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- So You Want To Work In The Media?
Reprinted with
permission. Broder, M.---So You Want To Work in
the Media? 21 Things I Wish I Had Known When I First Asked That Question.
Chapter 2: Psychology and the Media. Washington D.C.: American
Psychological Association, 1999.
SO YOU WANT TO WORK IN THE MEDIA?
21 Things I Wish I Had Known
When I First Asked Myself That Question
Michael S. Broder, Ph.D.
My rather intense involvement with the media came about
quite by accident. Almost twenty years ago, I was trying to figure out ways
to get subjects for my dissertation study which was on divorce adjustment.
Unlike many research projects where subjects can be obtained from intact
groups (e.g., the good old Intro Psych I class), getting subjects to enter a
program designed to help them overcome the pain of ending a love
relationship wasnt so easy. A friend suggested that I send public service
announcements to all of the Philadelphia-area radio stations in the hope
they would announce that an experimental, free program was available to
those who met the criteria and agreed to fully participate. I needed fifty
subjects and was running out of ideas. So, practically as a last effort
before switching topics, I gave it a try.
The only responses I got were from the two Philadelphia
talk radio stations, asking me if I wanted to be a guest on one of their
shows discussing the topic of divorce in general, and my program in
specific. In the late seventies, they actually thought this was a unique and
provocative topic. How quaint were those pre-sensationalism days of the
media!
At first, I had serious reservations. Rarely, if ever,
had I even listened to talk radio. Moreover, I knew of no one at the time
who had ever exposed him or herself to this ordeal. But hell, I was
desperate for subjects. So I accepted both invitationsa decision that was
to radically change my life, not to mention my career direction, forever.
To make a very long story as short as possible, I got my
subjects, managed to get both of the stations that invited me upset (for
appearing on these rival talk stations on the same day with virtually the
same pitch), and- still unwittingly- began what was to become perhaps the
most unique and intense part of my career. In the years since, Ive had my
own programs on both of those local Philadelphia stations, hosted talk shows
for all three major networks (CBS Radio, ABC Talkradio, and NBC Talknet), in
addition to New York Citys two major local talk stations; and made numerous
guest appearances on such programs as The Today Show, Oprah,
Donahue, Sally Jesse Raphael, and Geraldo, as well as on
hundreds of other shows. Ive written popular articles and/or been featured
in numerous national, regional and local publications, including Newsweek,
USA Today, The New York Times, Cosmopolitan and scores
of others; and co-authored two popular self-help books, The Art of Living
Single (Macmillan and Avon) and The Art of Staying Together
(Hyperion and Avon); fourteen popular audio self-help programs; and The
Therapists Assistant, an audiotherapy series designed to be used by
psychotherapists as an adjunct to treatment; and completed five multi-city
media/book tours in the United States and Australia.
Radio psychologists were being vilified by our colleagues
in the early eighties for daring to give advice over the airwaves. In 1982 a
group of us radio psychologists along with other psychologists who worked
in, and/or were interested in media issues, met in San Diego, California. It
was at that meeting that we actually coined the term "media psychology" and
formed the "Association for Media Psychology" (AMP), which was to become the
precursor to APAs Division of Media Psychology (Division 46), of which I
became the first president. The story of AMP and Division 46 has been told
many times. Our mission was to pool our resources and work together with
several purposes in mind: to educate the public about the profession of
psychology and how it can serve them; to refine our media skills and teach
these skills to our colleagues wanting to utilize this new specialty as part
of their work; to be both a consumer and a source of media-related research;
to develop Guidelines For Media Mental Health Professionals (Broder, 1983)
to be a sort of a guild and source of ongoing support for those of us who
worked in the media; and to be a clearinghouse for media opportunities, as
well as a resource for the media when they were looking for psychologists to
fulfill various media roles.
The degree to which these goals were met, is very much a
matter of opinion and beyond the scope of this chapter. But I can best
describe it as a mission in progress. I think of those early (AMP/Division
46) days with a great deal of pride and nostalgia. And as low brow as the
media gets, youll never hear me suggest that we censor anything! The
initial controversy of it all is what got me hooked. Once media psychology
gained the acceptance and professional respect it deserved, I found myself
becoming less and less engaged on a organizational level. I choose to no
longer do radio on a regular basis, although I will occasionally guest host.
