Enquiring Minds and Space Aliens
Revisited
September 10 2007
Counterbias.com
WALTER BRASCH
For a few years, usually when
I had too much time and not enough sense, I thought about writing a
weekly newspaper column. It would be a great catharsis of what I proudly
knew to be a warped mind, fertilized now and then by my wife, Rosemary.
With only 23,000 other columnists trying to pitch their own catharses, I
figured there was room for another 700–800 words a week, especially
since newspapers appeared to be desperate for features. How else could
anyone explain why they publish celebrity gossip columns, horoscopes,
and capsule summaries of soap operas? Thus was born, in August 1992, 15
years ago this month, “Wanderings,” a column that probes a small
particle of society. Sometimes it’s humor or a biting satire; sometimes
it’s a wistful essay or a hard-hitting investigative report.
My first column, which mixed politics and the media, a
harbinger of more than 500 future columns, was a look at the tabloids in
America, most of which were developing more credibility than the
mainstream media. The focus was on presidential politics and the
Weekly World News. The newspaper’s reporters and editors never took
themselves seriously, never succumbing to the necessity, often
overlooked by mainstream media, of fact-checking stories or the sin of
salivating after self-congratulatory media awards, bestowed by the media
themselves. The reporters, almost all of whom had extensive daily media
experience, mixed in stories that were completely accurate, stories the
major newspaper didn’t or wouldn’t cover, with a lot of believable
fiction, which a gullible America wanted to believe. Editor Harold
(Eddie) Clontz’s popular column, “Ed Anger,” allegedly written by
someone who was filled with venom and hatred but which always had
several grains of truth, predated radio and TV talk show blabbermouths.
The first issue of the News was in 1979; its last
issue is this week, its circulation having dropped from a peak of more
than 1.2 million in the mid-1980s to about 80,000 at its death. Part of
that decline was because people could learn about Elvis, space aliens,
and conspiracies on radio talk shows and from the Internet. A large part
of that decline, however, was because a new management in 1999 had begun
hiring comedy writers to write what they thought was news, and fired
journalists who could write plausible stories with a comedic flair. The
quality and campiness of the News rapidly declined into
sophomoric humor.
During almost three decades, the Weekly World News,
produced on a black-ink press during an era that saw the rise of splashy
over-designed color and graphics, was a part of American culture. Its
death should be mourned by Americans who rightfully believe they are not
getting either the facts or the truth from the mainstream media. Below,
in honor of the Weekly World News, is my first column.
~~~~~~~~~~~~
When I don’t believe I’m getting all the news from the
nation’s 1,450 daily newspapers, 6,700 community weeklies, 16,000 radio
and TV stations, 20,000 magazines, or 170,000 books published every
year, I turn to the supermarket tabloids for the truth.
Since most of the tabloid reporters worked on daily
newspapers, and are earning $60,000–$100,000 in their new assignments, I
place great credibility in what is being reported in the six major
tabloids, all of them published in Boca Raton or Lantana, Florida, and
which have a combined circulation of about 10 million.
From the tabloids, I can monitor where Elvis is this week,
learn first about who is seen with whom, and which TV series is planning
to replace which megastar, and more than anyone
ever needs to know about soap stars, none of this reported by the local
press. I also know everything there is to know about Elizabeth Taylor,
the Kennedys, the British royal family, Big Foot, and why taking coffee
bean baths can perk you up. I have also learned about monkey-faced boys,
dog-faced girls, human-faced pigs, an 8-year-old who gave birth to
twins, a woman who gave birth to a litter of 12 children, a 28-year-old
grandmother, a man who was pregnant, and a tribe in South America that
found a cure for cancer.
From the 350,000-circulation Sun, in one week alone,
I learned that a survivor of the Titanic spent 20 years on an iceberg,
that there really is a flying elephant with jumbo ears who lives in
Zaire, that a woman is turning into Marilyn Monroe, that scientists in
Jerusalem found Goliath’s mummified head, and that miracles occur near a
Florida tree that has the face of Christ.
The establishment media also don’t report much about house hauntings,
psychic revelations, reincarnations, and extraterrestrials. However, all
are conscientiously reported by the tabloids, and all for a buck or so a
week.
In just one issue of the 722,000-circulation Weekly World
News, this week alone, I learned that condoms cause breast cancer,
that a 7,000-year-old gargantuan shark patrols Lake Superior, that
Hitler was really a woman who survived World War II and died in 1992 in
Buenos Aires at the age of 103, and that a spaceship (with 14 perfectly
preserved extraterrestrial corpses) was found in the Gobi Desert. More
importantly, I learned that a friendly space alien, not too unlike E.
