If all countries may boast the Press
which they deserve, America’s desert is small
indeed. No civilised country in the world has
been content with newspapers so grossly contemptible
as those which are read from New York to the Pacific
Coast. The journals known as Yellow would be
a disgrace to dusky Timbuctoo, and it is difficult
to understand the state of mind which can tolerate
them. Divorced completely from the world of truth
and intelligence, they present nothing which an educated
man would desire to read. They are said to be
excluded from clubs and from respectable houses.
But even if this prohibition be a fact, their proprietors
need feel no regret. We are informed by the Yellowest
of Editors that his burning words are read every day
by five million men and women.
What, then, is the aspect and character
of these Yellow Journals? As they are happily
strange on our side the ocean, they need some description.
They are ill-printed, over-illustrated sheets, whose
end and aim are to inflame a jaded or insensitive
palate. They seem to address the blind eye and
the sluggish mind of the halfwitted. The wholly
unimportant information which they desire to impart
is not conveyed in type of the ordinary shape and
size. The “scare” headlines are set
forth in letters three inches in height. It is
as though the editors of these sheets are determined
to exhaust your attention. They are not content
to tell you that this or that inapposite event has
taken place. They pant, they shriek, they yell.
Their method represents the beating of a thousand
big drums, the blare of unnumbered trumpets, the shouted
blasphemies of a million raucous throats. And
if, with all this noise dinning in your ear, you are
persuaded to read a Yellow sheet, which is commonly
pink in colour, you are grievously disappointed.
The thing is not even sensational. Its “scare”
headlines do but arouse a curiosity which the “brightest
and brainiest” reporter in the United States
is not able to satisfy.
Of what happens in the great world
you will find not a trace in the Yellow Journals.
They betray no interest in politics, in literature,
or in the fine arts. There is nothing of grave
importance which can be converted into a “good
story.” That a great man should perform
a great task is immaterial. Noble deeds make
no scandal, and are therefore not worth reporting.
But if you can discover that the great man has a hidden
vice, or an eccentric taste in boots or hats, there
is “copy” ready to your hand. All
things and all men must be reduced to a dead level
of imbecility. The Yellow Press is not obscene it
has not the courage for that. Its proud boast
is that it never prints a line that a father might
not read to his daughter. It is merely personal
and impertinent. No one’s life is secure
from its spies. No privacy is sacred. Mr
Stead’s famous ideal of an ear at every keyhole
is magnificently realised in America. A hundred
reporters are ready, at a moment’s notice, to
invade houses, to uncover secrets, to molest honest
citizens with indiscreet questions. And if their
victims are unwilling to respond, they pay for it
with public insult and malicious invention. Those
who will not bow to the common tyrant of the Press
cannot complain if words are ascribed to them which
they never uttered, if they are held guilty of deeds
from which they would shrink in horror. Law and
custom are alike powerless to fight this tyranny,
which is the most ingenious and irksome form of blackmail
yet invented.
The perfect newspaper, if such were
possible, would present to its readers a succinct
history of each day as it passes. It would weigh
with a scrupulous hand the relative importance of
events. It would give to each department of human
activity no more than its just space. It would
reduce scandal within the narrow limits which ought
to confine it. Under its wise auspices murder,
burglary, and suicide would be deposed from the eminence
upon which an idle curiosity has placed them.
Those strange beings known as public men would be
famous not for what their wives wear at somebody else’s
“At Home,” but for their own virtues and
attainments. The foolish actors and actresses,
who now believe themselves the masters of the world,
would slink away into entrefilets on a back
page. The perfect newspaper, in brief, would
resemble a Palace of Truth, in which deceit was impossible
and vanity ridiculous. It would crush the hankerers
after false reputations, it would hurl the foolish
from the mighty seats which they try to fill, and
it would present an invaluable record to future generations.
What picture of its world does the
Yellow Press present? A picture of colossal folly
and unpardonable indiscretion. If there be a museum
which preserves these screaming sheets, this is the
sort of stuff which in two thousand years will puzzle
the scholars: “Mrs Jones won’t admit
Wedding,” “Millionaires Bet on a Snake
Fight,” “Chicago Church Girl Accuses Millionaire,”
“Athletics make John D. forget his Money.”
These are a few pearls hastily strung together, and
they show what jewels of intelligence are most highly
prized by the Greatest Democracy on earth. Now
and again the editor takes his readers into his confidence
and asks them to interfere in the affairs of persons
whom they will never know. Here, for instance,
is a characteristic problem set by an editor whose
knowledge of his public exceeds his respect for the
decencies of life: “What Mrs Washington
ought to do. Her husband Wall Street Broker.
