CBS 60 Minutes Held up a Mirror to America and the Recession


by Cody Lyon
*opinion*
On March 6, 2011, CBS News’ 60 Minutes demonstrated yet again why it’s often viewed as the gold standard of broadcast journalism. This time, reporter Scott Pelley along with producers Robert G. Anderson, Nicole Young and Daniel Rutenick took viewers to Seminole County Florida, an area right near Disney World, to show us how this Great Recession is so much more than a river of mind numbing numbers and policy speeches. Instead, the economic events of the past few years have led to a tsunami of chaos and upheaval for millions of lives, wreaking hardship and havoc on some of the most vulnerable, in this report, children. 60 Minutes noted that the government considers a family of four to be impoverished if it brings home less than $22,000 a year. And as Pelley reports, with unemployment numbers expected to remain largely stagnant in the coming years, a staggering 25%, or one out four kids will soon reach the poverty level.

Link to full video and text of 60 Minutes story at CBSNEWS

Continue reading after the jump

Perhaps the most moving moments in the report came from interviews with the children themselves, victims of economy who played no role in this meltdown or any other circumstances that may have led to their current misfortune. Pelley gently asks questions that produce details of unimaginable upheaval and now chronic insecurity. Some of the kids in the piece are now classified as homeless with many now staying in rundown motels. One brother and sister talk about the days following both parent’s job layoffs and the resulting loss of their home to foreclosure. For a short while, the family slept in a van parked at a Wal Mart parking lot, where morning routines included what they described as embarrassing trips into the store’s restroom to wash off before school.

As more people feel its impact, the nation further accepts this recession as more than some routine wonkish word. In fact, the economic collapse that officially began in 2008 has meant, and is probably going to lead to even more dramatic economic readjustment in the coming years. But, far to often, the news we watch or read detailing what some call an economic remap of society, gets left just at that, official terms and numbers. In fact, far to often those numbers or 'indicators' get simplified and sometimes, they get picked up as political armor to further unrelated agendas and reactionary policy. But, perhaps most dangerous, simply citing numbers or arguing about them in partisan TV chat fests doesn't respect the public's intelligence, and in some cases, drives many citizens to simply tune out. But, when a major news organization like 60 Minutes, takes the time to translate the figures into a measured, non partisan real life piece of journalism, a mirror is held up to the place and people we as a nation have become. And, often times, that leads to some collective pause, discussion and hopefully more informed decisions about the direction our nation heads into. Maybe, in some ways, that's one of the beauties of well reported journalism in a free society during times of serious challenge.


cody March 7, 2011 - 7:44pm
( categories: Media Criticism )

I'll bet the report will be ignored, forgotten in a week or two.
I think we're at a point now where there are only two things that will make the general population sit up, take notice and act:
When things get violent and the violence cannot be hidden or dismissed.
When so many are destitute that society breaks down for lack of peons to do the necessary work.

When Mr Average is not only unemployed and homeless but realizes that everyone he knows is the same;
when everyone sees that only the ultra-wealthy are secure;
when it dawns on the 'mandarins', including the politicians who enable the ultra-wealthy, that they are replaceable/disposable;
then - maybe - we'll take back the government and our country.

BTW: We're not in a recession. It's a depression - and it's likely to make the 1930s seem idyllic.


Retiring Mainframe maven, active curmudgeon, poet, writer.

steeleweed March 7, 2011 - 10:06pm

Very fine summary of the implications of the 60 Minutes piece. The corporate media provides a valuable service, from time to time, with breakthrough stories like this. It won't be followed like the Sheen escapades or the constant stupidity between the two wings of The Money Party, the crazies (Republicans) and sleepwalkers (Democrats). But it sets down a marker, just as the release of the torture stories did during Bush II. The people who live it and who notice benefit and a higher level of consciousness is achieved. At some point, it all piles up and manifests in direct action. The majority of people know what the deal is, based on support of the unions in Wisconsin. They need some final event or organization to truly push back.

Next up - a reality show on unemployment and why the official figures are a fraud, a cynical fraud, beyond belief fraud.

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The Money Party RSS

They can't process me. I'm not normal. Charlie Sheen

Michael Collins March 8, 2011 - 12:13am

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