'Spin Sisters'
How the Media Sell Misery to
Women
Paige McKenzie
NewsMax
Throughout the 1990s, women’s magazines became focused less on fashion and
more on features about violence against women and children, “even though crime
statistics were plummeting across the country,” Myrna Blyth notes in "Spin
Sisters: How the Women of the Media Sell Unhappiness and Liberalism to the Women
of America.”
Research studies of women’s magazines such as Cosmo, Family Circle, Good
Housekeeping, Glamour, Marie Claire, Redbook, Vogue, Woman’s Day and Ladies Home
Journal show that during that decade stories and cover lines that touched on
social issues and victimization skyrocketed.
“In almost all of the stories, the message was the same: We have a big
problem. It’s scary and could affect any woman or her children. … we need
government action, and we need it now!”
Blyth says that a major tool of the media is to grossly exaggerate the
challenges facing ordinary women as far more difficult and even tragic than they
really are to make a political point.
This was a technique employed even by the Clinton administration. Blyth told
NewsMax.com that Bill Clinton's team had something called the “Redbook
Strategy,” purportedly to reach all those so-called soccer moms.
The networks began to mimic the magazines, writes Blyth, with “hyped-up
stories of murder and mayhem, usually at the hands of abusive husbands or
boyfriends, evil corporations, or incompetent doctors. It could be you!”
Television executive and "20/20" creator Av Westin, which helped pioneer many
news magazine shows, told Blyth: “We started every story with a victim. That’s
what we said. We need a victim. Find me the victim.”
Blyth urges readers to notice that shows such as "48 hours" and "Dateline
NBC" “all have the same format: high volume on emotions, low volume on facts …
because they all want you to feel afraid.”
Deathtime
And then, of course, there’s the “mother network of all victim television”:
Lifetime Television Network for Women, a forerunner of "Sex and the City," whose
programs tell women that “all men are unfaithful rats, abusive monsters,
dishonest scumbags, or all of the above.” Women, however, are “ubervictims.”
More than 20 years ago, Blyth recalls, political scientist Aaron Wildavsky
looked around America and wrote: “How extraordinary! The richest, longest-lived,
best-protected, most resourceful civilization with the highest degree of insight
into its own technology is on its way to becoming the most frightened.”
Just count the female victims paraded before us all during the last decade:
Princess Diana, Amy Fisher, Tonya Harding, Nancy Kerrigan, Lorena Bobbitt,
Nicole Brown Simpson, Susan Smith, Louise Woodward, Paula Jones, Linda Tripp,
Monica Lewinsky, Chandra Levy, Laci Peterson and, of course, Hillary Clinton.
The "vast right-wing conspiracy" couldn't keep the worst poll numbers of any
first lady ever from shooting through the roof when news broke of the Lewinsky
affair.
Though Hillary is a “supremely powerful” woman, she learned to milk the
victimization card for all it was worth, notes Blyth.
“It wouldn’t surprise me, however, to see Bill conveniently fall off the
marital wagon publicly sometime in 2007, just in time for the long-suffering
senator to publicly don a victim’s rage one more time.”
Oprah's Fake 'Science' Fools the U.N.
But there is a bright side to all the stress of victimization. It entitles
you to focus on yourself. As Dr. Alice Domar of Harvard says, “Your plan for
yourself ... is just as important as any other.” And women should not be
required to give up anything if they need it for themselves.
Interestingly, Blyth notes that anti-depressants have become a $10 million
market. Could there be a correlation?
Stress also sells self-indulgence, writes Blyth, which in turn sells
“everything from Botox injections to body creams, spa visits to yoga mats.”
Even the United Nations and the World Health Organization got in on the act
when Oprah Winfrey devoted an entire show to a brand new female ailment --
“perimenopause.” As Blyth notes wryly, “the same crowd that voted to give Libya
a seat on its human rights committee” officially defined a condition that did
not exist until just a few years ago. Now a Google search reveals nearly 70,000
references.
Reality: 'The Best of Times'
The truth is a much different story.
“This is the best of times for American women. Every statistic proves it,”
Blyth writes. “You also happen to be the best-educated, healthiest, wealthiest,
longest–lived women with more opportunities for personal fulfillment than any
other generation in history.
