Baltimore Sun

Can we please get a little less gung-ho in our coverage of rich guys in space?

- David Zurawik David Zurawik is The Baltimore Sun’s media critic. Email: david.zurawik@baltsun. com; Twitter:@davidzuraw­ik.

I was already tired of the gee-whiz coverage of Richard Branson and Jeff Bezos going into space before Mr. Branson actually went there Sunday (or, went somewhere close, depending on your definition of space).

But much of the coverage since has absolutely worn me out with its treatment of Mr. Branson as a heroic figure and his joyride some 50 miles above Earth as if it was a monumental moment in human exploratio­n and consciousn­ess.

“Really, it’s a moment that gives you goose bumps,” Rachel Crane, CNN innovation correspond­ent said Sunday morning on the channel shortly after Mr. Branson’s craft landed.

“As a reporter, we all have those moments that we put in the memory book forever, that we know we’re never going to forget, [that] we’re going to hold onto the rest of our lives. I have got to tell you this is one of those for me.”

Obviously, Ms. Crane is free to enshrine whatever memories she wants in her memory book, but I don’t think I will be slotting Mr. Branson’s marketing moment on Sunday alongside, say, the U.S. landing on the moon in 1969 in mine.

Others had problems with some of CNN’s coverage as well.

“Covering Richard Branson’s flight, CNN’s Rachel Crane just reported that historical­ly these big technologi­cal innovation­s happen because of rich people. Hmm. NASA, the Internet, mapping the human genome?” Steven Waldman, co-founder and president of Report for America, wrote on Twitter.

Alex Heard, editorial director of Outside magazine, tweeted that “almost everything” Ms. Crane said in her reports “sounds like Virgin Galactic wrote it for her.”

Virgin Galactic is the spacefligh­t company founded by Mr. Branson. It plans to provide suborbital flights like the one Mr. Branson took Sunday to those customers with the means to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars to ride on this rich guy’s Space Mountain.

“We are at the vanguard of a new industry determined to pioneer twenty-first century spacecraft, which will open space to everybody — and change the world for good,” is the way a mission statement from Mr. Branson atop Virgin Galactic’s homepage puts it.

God save us from rich guys like Mr. Branson and Mark Zuckerberg promising their latest moneymakin­g technologi­cal venture is going to change the world for good. And we are in for more talk of how these efforts to privatize and colonize space are a good thing for all of us when Mr. Bezos takes a crew into suborbital space on July 20.

While Mr. Branson’s flight went some 50 miles above the Earth’s surface, which is considered space by several agencies in the U.S., Mr. Bezos plans to travel at least 62 miles above the surface, which is the true definition of space, according to several internatio­nal bodies such as Fédération Aéronautiq­ue Internatio­nale. I am not sure I care about the distinctio­n or hyped rivalry between these two rich boys with their toys.

I am with Democratic Sen. Bernie Sanders, of Vermont, on this one: “Here on Earth, in the richest country on the planet, half our people live paycheck to paycheck, people are struggling to feed themselves, struggling to see a doctor — but hey, the richest guys in the world are off in outer space!” he wrote on Twitter. “Yes. It’s time to tax the billionair­es.”

Too much of the coverage of Mr. Branson and Mr. Bezos so far has promoted the idea that the rich will save us. From the characteri­zation of Mr. Branson as some kind of heroic figure to the notion that rich men have led the way in technology that makes life better for all of us, that idea permeated cable TV coverage of the Virgin Galactic flight, especially on CNN.

We have seen it in other areas of American life where we face monumental challenges: during the 2016 presidenti­al election with Donald Trump portrayed as a great and rich CEO based on a manufactur­ed reality TV persona; and in the 2020 presidenti­al election, with Michael Bloomberg moving up in the polls based on huge ad buys until his candidacy crashed and burned in a TV debate.

It is still being seen by some as a solution to the plight of local and regional newspapers.

The solutions to our problems are not going to be found in suborbital space or in blindly celebratin­g the rich. They will more likely be found in working together instead of warring with one another here on Earth.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States