Got tired of Her and Deserted. But Mrs Washington,
who still loves him dearly, Is determined to win him
back. And here is the Advice of the Readers of
this Journal.” Is it not monstrous this
interference with the privacy of common citizens?
And yet this specimen has an air of dignity compared
with the grosser exploits of the hired eavesdropper.
Not long since there appeared in a Sunday paper a full
list, with portraits and biographies, of all the ladies
in New York who are habitual drunkards. From
which it is clear that the law of libel has sunk into
oblivion, and that the cowhide is no longer a useful
weapon.
The disastrous effect upon the people
of such a Press as I have described is obvious.
It excites the nerves of the feeble, it presents a
hideously false standard of life, it suggests that
nobody is secure from the omnipotent eavesdropper,
and it preaches day after day at the top of its husky
voice the gospel of snobbishness. But it is not
merely the public manners which it degrades; it does
its best to hamper the proper administration of the
law. In America trial by journalism has long
supplemented, and goes far to supplant, trial by jury.
If a murder be committed its detection is not left
to the officers of the police. A thousand reporters,
cunning as monkeys, active as sleuth-hounds, are on
the track. Whether it is the criminal that they
pursue or an innocent man is indifferent to them.
Heedless of injustice, they go in search of “copy.”
They interrogate the friends of the victim, and they
uncover the secrets of all the friends and relatives
he may have possessed. They care not how they
prejudice the public mind, or what wrong they do to
innocent men. If they make a fair trial impossible,
it matters not. They have given their tired readers
a new sensation; they have stimulated gossip in a
thousand tenement houses; justice may fall in ruins
so long as they sell another edition. And nobody
protests against their unbridled licence, not even
when they have made it an affair of the utmost difficulty
and many weeks to empanel an unprejudiced jury.
The greatest opportunity of the Yellow
Press came when a Mr H. K. Thaw murdered an accomplished
architect. The day after the murder the trial
began in the newspapers, and it was “run as a
serial” for months. The lives of the murderer
and his victim were uncovered with the utmost effrontery.
The character of the dead man was painted in the blackest
colours by cowards, who knew that they were beyond
the reach of vengeance. The murderer’s
friends and kinsmen were compelled to pay their tribute
to the demon of publicity. The people was presented
with plans of the cell in which the man Thaw was imprisoned,
while photographs of his wife and his mother were
printed day after day that a silly mob might note
the effect of anguish on the human countenance.
And, not content with thus adorning the tale, the journals
were eloquent in pointing the moral. Sentimental
spinsters were invited to warn the lady typewriters
of America that death and ruin inevitably overtake
the wrongdoer. Stern-eyed clergymen thought well
to anticipate justice in sermons addressed to erring
youth. Finally, a plebiscite decided, by
2 to 1, that Thaw should immediately be set free.
And when you remember the arrogant tyranny of the
Yellow Journals, you are surprised that at the mere
sound of the people’s voice the prison doors
did not instantly fly open.
We have been told, as though it were
no more than a simple truth, that the Yellow Press the
journals owned by Mr Hearst not merely made
the Spanish-American War, but procured the assassination
of Mr M’Kinley. The statement seems incredible,
because it is difficult to believe that such stuff
as this should have any influence either for good or
evil. The idle gossip and flagrant scandal which
are its daily food do not appear to be efficient leaders
of opinion. But it is the Editorial columns which
do the work of conviction, and they assume an air of
gravity which may easily deceive the unwary.
And their gravity is the natural accompaniment of
scandal. There is but a slender difference between
barbarity and senti-mentalism. The same temper
which delights in reading of murder and sudden death
weeps with anguish at the mere hint of oppression.
No cheek is so easily bedewed by the unnecessary tear
as the cheek of the ruffian and those who
compose the “editorials” for Mr Hearst’s
papers have cynically realised this truth. They
rant and they cant and they argue, as though nothing
but noble thoughts were permitted to lodge within
the poor brains of their readers. Their favourite
gospel is the gospel of Socialism. They tell
the workers that the world is their inalienable inheritance,
that skill and capital are the snares of the evil
one, and that nothing is worth a reward save manual
toil. They pretend for a moment to look with
a kindly eye upon the Trusts, because, when all enterprises
and industries are collected into a small compass,
the people will have less trouble in laying hands upon
them. In brief, they teach the supreme duty of
plunder with all the staccato eloquence at
their command. For the man whose thrift and energy
have helped him to success they have nothing but contempt.
