people who labor in "the nation's offices, factories arid service industries. There isn't much cover­age of how jobs are changing in America or of the growing gap in wealth between those who do the work and those who profit from it.

Issues of work and class are largely invisible, not just on Labor Day but year-round. Rarely do we see stories exploring important questions facing working families. For example:

  • Why is the average entry-level wage at least one-fifth less than it was 20 years ago, with starting pay declin­ing even for new college graduates?
  • What business strategies are lead­ing the shift to "contingent" labor - the part-time, temporary or subcon­tracted jobs that make up 30% of the work force?
  • What has forced the average mar­ried couple to work 326 more hours a year than 20 years ago to maintain its buying power?

A study by Fairness and Ac­curacy in Re­porting, a liberal media-watch­dog group, found "that the evening news programs of CBS, ABC and NBC recently devoted only 2% of their total air time to workers' issues, including child care, the minimum wage, and workplace safety and health.

During a full year, the broad­casts reportedly spent a total of 13 minutes on job safety and health, while an average of more than 16 workers die daily from work-related injuries and more than 650,000 annually suffer back, wrist or other in­juries from poorly designed worksta­tions and repetitive motion.

Although local television news shows are full of "how-to" consumer stories—how to find good eyeglasses, how to choose a baby-sitter, how to stay fit—they rarely give advice on problems at work.

Not only are work-related topics missing in the media, but so are work­ers. Studies of ABC's "Nightline" and PBS' "NewsHour With Jim Lehrer" found that almost all guests were cor­porate or government officials, politi­cians or professors, while fewer than 1% were non-elite workers or their representatives. A general examination of news reports in the New York Times and the Washington Post (or the Los Angeles Times) finds few sources who are workers or union representatives.

ABC reporter Sam Donaldson was candid in a magazine interview about the media's practice of turning mainly to the corporate and political elite for on-camera comment. "You can't come to me and say, 'Sam, I know you're on deadline, you need a comment on such and such, go out and take a chance on Mr. X.' No, I'm sorry, folks, I don't have time to take a chance on Mr. X."

Working people are also nearly invisible in television entertain­ment programming. Heads of households were working-class characters in only 11% of prime-time network family series from 1946 to 1990, according to a study by Rider University professor Rich­ard Butsch.

When working-class characters are shown, they often are por­trayed as "dumb, immature, irre­sponsible or lacking in common sense," Butsch noted, referring to shows such as "The Honeymoon-ers," "The Flintstones," "All in the Family" and "The Simpsons."

Public television doesn't do much better, according to a study of two years of PBS prime-time programming by City University of New York's Committee for Cultural Studies. Only about one hour a month dealt with the lives and concerns of workers, while nearly 10 times that much time was spent on the upper classes.

A number of factors contribute to media bias on labor issues.

One is that the news media are owned by big corporations, with strong interests and opinions. NBC, for example, which might be expected to inform working people about international trade agreements that make it easier for U.S. corporations to exploit foreign workers in cheap-labor havens such as Mexico, is owned by Gen­eral Electric—one of the compa­nies practicing such exploitation.

A second factor is the influence of advertisers, who insist on a "positive environment" for their ads—meaning one free of contro­versial, issues or opinions that clash with their corporate agendas.

third is the class background of editors, producers and oth­ers who make/decisions about me­dia coverage; Many live like corpo­rate officials and have little contact with working, people. A Los An­geles Times survey found that 54% of newspaper editors said they generally took business' side in disputes with workers, while only 7% generally sided with em­ployees—a contrast with polls that show most Americans generally side with workers.

A fourth consideration is that working people usually do not have the time, money or training to compete with corporate media-relations operations. Union work­ers have greater resources, but many labor organizations have only recently begun to use modem communications practices.

While these factors generally combine to produce media coyer-age that either ignores or is biased on work and class issues, some re­porters have managed to over­come the obstacles. In recent months, the Los Angeles Times has published various articles that ex­plore the causes of problems work­ing people face.

One Times story looked at the shift to temporary work — what it means to workers, why employers are doing it, and how unions and other organizations are respond­ing. Another article discussed an irony that some Catholic hospitals do not follow church teachings re­quiring respect for workers' free­dom to unionize.

Imagine how public debate could change if such topics were given the same intense media attention given to crime (even as crime rates have dropped) or the Dow Jones stock average (although a broad majority of the population owns little or no stock).

Imagine if the news gave priority to the daily concerns of working Americans—on Labor Day and ev­ery day.

Matt Witt teaches at the Ameri­can University School of Commu­nication in Washington, D.C.

Courtesy of TheWorkSite.org.