Inke Arns on Sat, 27 Mar 1999 14:35:05 +0100 |
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Syndicate: Dejan Sretenovic: The Death of Media |
Date: Sat, 27 Mar 1999 14:18:44 +0100 From: Ivan Jovic <ivancs@opennet.org> Subject: The Death of Media The Death of Media Most of the private TV stations in Belgrade, except few, transmit Radio Television of Serbia programs. Old partisan movies, news, classical music, patriotic military adds, press conferences of the Yugoslav politicians, army statements, etc. Foreign movies are officially banned from Yugoslav televisions and cinemas. We can see selected reports, mostly about damages on civil objects and hear the statements of the ordinary folk cursing USA and comparing Clinton with Hitler. We are in complete media blindness. The same images and messages on all TV channels. But, the most astonishing fact is that there is no strategic media propaganda as expected. Once again, we are witnessing amateur approach of the Yugoslav regime to the media. The Serbian Ministry of Information decision to expel US, German, French and British journalists is the best illustration for this misunderstanding of the role of media in such circumstances. Of course, censorship is inevitable in the state of war but they even do not consider the fact that Western media take the advantage of this internal media blindness. For example, if the information that several missiles and planes were shot down is correct, why they do not show pictures of wrecks as Iraqi television always did? No way, they have no idea that information war always goes together with real war. Instead of moving images we see still images which cover the reading of statements, talks, announcements, etc. Serbs are back to epic rhetoric which stems from Kosovo myth and they are still more attracted by spoken words than by images. The same images and the same rhetoric on various TV channels indicates that media gave up their productive role in favor of mere reproduction of the same message. The funny thing is that in interviews given to foreign media, Yugoslav politicians use the same pathetic rhetoric and the same arguments they use when addressing to local media. They still do not understand that national mythology and history cannot be proper arguments in contemporary world. It turns out that interviews of distinguished Yugoslav sportsmen in Europe and America produced more positive effects on public opinion abroad than these confusing and unclear statements of the politicians. Why? Experienced in media conventions abroad, they know how to address foreign media in simple and decent words, devoid of pathetic phrases and historical arguments. I have not checked the official web sites, but no doubt that they reflect the same media ignorance. Few independent daily newspapers which still come out (reducing number of pages each day) also reproduce official statements and announcements in the same, more or less patriotic manner. But what will have happen with the independent media after the war (if any of them survives)? Is there going to be any space for objective analysis of this catastrophe? Dejan Sretenovic