I still do a great deal of writing of books, articles and tape programs (my
most passionate professional activity) and make guest appearances on radio
and television as it pertains to that work.
Along the way there were many lessons about working in
the media to be learned. Some were formulated naturally, while others needed
to be learned the hard way. So, let me share some of the ones that I and
other media psychologists who have consulted with me over the years have
considered most important. In doing that, let me emphasize that this is
strictly my own perspective. I claim no absolute truth here, only opinion
and learning-based experiences that would have been quite helpful to know at
the beginning. In other words, this is the article I wish had been available
for me to read twenty years ago:
1. The question of whether advice given over the
airwaves is therapy or infotainment was always a ridiculous argument.
Therapy is not done over the airwaves simply because it cannot be done
over the airwaves. Never be defensive about the fact that when youre
working in the electronic media (which in this country is pretty much
commercially funded) that you are working for an entertainment medium. Sure,
media psychologists (both print and electronic) have educated the public on
how to normalize such things as relationships, career and child-rearing
issues. Media psychologists have taught those who have needed to handle
contemporary issues such as agoraphobia, bulimia, addiction, and even sexual
harassment (pre-Anita Hill and Clarence Thomas) that they are not alone.
Those of us who have succeeded in the media, have done so mainly because we
have been able to entertain; and thus keep what is perhaps the most
uncaptive audience you can have watching, listening or reading. Many of the
points below will crystallize various aspects of this theme.
2. A career in the media can be akin to professional
cyclothymia. Working on the air is often both an incredibly exhilarating
and profoundly addictive experience. At its best, the pay is inordinately
high; speaking engagements can be quite plentiful; the recognition, both
professional and otherwise, is intense; and the pressure which often
manifests itself as glorious excitement can bring ones creative juices to
levels never before imagined! At worst, I have often compared it to the
phenomena of being in love with someone whom you dont particularly like. As
trends change, more sensationalism is first suggested, then requested, then
demanded. All of the clichs you saw in the movies (e.g., Network and
Broadcast News, which some would say actually sweeten the characters
greatly) are accurate. Media psychologists have been endlessly (and often
rightfully) parodied, both consciously and unconsciously. Since the
invention of the TelePrompter, TV. hosts and news people with view
exceptions have needed less and less substance (other than that ability to
read their TelePrompter), but more and more "appeal" to survive. Television
talk shows (and radio is not far behind), once a glorious showcase for what
we do, have grown sleazier and sleazier and survival means constantly
redefining yourself and your "act." (As Charles Manson once said, "There was
a time when being crazy meant something; now everyones crazy!") Remember,
the same demographics that made Arthur Godfrey the nations leading morning
man in the forties and fifties, now overwhelmingly listen to Howard Stern!
(Interestingly, media lawyers are now going through similar struggleswhich
started with the O.J. Simpson trial and continue with the Clinton scandals.
They are now very much where we were in the 80s. And wasnt Monica
Lewinskys lawyer, William Ginsburg, the very caricature of the worst and
most outrageous media behavior we shuddered about back then?)
3. Its the ratings, stupid. Or to parody a real
estate clich, there are only three things in the media that are
importantratings, ratings and ratings! Remember Phil Donahue? Hes a great
guy and did a great show. But when his ratings dropped, he was
unceremoniously dumped after 29-1/2 years of carrying the daytime bottom
line of many of his affiliate stations on his shoulders (they wouldnt even
let him stay around for his 30th). By contrast, the Jerry Seinfelds and the
Ellen DeGenereses could publicly make outrageous demands to their employers
and still keep their timeslotsbut only until the wanted out or their
ratings dropped! If you wonder why this has become the age of the telegenic
sociopath (e.g., O. J. Simpson, Donald Trump, Tonya Harding and Bill
Clinton) you need look no further than the rating books. So its not how
nice, professional, smart, loyal, helpful or thorough you are, but how well
you attract numbers of people. Sizeand ultimately little elsematters! By
thinking of the media establishments for whom we work as businesses and not
institutions of higher learning (a common tactical error many psychologists
still make), we will practically always have our eye on the ball.
