Alternative Media, Then and Now and Tomorrow
Some 35 years ago, when I was just an aspiring journalist settling into
life In Los Angeles, a venerable alternative journal, the Free Press,
died. This paper, which had chronicled the Beat Era, the Civil Rights
Movement, and the rise of the '60s Counter Culture, much like the Village Voice
in New York City on the opposite coast, didn't stop publishing. Rather,
the new owner decided that the real money was in massage parlor ads and
ads for sex services, and so he eliminated the journalism in favor of
pornography.
At the time, I had been freelancing, doing pieces for the "Freep's"
managing editor, Tom Thompson, a hulking former linebacker and veteran
TV news reporter with a growl for a voice who ate too much, smoked too
much and had an unerring sense for what was really important and needed
covering.
When the Freep ceased to be a newspaper, Tom quit. But
instead of going off to find another job in some forsaken corner of the
corporate media, he did something unusual. He called a meeting at his
house of the journalists he had been working with, myself included.
Sitting around his living room, a dozen or so of us talked about the
crazy idea of starting a new alternative newspaper for Los Angeles. We
wanted a weekly. We wanted it to be something people paid for, even if
it was just a quarter.
And we wanted it to be ours, not some publisher's
property, in which we were just the cogs.
We found a backer, a liberal Democratic activist named Jim Horowitz,
who ran a small plumbing supply wholesale operation. Jim, incredibly and
generously, if with understandable skepticism, agreed to our terms: 50%
ownership in return for his fronting of $50,000, and 50% ownership for
those of us who agreed to work for $125 a week to put out the paper,
which we decided to call the Los Angeles Vanguard.
This coming week, two of the original journalists from that venture,
myself and Ron Ridenour, will gather together with the members of the
journalists' collective that runs this online paper--myself, John Grant
and Charles M. Young (Linn Washington will be out of town)--to celebrate
and critique what was done in Los Angeles half a lifetime ago, and and
what we have done with ThisCantBeHappening! over the 14 months of this
new publication's existence. We will be hosting a forum titled
"The LA Vanguard, ThisCantBeHappening! and the Future of Alternative Journalism"
this coming Thursday, August 18, at 7 pm at Larry Robin's Moonstone
Arts Center, 110A S. 13th Street in Philadelphia. (Everyone is welcome,
and refreshments will be available.)
LA Vanguard and TCBH! staffs: Young, Ridenour, Lindorff, Grant, Washington, Thompson and Pleasants
Both these publications, the Vanguard and ThisCantBeHappening!, did and in TCBH!'s case continue to do a lot with very little. At the LA Vanguard,
because we were still in the print era, most of the money went into
production. We had to have an office to put the paper together. We
needed Compugraphic typesetting and headline printing equipment and
paste-up tables, a darkroom, news racks, a truck to distribute the
papers, and we needed to pay for the whole web printing process. Our
meager salaries for the 60-80 hour weeks we put in were almost an
afterthought on the balance sheet. At ThisCantBeHappening!, in
contrast, our only address is on the internet, we have no salaries, and
our total expenses for the year are tallied in the hundreds of dollars.
But in both cases, we were able to do things that the corporate
media, with their millions of dollars in fixed assets and millions more
in editorial salaries, do not or will not do.
In Los Angeles, our little paper broke the story of the Los Angeles
Police Department's shoot-to-kill policy in confrontations with even
unarmed citizens (mostly black and Latino), we published a secret
internal memo exposing how local judges were biased in favor of
landlords because so many of them were themselves landlords, we covered
the campaigns of progressive state candidates like Tom Hayden, and we
exposed the links between the phone company and the growing local, state
and national police apparatus. We also belatedly discovered ourselves
to have been the target of the LAPD's "Red Squad," which dispatched a
young undercover officer to join our staff, posing as a wannabe
reporter--an assault on the First Amendment which the local ACLU chapter
later said was "unprecedented," and which led to a five-figure damage
settlement by the City of Los Angeles with the paper's staff.
ThisCantBeHappening! has also covered its share of otherwise
ignored stories, and has broken news too, which the corporate media
preferred to ignore. One example is on our home page now--an article,
interestingly, by Ridenour, who is visiting for this event from his
exile in Denmark and who went to participate in and report on the
Brandywine Peace Community's Protest and Commemoration of the criminal
bombing of Hiroshima on Aug. 6, 1945. You read about the anniversary of
Hiroshima in the Inquirer and saw stories about that atrocity on the
news (although it was not called an atrocity!), but you did not read or see
any report on the Brandywine protest in front of the Lockheed-Martin
war-machine complex adjacent to King of Prussia Mall, or on the arrests
made when protesters there hung crime scene tape across the entrance to
the plant, which helps make parts for the Hellfire missiles fired by
remotely piloted drone aircraft into homes and villages in Pakistan.
If you've been reading ThisCantBeHappening!, you also learned almost immediately after his arrest,
that the slaughterer of two young men in Lahore Pakistan last spring
was not, as reported in the US media, some unfortunate US consular
victim of a botched "robbery attempt," but rather a cold-blooded CIA
contract killer, quite possibly involved in stirring up terrorist
activities to destabilize Pakistan and foment a coup. You would have
also seen the clip
of a short cell-phone video showing two Israeli storm-troopers kicking
and then executing, with shots to the head, a teen-aged Turkish-American
volunteer on the Mavi Marmara Gaza aid ship--a clip that was never
shown on American television. You would have learned that a young man arrested from his home in Philadelphia and frog-marched before TV cameras,
charged with the killing of a white college student during a high-speed
stolen-car chase, was the wrong man, the result not of confusion, but
of deliberate police lying to prosecutors. Speaking of police and
prosecutorial lying, you would have (and still can) see a video we made, with filmmaker Ted Passon,
proving that death-row prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal could not have slain
Police Officer Daniel Faulkner execution=style as described by
prosecution witnesses. And you would have learned, during the debates
over President Obama's so-called Health Reform Bill, that by simply
extending Medicare to cover every American, all Americans could have by
now been receiving the same quality care that elderly Americans do, at a
total cost of about half what the nation currently pays for health
care. None of these stories got reported in the national or local
media, with all their millions of dollars and thousands of journalists
on staff.
Why?
And why can't the alternative media, like ThisCantBeHappening!, and the LA Vanguard before it, do more to break down the information barriers and blast through the propaganda?
Come join us this Thursday for an open forum and let's figure this out together, and figure out what to do about it!
If you can't come, please consider making a donation to
support our work here at the LA Vanguard. We do it all for free, but if
you readers would support us, even with $5 each per year, we could do a
whole lot more!