Political Junkies
From Talk Radio to Twitter, How Alternative Media Hooked Us on Politics and Broke Our Democracy
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- $19.99
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- $19.99
Publisher Description
A wide-ranging history of seventy years of change in political media, and how it transformed -- and fractured -- American politics
With fake news on Facebook, trolls on Twitter, and viral outrage everywhere, it's easy to believe that the internet changed politics entirely. In Political Junkies, historian Claire Bond Potter shows otherwise, revealing the roots of today's dysfunction by situating online politics in a longer history of alternative political media.
From independent newsletters in the 1950s to talk radio in the 1970s to cable television in the 1980s, pioneers on the left and right developed alternative media outlets that made politics more popular, and ultimately, more partisan. When campaign operatives took up e-mail, blogging, and social media, they only supercharged these trends. At a time when political engagement has never been greater and trust has never been lower, Political Junkies is essential reading for understanding how we got here.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
New School history professor Potter debuts with an illuminating rundown of historical trends in political journalism, from New Deal era consensus building to today's super-partisan echo chambers. During the Eisenhower administration, Potter writes, progressive journals such as I.F. Stone's Weekly offered an insider's perspective not found on major TV networks and in daily newspapers. Though McCarthyism purged "the left establishment" of many prominent voices, by the mid-1970s, Stone and rival "right-wing stars" such as radio broadcaster Carl McIntyre had given rise to a highly invested readership for both liberal and conservative publications, and a viewership for TV programs such as the MacNeil/Lehrer Report. Hooked on politics by the Watergate hearings, advances in polling technology, and the rise of cable news, "political junkies" (a termed coined by Hunter S. Thompson) were increasingly drawn to progressive and conservative populist outlets in the 1980s and 1990s, including the online news aggregator Drudge Report, which broke the story of Bill Clinton's affair with Monica Lewinsky. Donald Trump's 2016 election, Potter contends, can be attributed to his comfort with the "hyper-partisan populist atmosphere that digital alternative media promoted." Potter's brisk and well-informed account suggests that alternative media, by refocusing on truth-seeking and informed debate, can help solve many of the threats to American democracy that it has produced. Newshounds on both the right and the left will be encouraged.