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211 of 269 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars A smart idea for an article, perhaps for Huffington Post, December 26, 2011
This review is from: The Information Diet: A Case for Conscious Consumption (Kindle Edition)
I was interested in the book, and the central metaphor--that we are awash in cheap and unhealthy information in a way not unlike the glut of cheap and harmful food calories--is an intriguing conceit. However, that simile gets expanded so epically that the book's focus gets diffused. Why am I reading about factory farming and the overuse of corn in our diet for page after page? It's not even remotely because the author is adding anything new to the discussion. It's just rehashed and oversimplified summarizing of books like Fast Food Nation and The Omnivore's Dilemma. And here's the problem: not only has everyone heard all of this criticism of our American diet endlessly before, but the only reason it gets rehearsed for far too long here is because of the author's central conceit, which, as analogies go, is too obvious to require it anyway. As soon as he says that the central analogy is that we consume information like we do food, with all the attendant problems, he hardly needs to repeat for us all the problems with obesity and empty calories.

So the first irony is that the book is fat. It could be a lot leaner. It feels like sections have been added to pad it up to a slim little volume you could call a book, when everything interesting here could be said in a magazine article. Too many empty calories, alas.

The second problem, and one I would hope most readers would care about, though I have my doubts, is the painfully obvious bias the author exhibits when he divides up information into "health food" and "junk food." Kudos to the author for at least acknowledging that he's a liberal who has worked in Democratic politics for years, but that still doesn't excuse the exquisitely obvious way that he divides up the landscape. For pages, I literally dreaded his first mention of Fox News (a station, I must note, that I never watch), for I knew it was coming, and I knew exactly what he would say about it. I won't bore the reader with the details--if you're honest, you know exactly what the most predictable leftist take on conservative media would be. Yet when you have high hopes for a book, to cringe, literally, as it becomes obvious what kind of flatulent, flat-footed bias will be passed off as objectivity... well, it was disheartening.

I could add that, while I don't like any television news stations, what made the predictable Fox-bashing seem more horrible was the way it was couched in a defense of CNN as "the facts." For you see, Fox (and later MSNBC, cynically following Roger Ailes' model) is serving up the "cheese fries in gravy" equivalent of information sustenance, whereas CNN is just "the truth" and "the facts"-- a well-balanced, healthy diet of Wolf Blitzer and Anderson Cooper. And THAT'S why CNN's ratings are so low. It's the information equivalent of broccoli.

Maybe if CNN confirms YOUR bias, it can seem to you like just the "truth" and the "facts." But the idea that it is merely objective is, to put it mildly, absurd.

And so there is your second irony. The author says the problem with information consumption is that people only will watch or read what they want to hear, what confirms their bias. Especially those Fox-watching neo-cons, of course. Whereas those of us who get the objective "truth 'n' facts" from Anderson Cooper, et al., at CNN are open-minded people who can handle the truth. Any mainstream progressive who reads that claim will be flattered and have his biases confirmed.

There are lots of other silly things wrong with this book, such as when the author claims that the printing press ushered in the renaissance (a neat trick for Gutenberg to bring about Petrarch and Pico della Mirandola). But to sell a fatty book that's padded with excess and unnecessary verbiage as if it's an information diet, and to flatter readers that, unlike people who want to be flattered, they're truth-seekers--these things make the book especially disappointing.

Maybe it gets better after the first third. That's how much I could take before I decided to cut my losses and read something more nutritious.
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Showing 1-10 of 27 posts in this discussion
Initial post: Dec 29, 2011 8:53:54 AM PST
Peter Kovacs says:
I don't think the author was saying that Wolf Blitzer and Anderson Cooper are unbiased while the folks at Fox News are biased. I think he is referring to the fact that CNN employs a lot of journalists, and spend a lot of money on news gathering operations while FOX News employs fewer and spends less money on news gathering. These are simply objective facts that have a real impact in the quality of information delivered.

In reply to an earlier post on Jan 2, 2012 12:22:17 PM PST
[Customers don't think this post adds to the discussion. Show post anyway. Show all unhelpful posts.]

In reply to an earlier post on Jan 2, 2012 3:30:47 PM PST
Gary Moore says:
If you actually believe that FOX News has both a liberal and a conservative point of view - then I'm guessing you're exactly the kind of person the book is talking about......

In reply to an earlier post on Jan 9, 2012 5:28:24 AM PST
Ryan says:
They obviously do, if you have ever watched the network. Mostly conservative commentary, but they do present both sides in many instances.

Posted on Jan 10, 2012 8:52:35 AM PST
Last edited by the author on Jan 11, 2012 3:39:22 AM PST
M. E. Taylor says:
I simply wanted to add that, indeed, the author holds out CNN as the exemplar of objectivity: "CNN, on the other hand, took a different path. Watching the other two networks go their right- and left-of-center ways, CNN figured there must be some room left for the facts." He also attributes CNN's lack of viewers to the fact that, unlike its competitors, it offers the kind of news that ought to count: "Fox News is in first place on the right, and MSNBC is second on the left. CNN sits at the bottom in the middle, providing real news that nobody wants to hear."

