As you may have heard, torrential downpours in the southeast flooded the Tennessee capital of Nashville over the weekend, lifting the Cumberland River 13 feet above flood stage, causing an estimated $1 billion in damage, and killing more than 30 people. It could wind up being one of the most expensive natural disasters in U.S. history.For the most part I agree with his analysis. There is, however, another reason why this didn't get the coverage it deserved: The White House pretty much ignored it, and if Obama isn't interested in it neither is the mainstream media.
Or, on second thought, maybe you didn't hear. With two other "disasters" dominating the headlines—the Times Square bombing attempt and the Gulf oil spill—the national media seems to largely to have ignored the plight of Music City since the flood waters began inundating its streets on Sunday. A cursory Google News search shows 8,390 hits for "Times Square bomb" and 13,800 for "BP oil spill." "Nashville flood," on the other hand, returns only 2,430 results—many of them local. As Betsy Phillips of the Nashville Scene writes, "it was mind-boggling to flip by CNN, MSNBC, and FOX on Sunday afternoon and see not one station even occasionally bringing their viewers footage of the flood, news of our people dying."
So why the cold shoulder? I see two main reasons. First, the modern media may be more multifarious than ever, but they're also remarkably monomaniacal. In a climate where chatter is constant and ubiquitous, newsworthiness now seems to be determined less by what's most important than by what all those other media outlets are talking about the most. Sheer volume of coverage has become its own qualification for continued coverage. (Witness the Sandra Bullock-Jesse James saga.) In that sense, it's easy to see why the press can't seem to focus on more than one or two disasters at the same time. Everyone is talking about BP and Faisal Shahzad 24/7, the "thinking" goes. So there must not be anything else that's as important to talk about. It's a horrible feedback loop.
Of course, the media is also notorious for its ADD; no story goes on forever. Which brings us to the second reason the Nashville floods never gained much of a foothold in the national conversation: the "narrative" simply wasn't as strong. Because it continually needs to fill the airwaves and the Internet with new content, 1,440 minutes a day, the media can only trade on a story's novelty for a few hours, tops. It is new angles, new characters, and new chapters that keep a story alive for longer. The problem for Nashville was that both the gulf oil spill and the Times Square terror attempt are like the Russian novels of this 24/7 media culture, with all the plot twists and larger themes (energy, environment, terrorism, etc.) required to fuel the blogs and cable shows for weeks on end. What's more, both stories have political hooks, which provide our increasingly politicized press (MSNBC, FOX News, blogs) with grist for the kind of arguments that further extend a story's lifespan (Did Obama respond too slowly? Should we Mirandize terrorists?). The Nashville narrative wasn't compelling enough to break the cycle, so the MSM just continued to blather on about BP and Shahzad.
As I've written previously the Nashville flood does not offer Obama an opportunity to tout bigger government or slam Republicans, so there's not much reason for him to get concerned. Tennessee is a pretty red state, so Obama isn't likely to carry that state in 2012 nor is it likely to be close. Since Obama is in permanent campaign mode, there's not much reason to go there.
Fortunately for the citizens of Nashville they come from a part of "flyover country" where people watch out for each other and don't sit on their front porch (or their roof) waiting for the government to show up. They jump in and take care of their neighbors and that's what they're doing now.
They'll make it through all this.
If you'd like to help Michelle Malkin has a list of organizations that are accepting donations.
1 comment:
I live in Nashville. Our governor talked to Obama immediately after the flood, and when Obama offered to visit, he told him he didn't want a presidential visit because it takes too many resources, which were better used to deal with the flooding. Governor Bredesen described the federal response:
"I have to say that FEMA and the White House have been absolutely supportive. Very quickly FEMA was on the ground here before the raindrops started falling…The President was on the phone to me before the sun came up practically on Monday morning. Slightly after it came up, other people from the White House had called and checked in with us and helped…I’ve never seen this kind of a response to things that have happened. We’ve had our share of tornadoes and those kinds of things… I’m very, very pleased with the response we’ve gotten from the administration."
Since the flood, Obama has had a slew of officials visiting to try to keep the medias attention on this. He has several government agencies on the ground in Nashville, working to set things right. He declared flooded areas disaster areas so they could get emergency funding. Nashville government has actually been surprised at how MUCH he has done and how quickly... for someone that according to some doesn't care!
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