Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2014
The 1940s held multiple challenges for American print news media. Newspapers in particular came under withering criticism, and the need for press reform was becoming a matter of public consensus. “It is a fact,” stated a 1946 editorial in Editor & Publisher, the leading trade magazine, “that newspapers in general have become the national whipping boy.” A later piece described how 1947 had subjected newspapers “to the most searching analysis and criticism in all their history.” Similar sentiments were shared across a wide range of opinion magazines, trade journals, and journalists’ firsthand accounts. Media criticism, according to one historian of the period, had become a kind of popular sport. Critiques that previously had been associated with fringe polemics and leftist elements within the labor movement were becoming mainstreamed. Radicals such as Morris Ernst, who advocated breaking up newspaper and broadcasting chains, had begun to significantly influence media policy discourse. Political elites and broad sectors of the public were increasingly cohering around a structural critique of their press system.
Among the main causes of distrust of the industry were increased concentration of ownership and decreased competition. Charges against newspaper monopolies, absentee ownership, and lack of accountability to local communities became commonplace. As press institutions fought for their very legitimacy, calls for government intervention prompted warnings from people both within and outside the industry that the press must shape up before it was too late. Reformist innovations like citizen councils, proposed by the industry to confront the “rising tide of dissatisfaction,” gained traction – if only to prevent further public criticism and possible government action. Indeed, the government was already encroaching on multiple fronts, and such interventionist moves put publishers on notice that they were fair game for regulation.
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