RevolutionZ

Ep 378 WCF Transcend Media Madness


Listen Later

Episode 378 of RevolutionZ, Transcend Media Madness, continues our presentation of chapters from the forthcoming book The Wind Cries Freedom. 

What turns a sea of handmade signs into a movement that can’t be ignored? Partly it is information, so we follow that question into the heart of media. Who holds power inside newsrooms? How are stories shaped? What content is addressed? Why does institutional structure matter as much as personal intentions?

With Miguel Guevara and Leslie Jordan, a veteran broadcaster and organizer, we examine the quiet hierarchies that once defined alternative media and the concrete steps that dismantled them: balanced job complexes, real mentorship, and quality safeguards that spread skills instead of hoarding them.

From there, alternative media took on the engine behind so many bad outcomes: market logic. Chasing donors and clicks rewards brevity over depth and funnels creative energy into fundraising rather than reporting. How do media activists in the next American Revolution explain their choices to treat media as a public good, to plan budgets across outlets, and to distribute resources based on movement needs, not who can shout loudest. As competition gave way to cooperation, Leslie tells how new voices surfaced, class analysis deepened, and editorial agendas widened beyond the narrow lanes advertisers and even elites within organizations prefer.

For the new revolution's media movements, change also meant challenging corporate newsrooms from within. Leslie highlights movement campaigns that pressed for fair pay scales, inclusive hiring, participatory decision making, and editorial corrections. Journalism schools became a lever for the future, seeding norms that prized shared power over star systems. She also explains why RPS maintaining principled distance from any single alternative media organization kept independent media truly independent and free to critique allies and opponents alike while still coordinating for impact.

Along the way, we confront a live hazard: the push to strip AI guardrails for militarized use, and what that says about state-corporate pressure on communication tools. The stakes are high. If media is the nervous system of society, then democratizing it changes how every struggle moves. Our episode is part story, part strategy to turn moments into durable movements. 

Support the show

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

RevolutionZBy Michael Albert

  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8
  • 4.8

4.8

40 ratings


More shows like RevolutionZ

View all
Democracy Now! Audio by Democracy Now!

Democracy Now! Audio

5,826 Listeners

More or Less by BBC Radio 4

More or Less

864 Listeners

Economic Update with Richard D. Wolff by Democracy at Work, Richard D. Wolff

Economic Update with Richard D. Wolff

1,984 Listeners

Behind the News with Doug Henwood by Doug Henwood

Behind the News with Doug Henwood

518 Listeners

Ralph Nader Radio Hour by Ralph Nader

Ralph Nader Radio Hour

1,209 Listeners

The Dig by Daniel Denvir

The Dig

1,587 Listeners

The Intercept Briefing by The Intercept

The Intercept Briefing

6,125 Listeners

Rev Left Radio by Revolutionary Left Radio

Rev Left Radio

3,331 Listeners

Useful Idiots with Katie Halper and Aaron Maté by Useful Idiots, LLC

Useful Idiots with Katie Halper and Aaron Maté

4,451 Listeners

You're Dead to Me by BBC Radio 4

You're Dead to Me

3,244 Listeners

Bad Faith by Briahna Joy Gray

Bad Faith

2,707 Listeners

The Socialist Program with Brian Becker by The Socialist Program

The Socialist Program with Brian Becker

557 Listeners

System Update with Glenn Greenwald by Rumble

System Update with Glenn Greenwald

1,196 Listeners

The Chris Hedges Report by Chris Hedges

The Chris Hedges Report

377 Listeners

Drop Site News by Drop Site News

Drop Site News

488 Listeners