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The Mad Corporate World of Glenn Beck
When I picked up a ringing phone Monday morning, the next thing I knew a producer was inviting me to appear on Glenn Beck’s TV show.
Beck has become a national phenom with his nightly hour of polemics on CNN Headline News — urging war on Iran, denouncing “political correctness” at home, trashing immigrants who don’t speak English, mocking environmentalists as repressive zealots, and generally trying to denigrate progressive outlooks.
Our segment, the producer said, would focus on a recent NBC news report praising the virtues of energy-efficient LED light bulbs without acknowledging that the network’s parent company, General Electric, sells them. I figured it was a safe bet that Beck’s enthusiasm for full disclosure from media would be selective.
A few hours later, I was staring into a camera lens at the CNN bureau in San Francisco while Beck launched into his opening. What had occurred on the “NBC Nightly News,” he explained, “was at best a major breach of journalistic integrity.” And he pointed out: “The problem isn’t what NBC is promoting. It’s what they’re not disclosing.”
A minute later, Beck asked his first question: “Norman, you agree with me that they should have disclosed this?” The unedited transcript tells what happened next:
SOLOMON: “It’s a big problem when there’s not disclosure. I’m glad you opened this up. And I wouldn’t want any viewers of this program to be left with the impression that somehow General Electric is an environmentally conscious company.
“On the contrary, they have a 30-year history of refusing and actually fighting against efforts to make them clean up the Hudson River, which GE fouled with terrible quantities of horrific PCBs, other rivers as well. People told they can’t fish in the Hudson River. General Electric still lobbying to not have to clean up.
“General Electric, even today — and this report is very timely — General Electric is lobbying to get Congress to pass $18 billion in taxpayer-backed loan guarantees for a huge GE product which is General Electric components for nuclear power plants. So we should not be fooled in any way by efforts to greenwash General Electric or any other company.”
BECK: “You know what’s amazing to me? GE has a bigger budget for — special interest budget than all of the oil companies combined, and yet nobody says anything. Let me reverse this.
“Norman, do you think if I got on as somebody who says I don’t know what we can do about global warming, I’m not sure man causes it, and I certainly don’t want to have laws and regulations on this, if I got on and said that but I was being — my corporate — my corporate parent was Exxon Mobil, do you think I’d get away with that for a second without that being on the front page of the New York Times?”
SOLOMON: “Well, other networks, including General Electric’s NBC, have been very slow on global warming. And in fact, General Electric has major interest in components and products used by the oil and gas industry.
“I think if you look across the board, all the major networks, even so-called public broadcasting, which has Chevron underwriting its ‘Washington Week’ program every Friday, there is a problem, as you say. I think your words are very apt, ‘promoting’ but ‘not disclosing.’
“But let’s be clear about this, Glenn. I have a list here, for instance, that I jotted down.
“ABC, owned by Disney. ABC doesn’t disclose in their relevant news reports about Disney’s stake in sweatshops.
“Fox News — and now as of the last couple of days now, Wall Street Journal owned by the same entity, Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp — they don’t disclose that the ownership is entangled with the Chinese government to the detriment of human rights but to the advancement of the profit margin of the parent company.”
BECK: “See —”
SOLOMON: “We would be remiss, Glenn, if we left out CNN, because CNN has a huge multi, multibillion-dollar stake in Internet deregulation and the failure of the Congress to safeguard so far what would be called net neutrality. So every time CNN does a news report on the Internet, on efforts to regulate or deregulate or create a two- or three-tier system of the Internet, CNN News should disclose that Time Warner, the parent company, stands to gain or lose billions of dollars in those terms.
“And one more thing.”
BECK: “Real quick.”
SOLOMON: “A major — a major advertiser for CNN is the largest military contractor in the United States, Lockheed Martin. So when you and others —”
BECK: “I got news for you, Norman. Norman —”
SOLOMON: “— promote war — when you and others promote war on this network —”
BECK: “Norman — Norman —”
SOLOMON: “— we have Lockheed Martin paying millions of dollars undisclosed. So I would quote you —”
BECK: “Norman — Norman —”
SOLOMON: “Promoting but not disclosing is a bad way to go.”
BECK: “Norman, let me just tell you this. First of all, Lockheed Martin is not a — not a corporate overlord of this program.”
SOLOMON: “It’s a major advertiser on CNN.”
BECK: “That’s fine. That’s fine. Advertisers are different. But let —”
SOLOMON: “Well, it is fine, but it should be disclosed.”
BECK: “Norman, let me just tell you something. If you think that it’s warmonger central downstairs at CNN, you’re out of your mind. But that’s a different story.”
SOLOMON: “Well, upstairs, when I watch Glenn Beck, in terms of attacking Iran, it certainly is. It’s lucrative for the oil companies, as well as for the major advertiser on CNN, Lockheed Martin.”
BECK: “But we’re not talking about advertisers. We are talking about —”
SOLOMON: “Well, you don’t want to talk about it. So let’s talk about the Internet stake.”