4. This journey is peppered with some of the most
fascinating characters youll ever meet. In my media career I have run
into some of the most interesting, accomplished, evolved and humble; as well
as some of the most boring, pathetic, shoddy and ego-driven, Axis II types
Ive ever met anywhere! Few novelists could create some of the actual
characters that await you. By observing it and constantly fine-tuning my
level of involvement, this phenomena has greatly broadened my overall
perspective as a psychologist. I consider this a huge and unexpected bonus
of my media career.
5. Understand the nature of a media relationship.
There is an unwritten contract that says they use you for your expertise
and/or to lend your credentials to a point of view they want to express. In
turn, you use them for your purposes. When guesting, they will invariably
look at you as a one-shot deal. The mistake that many psychologists make is
to consider a guest appearance as an audition for something greater.
Instead, if you treat everything like a one-shot deal and then give
it your best shot, you will probably convey a much greater sense of
confidence. Chances are you dont know their full agenda in having you as a
guest. For example, the producer of one program called me recently to ask if
I knew of a female psychologist, preferably with a "non-Catholic" (read:
Irish or Italian) name who was pro-life! I dont know if the show
ever found one. But if they did, I can guarantee you that this psychologist
did not realize that their agenda was probably to set her up for some kind
of attack. As individuals, psychologists (with rare exceptions) are not
important to those in the media who pursue them. That is not necessarily a
bad thing, as long as we stay aware of it.
6. A great guest has five characteristics: Passion
for and about whatever he or she is addressing; a sense of humor; clarity
(the ability to explain a complicated issue, such as Maslows Needs
Hierarchy, to an eleventh grader with a short attention span); a definite
opinion or point of view about the topic; and a chip on the shoulder. Many
psychologists have the hardest time with that "chip-on-shoulder"
characteristic. But watch the professional guests, such as when Larry King
is on the David Letterman Show, or whenever you see Ruth Westheimer
interviewed. She is extremely pleasant; but never, ever wishy-washy. In
other words, regardless of your unique style, always come out with your
dukes up!
7. Learn to make it look easy.
But dont expect it
to be easy. The appearance of ease while operating at peak
performance is not a simple skill to develop. But with thorough preparation
and a great deal of practice, it will eventually become second nature. The
opposite, of course, is to look like youre trying to audition. The camera
and the microphone are very sensitive instruments. So, expect that whatever
anxiety you project will become greatly magnified. Granted, some
anxiety is actually good for peak performance, as long as it doesnt show
and/or you can reframe it to come across as excitement (read: passion).
8. Think of your media appearance as the exact
opposite of your dissertation. A dissertation can take as few as one or
two very simple points, and expand them into a study which could be many
hundreds of pages long. In working with the media, your the task is the
exact opposite. You must take very complex subjects such as marital
communication, step-parenting or eating disorders, and then reduce them to
sound bites or vignettes that can be readily understood by your composite
audience (that "individual" with an eleventh-grade education and the short
attention span). You can try this simple exercise at home: take your
dissertation topic and explain it in thirty seconds or less to someone who
has virtually no interest either in you, your topic, or psychology. Then
once youve mastered that thirty second task, realize that the average sound
bite on news or magazine shows today is about seven seconds. And
remember, the easier it is to change stations (and the more stations there
are to change to), the less captive is your audience.
9. Know as much as you can about what youre getting
yourself into. Before making an appearance, get as much information
about the show, the host, the format, other guests with whom you may be
expected to interact, and the worst possible situation you can be exposed to
during your appearance. Is the show controversial? Is it informational? Is
it a forum for puffery? Are the producers after sensationalism? Is the host
respectful of professionals, or are you merely there to be a foil or even a
"stooge"? All of these scenarios can be worked to your advantage as long as
you understand within reason what to expect. Shortly after I completed my
U.S. paperback tour for The Art of Staying Together, in which
most of the shows were interested in discussing things such as sex, affairs,
abusive relationships, and the other more provocative topics in the book, I
toured in Australia. Their talk shows were quite reminiscent of ours in the
sixties and seventies. Hosts asked questions such as, "How does a marriage
stay together?", without the now routine American embellishments such as ".
