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  • Orwell Rolls in his Grave


    Orwell Rolls in his Grave

    The film examines the current and past relationships between the media, the US government and corporations, analyzing the possible consequences of the concentration of media ownership. Making references to George Orwell’s novel Nineteen Eighty-Four, the film argues that reality has met and in some ways exceeded Orwell’s expectations about a society dominated by thought control, which is made possible by the media.

    According to the film, the mass media no longer report news, but manage it, deciding what makes the headlines and what is conveniently ignored, thus ultimately defining the framework upon which most other issues are discussed by the society. As an example, it is claimed that since the late 1980s there’s been an agenda pursued by the major media corporations regarding the deregulation of the media market, by which news reports sell all its benefits while neglecting its disastrous results.

    This documentary is a critical examination of the Fourth Estate, once the bastion of American democracy. Asking whether America has entered an Orwellian world of doublespeak where outright lies can pass for the truth, director Robert Kane Pappas explores what the media doesn’t like to talk about: itself. Meticulously tracing the process by which media has distorted and often dismissed actual news events, Pappas presents a riveting and eloquent mix of media professionals and leading intellectual voices on the media.

    From the very size of the media monopolies and how they got that way to who decides what gets on the air and what doesn’t, ‘Orwell Rolls in His Grave’ moves through a troubling list of questions and news stories that go unanswered and unreported in the mainstream media.

    - Exploring the one thing the media doesn’t like to talk about… itself.

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    • FutantWhat

      - This is from 2003 – it presages what’s going on now – as of course Orwell did with uncanny accuracy. It’s disturbing that now, nine years later – this nonsense persists. There is hope, though, in that the Internet is still not completely under “their” control – just today (January 20, 2012) the PIPA and SOPA laws have been shelved – but only because we fought back (we meaning the online community/wikipedia/google/et al). Funny how the double-speak is obvious in PIPA/SOPA – where freedom is recast as “piracy” – essentially, we the people being equated with Robin Hoods, stealing from the rich, who have the Sheriffs of Nothingham as their thugs

    • Lola

      Largely right on the money but tainted by a few instances of reactionary hyperbole.