As I said, I do not watch any television news, but when I have had occasion to watch CNN, its liberal bias is rather pronounced. I don't think of CNN as "the facts" or "real news," as the author does. I think of it as about as far to the left as Fox is to the right. (MSNBC is beyond the pale.)

Some people who may like CNN (perhaps even unconsciously) because it echoes their progressive politics may convince themselves that it's pretty much objective and committed to facts. My only reply is that I find it neither objective nor especially interested in facts, not being a progressive myself. I think, rather, that CNN's a bit of a train wreck. Now the author of THIS book holds it out as "the facts" and "real news." Potential readers ought to be aware that that is how his landscape is laid out.

In reply to an earlier post on Jan 10, 2012 6:47:37 PM PST
truthseeker says:
Thank God that you, M.E. Taylor, know what is and is not Factual. I was beginning to think that what ANY author (or person or persons) interprets as factually objective or not ALWAYS depended on a biased perspective.

But it's nice to know there is still one person left in this ol' world (you) who does not interpret Truth and Facts through their own subjective filter and who can therefore judge such matters of fact and non-fact for the rest of us ... er, right.

In reply to an earlier post on Jan 11, 2012 3:38:38 AM PST
M. E. Taylor says:
the ironically named "truthseeker" misses my point, of course. It is NOT that I am the final arbiter of truth and objectivity. It is rather the opposite, that reporting and how it is received are never objective. Of course, suggesting that progressive dogmatism is no more "objective" or "factual" than what Fox News pumps out upsets people like "truthseeker," who would be the ideal reader for this book, as it would flatter his biases. In fact, I would highly recommend the book to progressives who are feeling a little down in the dumps and could benefit from a little flattery.

In reply to an earlier post on Jan 11, 2012 12:58:27 PM PST
truthseeker says:
Wow, I guess you can't take very much in the way of teasing, huh?

And you make a lot of assumptions about me, someone you don't even know, don't you? Do you use this same methodology in determining what you believe is and is not biased in the news?, i.e., just jump immediately to a conclusion without any facts?

So ... let's get a little truth on you: no matter what you can determine about me, you have no idea what sources of information I believe are objective or factual, or not, as I did not address that issue. Further, whether or not I missed your point, you most certainly missed mine.

The point I was really trying to make, for those who need an exegesis, is that your critique of the author's point of view was merely pointing out the obvious. Of course the author has an opinion about what is and is not objective, and of course it is biased. Just as you have an opinion about what is and is not objective, and of course that is biased. Just as I also have an opinion that is also biased. Just as everyone does.

But apparently you believe you are eminently qualified to speak the obvious, i.e., that the author has a point of view. And implied in your review (which at no time suggested what you now claim was your actual point, i.e., "that reporting and how it is received are never objective") is that you are a better judge of what is objective than the author. Well, of course you believe that, just as nearly everyone else believes it, too.

I just don't think that most readers need to have all this obviousness pointed out. But I guess that's just my bias.

Well, in any case, I apologize for my teasing and will try not to do it again.

Posted on Jan 14, 2012 1:15:06 PM PST
Last edited by the author on Jan 14, 2012 1:17:54 PM PST
KLW says:
You seemed to be on the way to making a good point until you admitted that you think CNN is 'far to the left'. Absurd. Anyone with familiarity of even a few other governments and political cultures in the world, not to mention US history, sees the entire US spectrum between Fox and CNBC as so narrow that it looks like one data point. This entire "spectrum" has been moving sharply to the right for decades, to the extent that an ordinary network news cast from 40 years ago would be considered too left wing to be put on any tv station today. The few divisive issues that give the illusion of difference are all peripheral to what is really going on with money and power, and only seem significant to people who have been conditioned by consuming so much manipulative, junk "information" that all the underlying assumptions they have absorbed have become invisible to them.

The fact that the book even goes into which tv station is better than the other indicates to me that it, like you, has totally underestimated the problem of not just crappy content, but of crappy media itself, and thus the nature of what a real information diet would entail. Television, documentaries, and talk radio are simply poor information media. Madison Ave and Hollywood have put decades worth of massive effort into perfecting these media as means of deception and manipulation, not transmission of information. Real information comes from reading, preferably primary sources or secondary sources that argue honestly, dispassionately, and use specific references. I started eschewing all advertisements and most anything masquerading as "news" in televisual media many years ago, and the US seems like a land full of brainwashed drones to me - the more of this crap they consume, the less they think.

In reply to an earlier post on Jan 14, 2012 2:58:53 PM PST
truthseeker says:
KLW, you are quite right, of course. Barry Goldwater believed in choice on the issue of abortion. Richard Nixon believed in serious regulation of business. Both -- and simply for having such positions -- would be called leftists in the US today.

As I said not too long ago on my blog, compared to much of the rest of the world, the left in the US doesn't actually have much of a voice. What is taken for "left wing" in this country is pretty much anyone who can't completely digest the pablum that is fed us via the mass media each and every day.
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