T., declared his (her? its?) support for Bill Clinton for the
presidency. A photo on page 1 showed the smooth-skinned, large-headed,
long-fingered, unclothed alien shaking hands with the Democratic
Presidential nominee after a 40-minute super-secret visit in Madison
Square Garden during the Democratic National Convention.
It wasn’t the first scoop for the News. In May, the
newspaper had reported that the alien visited George Bush at Camp David;
in July, it reported the alien stopped by Dallas for a chat with Ross
Perot who, apparently taking the alien’s advice, soon dropped out of the
race. Pictures also accompanied these articles, thus proving the alien’s
existence. We learned that the alien—who came from the most successful
planet in the universe—gave Gov. Clinton advice on health and
environmental issues as well as how to turn the economy around. The
alien’s mission—other than to evaluate and recommend a candidate for the
confused American masses, most of whom would vote for the alien over any
of the presidential candidates—was to seek “trade concessions that would
benefit his home planet,” according to reliable sources who talked with
the Weekly World News.
The major news media, obviously jealous they were scooped on
the biggest news story of the decade, called the story a hoax. To get to
the truth, I made a few phone calls.
A member of the White House staff said she believed that
President Bush may have made several light-hearted comments about the
visit of the alien, but referred me to another office for confirmation.
An official spokesman for the President at first indicated he didn’t
know what I was talking about when I asked about the space alien. After
informing him of this late-breaking news, he said he didn’t think the
President made any comments about “that alleged meeting.” He then
informed me that “as far as we’re concerned,” there was no meeting, thus
confirming my belief that if the White House says it didn’t occur, it
probably did occur.
On to Bill Clinton’s team. Being the hard-hitting
investigative journalist that I am, I had to get confirmation, if not
from the Governor, certainly from an official spokesperson. Did you ever
try to find an official spokesperson when you need one? After three days
of phone calls, all I had was a lot of conversations with a pack of
confused but obviously arrogant campaign officials who couldn’t or
wouldn’t confirm or deny anything. All, it seemed, were so full of
themselves, unlike their boss, that none had room for any sense of
humor. Obviously, the Clinton team was more impressed with themselves,
and the possibility they may one day be able to walk into the White
House without a tourist pass, than in revealing the truth.
To clear up the confusion, I contacted Eddie Clontz, editor
of the Weekly World News. Eddie’s a pleasant fellow and an
excellent journalist who worked for several years as a reporter and wire
editor at the St. Petersburg Evening Independent.
He did his best to keep a straight face, but he and I both
knew it was going to take a better actor than him to pull that one off.
“We had been working the story for a year,” said Eddie who revealed that
the newspaper received the tip from “some of our people in the
military.” He said that credible sources “often don’t call regular
newspapers because the dailies take it as a joke or will treat it as
such,” thus confirming my suspicions that daily newspaper reporters are
more concerned with trivial pursuits than they are with news of
interplanetary consequence.
The photos, Eddie said, were submitted by one of the
newspaper’s sources. A true journalist, he wouldn’t reveal a confidence.
He did confirm that the newspaper plans to follow the alien’s travels
through the country, but probably won’t be tracking either George Bush
or Bill Clinton. Their lives just weren’t as important, or as
interesting, as that of an intelligent life form from another planet.
“We don’t get into political coverage unless it has to do with a space
alien,” the newspaper’s editor slyly said.
Now, for the big question. Does Eddie Clontz, editor of a
newspaper with larger circulation than all but the top five American
dailies, believe in the alien? “I really don’t think so,” he said,
noting that although “the photographs look real to me, as a skeptic I’d
say it’s not true.” Actually, he also called the existence of the alien
“preposterous.”
In every political campaign, there is always something to
break the tension, something to lighten up a campaign that tires out
candidates, staff, reporters, and voters. This year, it’s the alien’s
visit with the candidates. Next campaign, maybe it will be coverage of
the alien’s race for the Presidency.
==
Eddie Clontz, editor from 1981 to 2001, died three
years later at the age of 56. Walter Brasch’s latest books are
America’s Unpatriotic Acts: The Federal Government’s Violation of
Constitutional and Civil Rights and ‘Unacceptable’: The Federal
Response to Hurricane Katrina. Forthcoming is Sinking the Ship of
State: The Presidency of George W. Bush. You may contact Dr. Brasch
through his website,
www.walterbrasch.com or at
brasch@bloomu.edu]