. . if one partner is fifty years older than the other," etc. This was
culture shock! By the second day I caught on, but I must admit I was quite
unprepared at first!
10. These three skills will help you greatly:
Improvisational acting (where you will learn to fine-tune your persona for
practically any given situation); voice (where you will learn how to make
the best possible vocal presentation by changing certain quirks that might
get in your wayand we all have them); and how to bring yourself to a peak
performance state of mind at will. The latter will ensure that youre at
optimal energy level before you go on the air. This is especially important
when youre on a media tour that requires you to make numerous appearances
on a given day. Media tours can be quite grueling, since the days are
usually long and appearances can be both numerous and spaced out unevenly.
Improvisational acting and voice training are best obtained by professional
coaches and classes that are generally available locally.
11. Breaking into the media can be difficult, but it
is not impossible. This subject is a book in and of itself. Quite
obviously, the better the opportunity the more competition there is. Master
guesting before attempting to host. With very few exceptions, well paying
positions are now almost impossible to get without a solid talent agent. In
selecting an agent, make sure he or she has a track record in placing people
similar to you in the medium you are looking for. Rarely does someone break
in without a great deal of conscious effort, which includes sending out
numerous tapes and bios, taking auditions, handling rejections, and once
again never allowing it to become too important. Some of the best
media gigs are actually created by those who seek them. In other words, if
you can develop a win-win airtight proposal with sources for funding, youre
in the best possible position to have it looked at by the right people, and
then to eventually succeed. A station or network that has already created a
position simply awaiting talent is more or less an exception to the rule.
And when such a situation does occur, the talent they select will
practically always have a track record.
12. Remember the audience. No matter what medium
you are working inand Ill have a few words about the three most specific
ones: radio, television and printremember that the most important element
is your audience. It is the audience who decides whether you stay or go, it
is your audience who pays your salary. When appearing on a show, it is not
the host that youre interacting with. The host is merely a catalyst to
bring you to the audience. Likewise, when doing radio call-in programs, it
is not the caller that the program exists for, but the audience. Your caller
is merely the instrument to bring your message to the listeners. (Youre not
running a crisis hotline!) So constantly ask yourself, "How does what I say
or do benefit or impact the audience?" and youll just about always be on
the right track.
13. In radio what you say is all you havethats good
news and bad news. We still hear over and over again about the
Kennedy-Nixon television debates in 1960, where Kennedy clearly won on TV.
But what we hear less about is that those who listened to the debates
on the radio, overwhelmingly thought Nixon won. In radio, while you dont
have to worry about what your audience sees, what your audience sees wont
get you out of trouble either. Pauses are called "dead air." A big advantage
of radio is that there is usually much more time. Thus, you can generally get
into a lot more depth, and use your notes as much as you need or want to.
Another aspect of radio is that your show must be structured so that someone
can tune in at any time and feel as though theyre on boardunlike
television.
14. In television the "eyes" have it. Unlike
radio, unless youre using a TelePrompTer, your main points must be
memorized. You generally have much less time, but are expected to at least
appear to convey the same level of depth you would anywhere else. This is
quite a challenge. In addition, about eighty percent of the "grade" for your
presentation is visual. This means that you can make a brilliant point, but
if the camera is focusing on someone elses facial reaction to what youre
saying, chances are your point will be lost and that facial reaction- if
anything- will be remembered. Make sure that how you dress as well as other
aspects of your appearance reinforce your message. At the very least, your
appearance should not detract from or be inconsistent with your message.
15. Just one short word about print media.
Writers Market (Holm and Prues, 1997) is a book that comes out every
year, and details virtually every publishing (book and magazine) resource
which might be appropriate for your work. This fine publication will give
you information about how to write query letters (for articles and books),
find book agents, and how virtually anyone with both a good product and
perseverance can get published. If you truly have something to say, this is
by far the easiest medium to break into, and the one which is most likely to
propel you into the electronic media in this day and age (by virtue of
appearances for your books and articles, and the prominence in your area of
expertise your writings will establish for you).
