Iranians Are Much Talked About on Sunday Morning TV, but Never Heard From [View all]
http://readersupportednews.org/opinion2/277-75/29573-iranians-are-much-talked-about-on-sunday-morning-tv-but-never-heard-from
But as these shows cover the Iran deal, one thing is glaringly missing: Iranian voices. There has not been a single Iranian official recently interviewed by any of these Sunday morning shows. When I raised this issue on Twitter a couple of weeks ago, a Meet the Press Senior Editor, Shawna Thomas, said the show had put in a request with Iran for an interview, while MSNBCs Chris Hayes also suggested that it can be difficult to secure interviews with Iranian government officials.
That may be, but even if it is difficult to obtain interviews with Iranian government officials, it is extremely easy to interview Iranian experts, scholars, journalists and other authoritative voices from Tehran. Last week, Democracy Nows Amy Goodman and Juan Gonzalez hosted a fascinating hour-long discussion about Iran with Seyed Hossein Mousavian, a former nuclear negotiator for Iran who was Irans Ambassador to Germany from 1990 to 1997, and now teaches at Princeton. Just this week, CNN Internationals Christiane Amanpour interviewed Tehran University Professor Sadegh Zibakalam about Tehrans views and actions in the Iran deal. Beyond those in Iran, there are Iranian-American groups and Iranian-American experts who actually speak Farsi who dont see the world the way Jeffrey Goldberg and Lindsey Graham do. Outside the Sunday shows, Iranian officials have been interviewed occasionally by U.S. media figures.
In sum, the only way to exclude Iranian voices is if you choose to exclude them. Thats exactly what Sunday morning television programs have done, and continue to do. And it matters a great deal for several reasons.
For one, excluding the Iranian viewpoint ensures that these shows spew propaganda to the American public. Iran is talked about, almost always in demonic terms, but is almost never heard from. That means that these shows, which endlessly boast of their own objectivity, are in fact far more akin to state media.