Do You Want To Be Entertained Or Informed?

Noise.  There is so much NOISE in the news today … everyone is screaming, screeching, ranting and raging … it makes it impossible to think, let alone assimilate the news at hand, to separate the wheat from the chaff, so to speak.  Today’s news media goes for the ‘entertainment’ factor – the louder the better – because that is what people respond to, and as they say in the industry, “If it bleeds, it leads.”

President Joe Biden has done a remarkable job during his nearly three years in office, especially given the hurdles and roadblocks that have been thrown in his way from the Republicans in Congress and others since even before his inauguration.  But he doesn’t get much credit in the press, does he?  Robert Reich has some theories on why this is …


The real reason Biden isn’t getting credit

And what to do about it

By Robert Reich

24 October 2023

As Republicans squabble, Trump brays, Netanyahu mobilizes a ground invasion of Gaza, and Putin pushes more Russian soldiers to the front lines of Ukraine, President Biden continues to be the one adult in the room.

In response to my letter to you last week about Biden’s leadership, a number of you wondered why he isn’t getting more credit for it.

Granted, polls are meaningless more than a year before an election. Even so, it’s bizarre that Trump — indicted for a rash of felonies, liable for sexual harassment, found to have committed business fraud — has such strong support relative to Biden.

Why don’t voters give Biden more credit?

One theory is that Trump and Fox News have poisoned their minds.

This may be true for some, but I keep coming across self-described Republicans — many of them middle-aged men without college degrees — who don’t particularly like Trump and don’t believe what they see on Fox News.

Yet they’re unimpressed with Biden. They tell me he’s “weak.” They ask questions like, “What has Biden done for me?” or “What’s one way I’m better off because of Joe Biden?”

When I mention some of Biden’s accomplishments — his steady hand in foreign policy, for example, or his creation of tens of thousands of good jobs through investments in wind, solar, electric batteries, infrastructure, and semiconductors — they tell me they didn’t know.

Which brings me to the second theory about why Biden isn’t getting credit: Biden is terrible at “messaging.”

I hear this all the time. “He needs a better ‘message,’” they say, or “He doesn’t know how to get across what he’s accomplished,” or “His speeches are deadly dull.”

I’ve gone back and watched several of Biden’s recent speeches, including last Thursday night’s address to the nation about Israel and Ukraine. His speeches aren’t electrifying, to be sure. But he says what needs to be said. He’s truthful. He doesn’t exaggerate. He’s compassionate.

So why aren’t more people hearing him?

This raises a third theory: Biden doesn’t communicate in ways that today’s media and much of the public are able to hear.

I think there’s a lot to this.

I’m old enough to remember when President Dwight D. Eisenhower talked to the nation. Despite Ike’s flat delivery, which was often punctuated with throat-clearing, the public listened and responded, usually positively, because Americans in the 1950s were able to process non-emotive messages. They might disagree with him, but he gave reasons for what he did or proposed and invited voters to deliberate rationally.

The media of that era felt duty-bound to transmit those non-emotive messages.

By “non-emotive,” I mean messages that are straightforward. They don’t cause the recipient to be entertained or inspired, don’t play on fear or bigotry or any other strong negative emotion.

This is no longer the way the media transmits information or how Americans process it. Now, a message has to pack a wallop to be heard.

Everything Trump says and posts is designed to spur an emotional reaction. His anger, ridicule, and vindictiveness are intended to elicit immediate, passionate responses.

Trump gets attention because the media lives off emotive messaging. The more charged the message, the more likely viewers will stop scrolling. The fiercer the words, the more likely readers will take notice.

Joe Biden still lives in the world of rational, non-emotive messaging. He has been in politics for 50 years. He is steeped in rational, conventional argument — the kind Dwight Eisenhower delivered.

When it comes to “messaging” about his accomplishments, neither Biden nor his surrogates do the emotive work that our media ecosystem demands and the American public is now primed to respond to.

When voters tell pollsters they think Trump is “stronger” than Biden on foreign policy or the economy, the “strength” they feel comes from the emotions Trump stirs up — rage, ferocity, vindictiveness, and anger. These emotions are connected to brute strength.

Biden projects strength the old-fashioned way — through mature and responsible leadership. But mature and responsible leadership doesn’t break through today’s media and reach today’s public nearly as well as brute strength.

So what’s the answer? Not for Biden (or his Democratic allies and surrogates) to abandon facts, data, analysis, and reasoned argument.

The best response is to draw the starkest possible contrast between Trump’s unhinged childishness and Biden’s competent adulthood.

Rather than sell Biden’s policies, sell Biden’s character. Rather than dispute Trump’s arguments, condemn his temperament.

And ask Americans the following question: Do they want a wild child at the helm again, or a grown-up?


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18 thoughts on “Do You Want To Be Entertained Or Informed?

  1. One can almost tell by looking at him that Biden is a calm, unemotional, steady individual. He simply is not given to theatrics and hand-waving. When you think about it, I’m not sure his demeanor is all that different from many past presidents.

    Until Trump. He cut a new path … and people got used to the melodrama. They got used to (and liked) the attacks against others. They cared less about Trump’s presidential accomplishments than they did about the fact he fed their insecurities.

    ADULTS appreciate Biden. Others like Trump.

    Liked by 3 people

    • Your last sentence says it all, my friend. Those who would, at this point, with all the history, support Donald Trump are one of two things: a) bored, mindless people who value entertainment over stability, or b) wealthy corporate people who would benefit financially under Trump.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. I’ll take a grown-up any day. And while I like Joe Biden, I have to admit I think he is too old to be running again. I wish there was a more viable Democratic candidate for me to really be enthused about.

    Liked by 3 people

    • Ideally, I agree, but the thing is that there is NO viable Democratic candidate who would beat Donald Trump at this stage. The Democratic Party should have been prepping for this day for the last eight, or at least four years, but they let the ball drop. Best hope to keep Trump out of ever entering the Oval Office again is for the Democrats to throw their full weight behind Joe Biden and stop even talking about his age. After all, Trump is just what … 3 years younger? And look at all the rubbish that’s come out of his mouth lately … that he beat Obama in 2016 and other ridiculous things. Sigh. Beam me up, Scotty!

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Good post laying out the reasons why Biden is by far and away superior to anything the Republicans could currently produce.
    As for your question though, don’t expect a reasoned and rational response as to why Trump. I have yet to see one.

    Liked by 3 people

  4. I would presume that Biden has staff that take care of publicity and write his speeches. From an European point of view, Americans are very emotional. That is why it is sometimes very difficult to discuss with Americans, they get emotional and come with expressions like “if you are not with me, you are against me” and such … like. They don’t consider one’s arguments, they just “feel” that one is against them, which is not necessarily the case.

    Liked by 2 people

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