« Is it bad to become like your parents? | Main | Solving the Harry Potter security problem »

Will people on TV start making more sense?

Ezra Klein has a neat argument:

...the incentives are changing.  Assume that the incentive for going on television is to raise your profile (which is about 75 percent correct).  If I went on television five years ago, a large part of my incentive would be to make the host like me.  After all, these appearances pass in an instant, and most of you would never see the program.  So if I want to reach the maximum number of people with my arguments and do the most to increase my visibility, I want to keep coming back.

Now, however, with YouTube and GoogleVideo and online archiving, a single, contentious appearance can be seen on the internet a million times.  Everyone, after all, has seen Stewart berate Tucker Carlson on Crossfire, but very few of us had actually tuned in that day.  Similarly, my segment on the Kudlow show, replayed on the internet a few thousand times, did much more for my reputation among the audience relevant to my success than have my more friendly, but bland, appearances on other shows.

Making sense often requires you to be disruptive, and not long ago, being disruptive was probably a bad idea.  Now it's a good one.  And since the channels are wising up and putting their videos online with advertising before them, they also want widespread online dissemination of appearances, and so their incentives are increasingly aligned with mine.  Does this mean more folks will be making sense?  Not necessarily.  But it means there might be more room for sense-making.

Or is Ezra just being deliberately disruptive to get links?  How will TV hosts respond to maintain equilibrium?  Invite fewer uncontrolled guests?  Invite fewer guests period?  Or will contestability force hosts to invite more disruptive guests?

Posted by Tyler Cowen on July 21, 2007 at 03:44 PM in Television | Permalink

Comments

Maybe the tv hosts can just delete the comments that make them look bad? You know, learn from bloggers like Cowen.

Posted by: Dareano at Jul 21, 2007 7:20:04 PM

Dareano,
The only comments that might be considered to make anyone look bad are generally invective laden ones that most of us find annoying and uninteresting. If any of these are removed, most of us are thankful and it is Tyler's right to do this.

If your point was to be humorous, it was not successful. Try again perhaps?

Posted by: iam at Jul 21, 2007 7:50:29 PM

To attempt to answer your last question, it seems like hosts would now be similarly incentivized as guests. In the past, a host would want to get a high profile guest back for repeat incentives, so the incentive would be to be nice to the guest. Now, I think hosts would be incentivized to the same extent to be "disruptive" rather than nice/placating to high profile guests, since the the viewership of a single disruptive clip on the internet may dwarf views of many nice/placating repeat interviews with the guest.

Posted by: Hopefully Anonymous at Jul 21, 2007 10:26:00 PM

I don't buy it.

This month's hot Youtube meme is soon replaced by next month's. For instance, did Alanis Morissette's April Fool cover of "My Humps" really permanently return her to prominence? To borrow a metaphor or two, Youtube fame is a mile wide and an inch deep, and fifteen minutes long.

If you're an actor, you always have a new movie to plug; if you're a blogger, you might have a book to plug at some point. Sooner or later you do want to get invited back. Maintaining a public profile is a high-maintenance never-ending treadmill in the highly competitive attention economy, and you bite the talking head that promotes you at your own risk.

Then again, if no one's ever heard of you yet (Ezra who?), making a splash can be a useful gambit, once.

And if "making sense" is some new euphemism for being disruptively polemical, well, then Ann Coulter is already the queen of sense.

Posted by: anonymous at Jul 21, 2007 11:29:32 PM

Ezra Klein's point seems right to me. Tech seems to be enhancing the integrity and accountability of discourse. At least I like to think so.

Posted by: Daniel Klein at Jul 22, 2007 3:14:24 AM

Being disruptive is useful for "making sense" only if you think as Ezra Klein seems to that he is always right and that the way to spread the truth is to talk over the people who are wrong. If however you think that other people who disagree with you have something valuable to say, a conversation is probably better than a monologue.

Posted by: Hei Lun Chan at Jul 22, 2007 10:50:41 AM

Ann Coulter figured this out some time ago -- going along to get along is a path to obscurity. On the other side, I think Lou Dobbs has learned the same lesson.

I remember Milton Friedman making the point, almost 50 years ago now, that the level of controversy over public airwaves will be inversely proportional to the level of government control. The unregulated Internet is exhibit A.

Posted by: SheetWise at Jul 22, 2007 11:38:48 AM

Yes. Ann Coulter is the queen of sense. And sensibility.

Posted by: Robert Speirs at Jul 24, 2007 9:07:15 AM

I come from asia, injoy 室內設計,work in a 搬家公司,other enjoy isecosway科士威,good see U。

Thanks.

Posted by: jack at Jan 6, 2008 9:37:15 PM

Post a comment