Steven Waldman

"Steven Waldman Named To Lead Commission Effort on Future of Media In a Changing Technological Landscape" (FCC Press Release)

Thursday October 29, 2009

STEVEN WALDMAN NAMED TO LEAD COMMISSION EFFORT ON FUTURE OF MEDIA IN A CHANGING TECHNOLOGICAL LANDSCAPE

FCC chairman Julius Genachowski announced today the appointment of Steven Waldman, a highly respected internet entrepreneur and journalist, to lead an agency-wide initiative to assess the state of media in these challenging economic times and make recommendations designed to ensure a vibrant media landscape.

Earlier this month, the bipartisan Knight Commission on the Information Needs of Communities in a Democracy called for "new thinking" to "ensure the information opportunities of America's people and the information vitality of our democracy" and proposed FCC action. The Pew Project for Excellence in Journalism has highlighted the dire circumstances for newspapers, and both the Knight report and a recent study from Columbia Graduate School of Journalism called for a full reassessment of the media marketplace both inside and outside of government, including at the FCC

Waldman is the Co-Founder, President and Editor-in-Chief of Beliefnet.com, the largest multifaith website for religion and inspiration, and served as its CEO from 2002 until 2007, when it was acquired by News Corporation. Under his leadership, Beliefnet won the top editorial awards on the Internet, including the General Excellence award from the Online News Association and the National Magazine Award for General Excellence Online.

Waldman, who will join the Office of Strategic Planning and serve as Senior Advisor to the Chairman, will work with the relevant FCC bureaus and lead an open, fact-finding process to craft recommendations to meet the traditional goals of serving the public interest and making sure that all Americans receive the information, educational content, and news they seek. He will step down from Beliefnet and News Corp and discontinue his blog and the regular column he writes for Wall Street Journal Online.

"A strong consensus has developed that we're at a pivotal moment in the history of the media and communications, because of game-changing new technologies as well as the economic downturn," said Genachowski. "Highly respected entities have called on the FCC to assess these issues. At such a moment, it is important to ensure that our polities promote a vibrant media landscape that furthers long-standing goals of serving the information needs of communities. The initiative is intended to identify the best ideas for achieving those goal, while recognizing that government must be scrupulous in abiding by the First Amendment and never dictating or controlling the content of the news or other communications protected by the First Amendment."

"Steve Waldman is uniquely qualified to look at this shifting terrain and make sure we meet this moment wisely," Genachowski said. "He was an award-winning journalist in traditional media and then became an Internet pioneer -- launching, running and bringing to profitability one of the great content success stories. He's also known for his even-handedness and has garnered respect from people of widely different ideologies and approaches."

Before creating Beliefnet, Waldman served as National Editor of US News & World Report and was National Correspondent for Newsweek. He's author of the New York Times bestseller FOUNDING FAITH: Providence, Politics, and the Birth of Religious Freedom in America. He also served as Senior Advisor to the CEO of the Corporation for National Service in the 1990s. His work has appeared in numerous publications including The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, National Review Online, Huffington Post, The Atlantic, ChristianityToday.com, The Washington Monthly and Slate.

He has been a regular commentator on national television and radio programs including Fox & Friends, Fox Business, Good Morning America, The Today Show, CNN Headline News, ABC World News With Charles Gibson, NPR's All Things Considered and On the Media, and many others. He was named a "Spiritual Innovator" by Time magazine.

"I'm excited by many of the new media's innovations and, at the same time, concerned about the challenges facing American journalism, which potentially harm citizens' ability to get information they need and hold leaders accountable," said Waldman. "Most solutions will come from the private and non-profit sectors. But government rules already affect the media landscape in profound ways so it's imperative that we both vigorously protect the First Amendment and determine which media policies make sense, which don't.. Unwise government policies can undermine business models and hinder innovation. Smart policy can help businesses, facilitate innovation, and ensure a thriving media marketplace. "

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Comments
Gerard Nadal
October 29, 2009 8:37 PM

Steven,

I appreciate your candor. "Chief Diversity Officer" sounds pretty self-explanatory, and not a little ominous to conservatives. While Genachowski has come out in opposition to the fairness doctrine, he has not repudiated the assault on Fox News, nor has he repudiated Lloyd's proposal for licensing fees for private (conservative) talk radio stations which would gut them just as efficiently as the so-called fairness doctrine. Government always crushes with punitive taxes that which it wishes to eliminate. I find Genachowski's silence on Lloyd and the assaults on Fox as disturbing as it is convenient.

As an entrepreneur who co-founded and grew Beliefnet, you can appreciate the power of the free market. If people want something, they buy. If not, they pass. There is a reason why most liberal attempts in the private sector of the radio market have failed. There is a reason why Fox News has become a titan in cable. People are buying.

With only 33% of Americans identifying as Republican, why should Obama and the left feel threatened? That means 67% should be patronizing all other cable news outlets. That Fox is beating them all combined says something. Maybe they truly are fair and balanced, and are regarded as such by more than just Republicans.

When I see proposals such as Lloyds, they highlight how much people don't subscribe to liberal cable news and public talk radio. There is a reason why most all liberal programming on the radio is on publicly-funded stations such as NPR. These draconian proposals punish not only the stations and their employees, but the American people for daring to think and believe differently from a self-ordained leftist elite. The greatest perversity of all is that my position used to be espoused by my liberal professors in the 60's and 70's. As Dylan sang, "the times they are a changing..."

People such as Obama, Lloyd, Bingaman, et al. are on the wrong side of the First Amendment and the American character. They'll be remembered as such. You deserve a better fate.

God Bless

Mr. Incredible
October 30, 2009 1:06 AM

Gerard Nadal
October 29, 2009 8:37 PM
With only 33% of Americans identifying as Republican...
---------------------------------------------
But declared Conservatives now outnumbering declared Libs...

Mr. Incredible
October 30, 2009 1:12 AM


So, Steve, when you deliver your report to the Commish after some length of time, is that the end of your appointment, y'think, or what? How long do you have to come up with a report?

henriyardy
November 2, 2009 4:05 AM

I think there could be more interaction from the viewer. If you look at the way that the TV and Computer games are heading, you see that the player has more and more control over the game and interacts in ways that wasn't possible before. I think other media will follow.


Absolute Acai Berry

nnmns
November 13, 2009 12:55 AM

Interesting that conservatives, who dominate yammer radio and yammer tv due to the businessmen who buy adds for them and the dittoheads who want to be told what to think every day, claim to be panicked by rumors. Guys, you most of all, should know most rumors, and almost all rumors on the yammer shows, are false.

Steve, congratulations I guess. We'll miss you here I'm sure.

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