"COVAX and World Bank to Accelerate Vaccine Access for Developing Countries," trumpets a World Bank press release. "How AI Is Making Healthcare More Affordable And Accessible," announces Forbes magazine. "How technology is helping improve financial inclusion around the world," reports CNBC. It's a linguistic frame that appears regularly in media, PR, and policymaking. Those who can't afford the top-tier forms of basic necessities like housing or physical and mental healthcare, we're told, can have "access" to less expensive, lower-quality versions. Enter bottom-rung ACA marketplace plans, less effective COVID vaccines, homeless people living in train containers, scammy cryptocurrency apps, and clunky chatbot "therapists." After all, they're better than the alternative: having no healthcare, housing, or income at all. But why must having nothing at all be the only alternative? Why isn't it possible to ensure high-quality essentials for everyone? And how does media's repackaging of substandard necessities as "increasing access" and fostering "inclusion" serve to make the barbarism of austerity politics seem palatable, even benevolent? On this episode, our season seven premiere, we'll examine the trope of framing subpar material essentials as forms of "inclusion" for the poor or "increasing access" to important life saving and sustaining needs, exploring how media simply accept, rather than challenge, the manufactured austerity that allows this cruel stratification in the first place. Our guest is writer, artist and pod host Beatrice Adler-Bolton.
This seems like a good one and a much needed conversation besides.
…I realize that I’ve never listened to this pod before.
Should I start from the beginning? Ugh, I like completing pods from start to end but I guess I’ll make an exception…
They’ve got a big back catalogue so I’d recommend just looking through and seeing what sounds interesting. They’re focused on how media is used to launder neoliberal and fascist ideas; some of my favorites are the always stumbling U.S. empire (14), whataboutism (66) and the two-parter on thought-terminating enemy epithets (137 & 138). These ones are obviously more about foreign policy, but they dig into a ton of topics.
It’s a really good podcast though, and I’ve had decent luck recommending it to libs and baby leftists as the host have a sort of NPR aesthetic so people aren’t immediately turned off the way they would be with more explicitly communist material. They also have transcripts for all(?) of their episodes, they get good guests, and their material is really well sourced.
One warning, I often find myself getting angry while listening. It’s not quite at the level of blowback which makes me completely unironically wish death to America, but it’s close.
Whataboutism? What about deez nuts?
That was me circa 2020 when I started listening. I can definitely say it helped me examine my worldview and therefore partially responsible for my continued leftward shift in ideology… It does have a tendency to make ya wanna walk into the sea, doesn’t it? Worth it though.
Those favs are also some of my favs. Definitely the ones I also recommend though I’ve never seen them written out like this.
I know there’s a lot of ironyposting about this pod and Adam is overly fond of referencing his substack IMO but I genuinely like it. I always knew the corporate media was full of shit but their critiques really helped me understand the methods and materials behind the bullshit.
Same, I’m a bit of a broken record with always recommending the pod, but it really helped me learn to ask questions about why policies and historical/current events are presented the way they are in liberal media
In addition to the other recommended episodes, I like the one on Common Sense (101) and the “porch pirate panic” (97).
Gotcha!