“Yet you're are being sold, day after day and month after month in soppy TV
movies and scary TV newsmagazines and on the slick pages of colorful magazines,
the most negative interpretation of your lives.”
Perhaps the biggest tool of the spin sisters, says Blyth, is the way they
present themselves as ordinary American women, and use sympathy as manipulation,
to convince readers and viewers that all women should and do think alike. And,
she writes, they are manipulative even in the face of tragedy ... doing things
to get stories that “most women would not approve of.”
But the tactics aren’t working so well these days. Sales of magazines are
plunging, and the networks' ratings are in the toilet.
“I find it so fascinating that even on Wisconsin public radio, believe it or
not, 90 percent of the women who called in agreed with me. .... When women call
up, and men too, they say, ‘At least someone has said this.’ It’s as if everyone
feels very isolated with their beliefs, especially women, and don’t realize
there are many others who agree with them,” Blyth told NewsMax.
Media filter out diverse opinions, notes Blyth, especially those of
conservative women.
Conservative Women 'Invisible'
“Finding conservatives or even moderate Republicans like me in the Spin
Sister media elite is as likely as finding a size 16 model on the cover of
Vogue,” she writes.
When Blyth observed aloud that she was the only Republican at a recent baby
shower, attended by Hillary Clinton, Katie Couric, Diane Sawyer, Barbara Walters
and other media spin sisters, she was told, “You were invited despite that
fact.”
As far as the media are concerned, “Not only are conservative women dumb, but
dull and uptight,” says Blyth, who admires Dr. Laura, Michelle Malkin, Laura
Ingraham and Ann Coulter.
All strong, attractive successful women, they and others like them – such as
Bush administration members Condoleezza Rice and Elaine Chao - are ignored by
the spin sisters.
Blyth mentions a particular noteworthy female, “a brilliant operative … whose
own life story reads like a Barbara Taylor Bradford novel … who worked her way
through university in a munitions factory, winning a fellowship to Radcliff for
graduate work, attending law school in her fifties, an expert on arms control,
the author of a major work of political philosophy. Oh, and a wife and mother of
six children. My media buddies are wildly impressed by her achievements. Until I
mention her name …”
Phyllis Schlafly, a Midwestern housewife who outsmarted and outmaneuvered
sophisticated New York editors by marshalling huge grassroots support in defeat
of the Equal Rights Amendment when it was just three states shy of approval,
Blyth recalls.
“But no self-respecting Spin Sister would be caught dead doing a piece on
this woman, who by any objective measure, has led an extraordinary life.”
Then there’s Patricia Heaton, who is “unabashedly pro-life. When asked how
other Hollywood types reacted to her unusual for Tinseltown views, she sweetly
says, ‘On a personal level, as a Christian, it will not be Barbra Streisand I’m
standing in front of when I have to make an accounting of my life.’”
The spin sisters see the America between the east and west coasts as empty,
and don’t want women from small towns on television because they are not
articulate enough in a one-minute sound bite, says Blyth. She quotes pollster
Kellyanne Conway: “You just don’t see many women on television from the ‘red
states,’ the states that voted for George Bush. You don’t hear about their
beliefs. They are almost invisible.”
Even so, Blyth told NewsMax she didn’t know if a conservative magazine for
women could succeed. Though tests repeatedly show a huge market and desire for
magazines that would appeal to conservative women, she says, “advertisers want
nothing to do with them."
“In truth advertisers are more and more important in women’s media. The
editorial staff is getting smaller, and the marketing and advertising staff are
getting bigger. And the fashion advertisers love the new, the hot and trendy, so
they’re [uninterested] in things that confirm traditional conservative values.
They’re more comfortable with articles about sex toys than things that talk
about how many women in this country are deeply religious. They would think a
magazine like that is exclusionary."
Now Blyth is the one who will be excluded, she says. Though no one has
refuted the stories she reveals in her book, the spin sisters have not been very
nice. But she says: “I’m pretty tough. I won’t be invited to parties by Hillary
anymore.”
She doesn’t seem too concerned.
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