No wonder Lance keeps having minor coronaries over RD. He's right: There are plenty of other places to discuss politics in general. When I come here, I expect a more focused discussion.
So let's make it more focused.
A comparison with Watergate is instructive. There were many fewer media outlets then. There was stronger support both from subscribers in the case of newspapers, and from advertisers for most other media. They could withstand financial pressure. Regulatory pressure was a concern for broadcasters, which is probably one reason they tended to let print media take the lead in breaking stories. Print media also had deeper staffing. Journalists had some standing. The notion of a "fifth estate" performing an oversight function over government didn't seem ridiculous.
Now, all media are under financial pressure. The revenue pie is stagnant or smaller, and it's cut up in far more pieces. Newspapers are considerably weaker, both in terms of finances and content, except for a few nationally oriented media. Even for those national publications, I get the impression that they are sometimes pulling their punches. One bright spot is National Public Radio, but it has faced substantial pressure, too, with the withdrawal of federal funding. That pressure should be an object lesson to proposals from some what I call "capital-J journalism" proponents for government subsidies of traditional news media. He who pays the piper calls the tune.
What we now call "linear TV" is also in a weakened position financially. Some outlets are still trying, both nationally and locally. But there is more competition, for advertising dollars and for attention. New platforms have developed, siphoning away revenues from traditional media. There's an increasing inclination among audiences to read, listen, and watch content that reinforces (or even intensifies) existing beliefs. Cable-TV news started it, but with greatly improved technology and streaming, all you need is a camera and studio, plus a few loudmouths who will say anything and a willingness to jettison traditional controls of editing and standards. Any notion of oversight and independence diminishes more and more. With all of that going on, it becomes increasingly difficult for anyone trying to practice credible, fact-based, independent journalism to stick with it. No matter what you do, someone's not going to like it. Recent ownership maneuvers...think Skydance and Paramount/CBS...will just accelerate these trends.
Then artificial "intelligence" (really, a linguistic guessing model) comes along, making the notions of truth and objectivity even harder to sustain.
As for the Trump speech: let him make his speeches. This one was counterproductive for Trump and had a certain "Emperor's New Clothes" flavor to it. Seeing it probably did more to shift public opinion than a thousand podcasts, op-eds, finger-wagging threads on Bluesky, and so on. People don't like to be shouted at. It's been the progressives who have been doing most of that kind of shouting; it was enlightening to see Trump do it this time.
I think fact-checking is still important, and should have been done for this speech. It's hard to do when, every day, a new distraction is manufactured. If you're waiting for the media to tell you "that's the way it is", you're setting yourself up for disappointment. Support and use whatever fact-checking you can but don't always assume it will be there.
In this new age, media literacy is crucial...and underappreciated. Our educational institutions don't do a particularly good job of helping people learn it. Every one of us now has to be his or her own editor and make judgments for ourselves. That's a skill. Judging whether a media outlet is doing its job is a skill, too.