16. Print interviews, such as for newspapers and
magazines, are also good ways to gain recognition by other media sources.
Unlike the electronic media (when you just about always know when youre on
the air), be conscious of never speaking "off the record." Watch for the old
"Colombo" technique where the reporter says to you after you think the
interview is completed, "Oh, just one more thing . . . " and you begin to
answer as though you are off the record, only to find that whatever you said
at that moment is the only thing that appears in print. A very small
minority of extraordinarily gracious reporters and publications (as well as
a few who are reeling from lawsuits) will clear your quote with you prior to
publication. This is the exception, not the rule, so dont expect this
courtesy. Just be careful that your words are appropriately measured.
17. Consciously develop your media persona. In
therapy we use protocols. Theoretically we could say the same thing over and
over again many times during the course of a day without sounding (to anyone
else) repetitious. And theoretically, one could do great therapy without
ever using any type of original approach. But in the media, it is uniqueness
that counts. Uniqueness not so much about what you say, but about how you
come across. So remember to be not only an authority but also a character
or personality. Virtually any media person you can think of has some
distinct physical and/or personality characteristic that is a trademarkeven
if it is something really subtle like "dryness." Chances are this was
developed after a great deal of thought and practiceeven though it may
still be a staple of his or her personality. Think about what persona you
can choose to enhance your message. Then do what it takes to incorporate
that personal into whatever you do with consistency.
18. Know your goals. What is driving your media
work? If it is to convey your message, you can always find a forum, a
classroom, an article, a small radio station or another outlet to use as a
launching point. On the other hand, if your goal is to be something
such as a celebrity (versus to say or accomplish something),
the media can be a very frustrating experience. Amid the snickering heard at
a recent APA convention about a colleague who believed that one more face
lift would get her that "TV job" and some much needed self-esteem, there is
a very sad dynamic that characterizes those who hunger for "stardom."
Although there are an infinite number of electronic and print opportunities,
there are very few star slots. Furthermore, the star slots that do exist are
invariably occupied by those who have painstakingly paid their dues and
developed substance along with their act. Narcissism without talent will get
you only as far as the first exit door. Thus, the best chance you have of
assuring yourself of a positive experience, is to concentrate on your
message (the means) and not the size of your audience (the result of
good work, not the means). If your message works, your audience will
invariably increase. Ive observed that those who have the most difficulty
really have not adequately concentrated on and fine tuned their message
(i.e., made it valuable), and then expect a lot of recognition for having
little new to say. But when you truly have something important and helpful
to say there will be plenty of people to listen.
19. What we do in our offices is far more
consequential. There used to be a debate about whether we who did radio
call-in programs actually helped callers. After 17 years of doing radio, I
believe that we probably are helpful; but not nearly as much as we thought
we were. Do we hurt them? No. Ive never seen or heard of anyone who was
truly hurt in any way. But I
have seen many colleagues make a lot more of what they considered their
effect and the effect of media psychology than I did. I believe I make a
much deeper and far reaching contribution, albeit to fewer numbers of
people per minute, when I conduct continuing education seminars, teach clinical
courses, and see clients in my office.
20. Only do whats fun.
And when it stops being
fun, stop doing it! Thats when Jack Paar left The Tonight Show, and
practically every one I have met who has had an overall positive experience
with the media, has adopted that attitude. It is the only truism I can think
of which guarantees that you become winner in this game, no matter
what.
21. And finally, dont take yourself too seriously!
For 17 years I have ended every radio show with that message! And believe it
or not, that mantra was never more applicable than when I was president of
Division 46, and also acted as the "unofficial chief bereavement counselor"
for those who lost their shows. At that time, I got a lot of experience
administering the "Rambo" technique of coping: ignore the pain and youll
survive it. Then whats left is that great feeling of having reached many
people for a moment in time.
REFERENCES
Broder, M (1983). Guidelines for Media Mental Health Professionals,
prepared in conjunction with Guidelines Committee of the Association for
Media Psychology.
Broder, M (1993). The Art of Staying Together, New York, NY.
Hyperion.
Holm, Kirsten C. and Prues, Don (1997). Writers Market.
Cincinnati, Ohio: Writers Digest Books.