In “Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media”, Chomsky examines the ways in which the mass media can be used as a tool to control and manipulate public opinion. Chomsky breaks down his theory into five main filters: size, ownership, advertising, flak, and fear.
Chomsky’s Five Filters of the Mass Media
- Size: The dominant media outlets are large corporations that are beholden to their shareholders. As a result, these outlets tend to produce content that is safe and inoffensive so as not to upset their corporate masters.
- Ownership: A small handful of corporations control the vast majority of the media landscape. This consolidation of power means that a very small number of people have an enormous amount of influence over what we see and hear in the news.
- Advertising: The relationship between advertisers and the media is one of interdependence. Advertisers provide the media with much-needed revenue, while the media provides advertisers with a captive audience for their products and services. As a result, the media is reluctant to bite the hand that feeds it by running ads that are critical of big business or controversial topics like war and peace.
- Flak: Flak is negative feedback or criticism directed at a particular person or idea. When applied to the media, flak refers to pressure exerted by special interest groups on news outlets to shape their coverage in a certain way—usually in favor of those special interests. For example, if an energy company doesn’t want its dirty secrets exposed in the press, it might hire a team of PR experts to bombard journalists with negative feedback whenever they attempt to write such an article.
- Fear: In addition to outside pressure from flak machines, many journalists also self-censor out of fear of losing their jobs or being blacklisted from future employment opportunities. This creates a situation where only those stories that toe the company line are covered, while anything remotely controversial is swept under the rug.
In “Manufacturing Consent”, Chomsky offers up a scathing critique of the mass media and its role in society. He argues that the media is controlled by special interests and used as a tool to manipulate public opinion. While some may dismiss Chomsky’s theories as conspiracy nonsense, there’s no denying that he makes some valid points about media bias and censorship.