The Good Earthquake
Media reports on the San Francisco earthquake
leave out an important factor:
individual feelings about our relationship to the planet
An Interview with Jerry Mander, by Peter Berg
One of the articles in Earth & Spirit (IC#24) Late Winter 1990, Page 9
Copyright (c)1990, 1997 by Context
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When the Earth shook San Francisco and environs on October 17, 1989,
TV treated us to lingering shots of the collapsed Nimitz Freeway, Bay
Bridge,
and burning buildings. But the mainstream media missed two very significant
stories: the devastation to poorer areas like Watsonville, CA, where
migrant
farm workers and their families - often living six to a room - were left
homeless; and the positive effect that the earthquake had on many people
in the Bay Area. It literally shook them up and made them reevaluate key
aspects of their lives. One hears (by the grapevine) stories of families
reunited, new friendships formed, communities bonded together.
Here Peter Berg, a leader in the bioregional movement, interviews
Jerry Mander, the author of Four Arguments for the Elimination of
Television,
about media coverage of the Earthquake of '89. Excerpted and condensed from
"Planet Drum Pulse," published by the Planet Drum Foundation,
PO Box 31251, San Francisco, CA, Shasta Bioregion. Mari Dolcini transcribed
the original interview.
Peter Berg: Everyone I know agrees that the media vastly
sensationalized
our last earthquake. People here and in other places thought San Francisco
was in ruins, even though only 2% of the city was struck. How did this
occur?
Jerry Mander: There are several factors, some of them intrinsic
to the media and to the medium of television in particular. But there are
particular circumstances in this case. The World Series was being played
in San Francisco, so everyone was here - the Goodyear Blimp, the cameras,
62,000 people in the stands, and presumably 100-120 million people watching
world wide. It's what the media wait for - a very, very hot moment, and
they've got everyone there already. They don't have to announce it or
advertise
it. Then they step up to the moment and enact grandness.
PB: There was a vast discrepancy between the actual personal
experiences people had, which were made to seem trivial, and those major
experiences [focused on by the media]. Does the media do that to make the
media material seem greater?
JM: It does, but the media has yet to point out [three weeks
after
the earthquake] what the earthquake did that was amazingly wonderful for
human consciousness in this area. Fire, things falling down - that works
on television very well. What doesn't work is for me to say that it was
probably the biggest, most profound experience with the earth that I'd ever
had. It was almost fun actually. When I realized the house was going to
make it, it was a ride. Where I live there was not so much as a glass
knocked
over, and everyone was calm.
For many people I know, who had no damage and were not in any danger,
this earthquake has carried over as a big experience. It was a profound
interaction with nature that you don't find anywhere in the media reports,
ever.
PB: Why isn't it covered by television or the
media?
JM: Because it's a talking head. And it's too spiritual, too
paganistic,
too nature-based for television to want to encourage or to even pick up
on its nuances. And yet if you could ask most San Franciscans, "What
profound things happened to you besides fear,"people would
speak
about the planet. If that had been handled in the media at all, by
even one person, people could have noted it and brought the experience into
consciousness.
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