They cannot think of the criminal without bursting
into tears. And, while they lay upon the rich
man the guilty burden of his wealth, they charge the
community with the full responsibility for the convict’s
misfortune. Such doctrines, cunningly taught,
and read day after day by the degenerate and unrestrained,
can only have one effect, and that effect, no doubt,
the “editorials” of the Yellow Press will
some day succeed in producing.
The result is, of course, revolution,
and revolution is being carefully and insidiously
prepared after the common fashion. Not a word
is left unsaid that can flatter the criminal or encourage
the thriftless. Those who are too idle to work
but not too idle to read the Sunday papers are told
that it will be the fault of their own inaction, not
of the Yellow Press, if they do not some day lay violent
hands upon the country’s wealth. And when
they are tired of politics the Yellow Editors turn
to popular philosophy or cheap theology for the solace
of their public. To men and women excited by
the details of the last murder they discourse of the
existence of God in short, crisp sentences, and
I know not which is worse, the triviality of the discourse
or its inappositeness. They preface one of their
most impassioned exhortations with the words:
“If you read this, you will probably think you
have wasted time.” Though this might with
propriety stand for the motto of all the columns of
all Mr Hearst’s journals, here it is clearly
used in the same hope which inspires the sandwichman
to carry on his front the classic legend: “Please
do not look on my back.” But what is dearest
to the souls of these editors is a mean commonplace.
One leader, which surely had a triumphant success,
is headed, “What the Bar-tender Sees.”
And the exordium is worthy so profound a speculation.
“Did you ever stop to think,” murmurs
the Yellow philosopher, “of all the strange beings
that pass before him?” There’s profundity
for you! There’s invention! Is it
wonderful that five million men and women read these
golden words, or others of a like currency, every
day?
And politics, theology, and philosophy
are all served up in the same thick sauce of sentiment.
The “baby” seems to play a great part in
the Yellow morality. One day you are told, “A
baby can educate a man”; on another you read,
“Last week’s baby will surely talk some
day,” and you are amazed, as at a brilliant
discovery. And you cannot but ask: To whom
are these exhortations addressed? To children
or to idiots? The grown men and women of the
United States, can hardly regard such poor twaddle
as this with a serious eye. And what of the writers?
How can they reconcile their lofty tone, which truly
is above suspicion, with the shameful sensationalism
of their news-columns? They know not the meaning
of sincerity. If they really believed that “a
baby can educate a man,” they would suppress
their reporters. In short, they are either blind
or cynical. From these alternatives there is no
escape, and for their sakes, as well as for America’s,
I hope they write with their tongue in their cheeks.
The style of the Yellow Journals is
appropriate to their matter. The headlines live
on and by the historic present; the text is as bald
as a paper of statistics. It is the big type
that does the execution. The “story”
itself, to use the slang of the newspaper, is seldom
either humorous or picturesque. Bare facts and
vulgar incidents are enough for the public, which
cares as little for wit as for sane writing. One
fact only can explain the imbecility of the Yellow
Press: it is written for immigrants, who have
but an imperfect knowledge of English, who prefer
to see their news rather than to read it, and who,
if they must read, can best understand words of one
syllable and sentences of no more than five words.
For good or evil, America has the
sole claim to the invention of the Yellow Press.
It came, fully armed, from the head of its first proprietor,
It owes nothing to Europe, nothing to the traditions
of its own country. It grew out of nothing, and,
let us hope, it will soon disappear into nothingness.
The real Press of America was rather red than yellow.
It had an energy and a character which still exist
in some more reputable sheets, and which are the direct
antithesis of Yellow sensationalism. The horsewhip
and revolver were as necessary to its conduct as the
pen and inkpot. If the editors of an older and
wiser time insulted their enemies, they were ready
to defend themselves, like men. They did not
eavesdrop and betray. They would have scorned
to reveal the secrets of private citizens, even though
they did not refrain their hand from their rivals.
Yet, with all their brutality, they were brave and
honourable, and you cannot justly measure the degradation
of the Yellow Press unless you cast your mind a little
further back and contemplate the achievement of another
generation.
The tradition of journalism came to
America from England. ‘The Sun,’
‘The Tribune,’ and ‘The Post,’
as wise and trustworthy papers as may be found on
the surface of the globe, are still conscious of their
origin, though they possess added virtues of their
own. ‘The New York Herald,’ as conducted
by James Gordon Bennett the First, modelled its scurrilous
energy upon the Press of our eighteenth century.