BECK: “No, no, no. Norman —”
SOLOMON: “Let’s talk about the Internet stake that the owners of CNN have. Huge profits to be made or lost by the parent company of CNN depending on what happens in Washington in terms of Internet regulation.”
BECK: “Norman, let me tell you something.”
SOLOMON: “That should be acknowledged, don’t you think?”
BECK: “Absolutely. And if it was on this program, it would be acknowledged.
“I thank you very much for your time.
“That just goes to show you, you’ve got to beware of everybody who you’re getting your news from. Wouldn’t it be nice if once in a while somebody came on and said, you know, I don’t really have an agenda except the truth? It’s my truth. If you don’t like it, you should go someplace else.”
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During the back-and-forth, I’d understated the present-day role of Chevron as a funder of key news programming on PBS. Actually the Chevron Corporation, which signed on as an underwriter of “Washington Week” last year, no longer helps pay the piper there — but the massive energy firm does currently funnel big bucks to the most influential show on PBS, the nightly “NewsHour with Jim Lehrer.”
The corporate funders of the “NewsHour” now include not only Chevron but also AT&T and Pacific Life. There must be dozens of journalistic reports on the program every week — whether relevant to the business worlds of energy, communications or insurance — that warrant, and lack, real-time disclosures while the news accounts are on the air. Meanwhile, over at “Washington Week,” the corporate cash now flows in from the huge military contractor Boeing and the National Mining Association.
And that’s just “public broadcasting.” On avowedly commercial networks, awash in corporate ownership interests and advertising revenues, a thorough policy of disclosure in the course of news coverage would require that most of the airtime be devoted to shedding light on the media outlet conflicts-of-interest of the reporting in progress.
And what about Glenn Beck? The guy is another in a long line of demagogues riding a bull market for pseudo-populism. Brought to you by too many corporate interests to name.
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Norman Solomon’s latest books are “Made Love, Got War: Close Encounters with America’s Warfare State” and “War Made Easy: How Presidents and Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death.” For further information, go to: www.normansolomon.com.
Posted by anthony
Anthony Lappé is GNN's Executive Editor. He's written for The New York Times, Details, New York, Paper, The Fader and Vice, among many others. He has worked as a producer for MTV and Fuse. He is the co-author of GNN's True Lies and the producer of their Iraq doc,...










That was an awesome article, glad you guys republished this.
I wish I could have been a fly on the wall. Did any of this get broadcast if so could it be put on You Tube ?
We need someone to do a similiar analysis of the British media’s ownership and advertising revenues .
ohhh I hate Glenn Beck, and Norman was all over him. Good Stuff.
That was a serious schooling.
Good Stuff! Someone needs to publish this on youtube.
Here’s the link for the media matters republish, but unfortunately it doesn’t have the Norman Solomon portion:
http://mediamatters.org/items/200712190009
Here’s my favorite Glenn Beck rant, where he professes that the show “24” is real:
http://mediamatters.org/items/200702020015
I recall Glen Beck, while being interviewed by Anderson Cooper in some odd CNN circle jerk, stating that the biggest threat to America today is “political correctness”.
I suppose I should have stuck around to hear his reasoning behind that statement, but I felt it would be more productive to go stare at a blank wall for the remaining 20 minutes of the program.
Do any of you really think that this means anything? Do you really think that someone as pathological as Beck would learn something from this? Do you really think that any of Beck’s viewers will change their minds about what they believe in over this?
Beck, as the rest of the right-wing TV/Radio-show hosts, is not a person of reason, not a person who is trying to learn, or trying to educate his viewers.
Nothing will come of this. Absolutley nothing.
All Solomon did was to give a liitle but of legitimacy to someone who does not deserve it.
“Norman, do you think if I got on as somebody who says I don’t know what we can do about global warming, I’m not sure man causes it, and I certainly don’t want to have laws and regulations on this, if I got on and said that but I was being — my corporate — my corporate parent was Exxon Mobil, do you think I’d get away with that for a second without that being on the front page of the New York Times?”
This is a standard argument that robots like Glenn Beck use. It is very recognizable. The New York Times certainly would not let them get away with it! Ha! Ha!
“Do you really think that someone as pathological as Beck would learn something from this?”
That’s not the point.
If this was just an untelevised discussion between the two, that would be another thing.
“All Solomon did was to give a liitle but of legitimacy to someone who does not deserve it.”
Actually he did what he set out for: he made an excellent argument for anyone who was watching and interested in learning something. I have no doubt that his lucid arguments got through to a few of the audience. It might be a little different if this was fox, where the audience is generally a bit more dogmatic…
Great stuff.
the only thing more awesome than that would be Naomi Klein bitch slapping Bill O’Riley
Here’s the video
yessir
Its about time someone put that conservative fluff girl Glenn Beck in line, gotta catch them off guard…or they’ll just turn your mic off.
Its about time someone put that conservative fluff girl Glenn Beck in line, gotta catch them off guard…or they’ll just turn your mic off.