The influence of Junius and the pamphleteers was discernible
in its columns, and many of its articles might have
been signed by Wilkes himself. But there was
something in ‘The Herald’ which you would
seek in vain in Perry’s ‘Morning Chronicle,’
say, or ‘The North Briton,’ and that was
the free-and-easy style of the backwoods. Gordon
Bennett grasped as well as any one the value of news.
He boarded vessels far out at sea that he might forestall
his rivals. In some respects he was as “yellow”
as his successor, whose great exploit of employing
a man convicted of murder to report the trial of a
murderer is not likely to be forgotten. On the
other hand, he set before New York the history of Europe
and of European thought with appreciation and exactitude.
He knew the theatre of England and France more intimately
than most of his contemporaries, and he did a great
deal to encourage the art of acting in his own country.
Above all things he was a fighter, both with pen and
fist. He had something of the spirit which in-spired
the old mining-camp. “We never saw the man
we feared,” he once said, “nor the woman
we had not some liking for.” That healthy,
if primitive, sentiment breathes in all his works.
And his magnanimity was equal to his courage.
“I have no objection to forgive enemies,”
he wrote, “particularly after I have trampled
them under my feet.” This principle guided
his life and his journal, and, while it gave a superb
dash of energy to his style, it put a wholesome fear
into the hearts and heads of his antagonists.
One antagonist there was who knew
neither fear nor forgetfulness, and he attacked Bennett
again and again. Bennett returned his blows, and
then made most admirable “copy” of the
assault. The last encounter between the two is
so plainly characteristic of Bennett’s style
that I quote his description in his own words.
“As I was leisurely pursuing my business yesterday
in Wall Street,” wrote Bennett, “collecting
the information which is daily disseminated in ‘The
Herald,’ James Watson Webb came up to me, on
the northern side of the street said something
which I could not hear distinctly, then pushed me
down the stone steps leading to one of the brokers’
offices, and commenced fighting with a species of
brutal and demoniac desperation characteristic of a
fury. My damage is a scratch, about three-quarters
of an inch in length, on the third finger of the left
hand, which I received from the iron railing I was
forced against, and three buttons torn from my vest,
which my tailor will reinstate for six cents.
His loss is a rent from top to bottom of a very beautiful
black coat, which cost the ruffian $40, and a blow
in the face which may have knocked down his throat
some of his infernal teeth for all I know. Balance
in my favour $39.94. As to intimidating me, or
changing my course, the thing cannot be done.
Neither Webb nor any other man shall, or can, intimidate
me.... I may be attacked, I may be assailed,
I may be killed, I may be murdered, but I will never
succumb.”
There speaks the true Gordon Bennett,
and his voice, though it may be the voice of a ruffian,
is also the voice of a man who is certainly courageous
and is not without humour. It is not from such
a tradition as that, that the Yellow Press emerged.
It does not want much pluck to hang about and sneak
secrets. It is the pure negation of humour to
preach Socialism in the name of the criminal and degenerate.
To judge America by this product would be monstrously
unfair, but it corresponds perforce to some baser
quality in the cosmopolitans of the United States,
and it cannot be overlooked. As it stands, it
is the heaviest indictment of the popular taste that
can be made. There is no vice so mean as impertinent
curiosity, and it is upon this curiosity that the Yellow
Press meanly lives and meanly thrives.
What is the remedy? There is
none, unless time brings with it a natural reaction.
It is as desperate a task to touch the Press as to
change the Constitution. The odds against reform
are too great. A law to check the exuberance
of newspapers would never survive the attacks of the
newspapers themselves.
Nor is it only in America that reform
is necessary. The Press of Europe, also, has
strayed so far from its origins as to be a danger to
the State. In their inception the newspapers
were given freedom, that they might expose and check
the corruption and dishonesty of politicians.
It was thought that publicity was the best cure for
intrigue. For a while the liberty of the Press
seemed justified. It is justified no longer.
The licence which it assumes has led to far worse evils
than those which it was designed to prevent.
In other words, the slave has become a tyrant, and
where is the statesman who shall rid us of this tyranny?
Failure alone can kill what lives only upon popular
success, and it is the old-fashioned, self-respecting
journals which are facing ruin. Prosperity is
with the large circulations, and a large circulation
is no test of merit. Success is made neither
by honesty nor wisdom. The people will buy what
flatters its vanity or appeals to its folly. And
the Yellow Press will flourish, with its headlines
and its vulgarity, until the mixed population of America
has sufficiently mastered the art of life and the
English tongue to demand something better wherewith
to solace its leisure than scandal and imbecility.