McChesney was born in Cleveland, Ohio. He and John Bellamy Foster studied together at The Evergreen State College in Olympia, WA. In his early years, he worked as a sports stringer for UPI, published a weekly newspaper, and in 1979 was the founding publisher of The Rocket, a Seattle-based rock magazine which chronicled the birth of the Seattle rock scene of the late 1980s and 1990s. McChesney received a Ph.D. in communications at the University of Washington in 1989. From 1988 to 1998 he was on the Journalism and Mass Communications faculty at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
He is also the founder and president of Free Press and host of the radio show Media Matters, broadcast on WILL-AM at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign where he is a research professor in the Institute of Communications Research and the Graduate School of Information and Library Science.
He was a former editor of the Monthly Review and now a director of the foundation that operates the magazine.
He is married to Inger Stole and has two daughters.
In a September 24, 2001 interview in LiP Magazine, Dr. McChesney stated that the sanctions imposed after the Gulf War "led up to the death of up to a million civilians, including perhaps as many as 500,000 children." *
Dr. McChesney is perhaps best known for his work in the area of media reform. He proposes that the notion of a deregulated media is a complete misnomer. The media is, instead, a governmentally sanctioned oligopoly, owned by a few highly profitable corporate entities. These concerns jealously guard their privilege through legislative influence and through use of their control of news coverage, by which means they distort public understanding of media issues. McChesney pinpoints the beginning of governmental oversight with the regulatory role imposed on the U.S. government at the advent of broadcast, where government was required to enforce the broadcasting rights of a limited number of participants.
McChesney sees the Communications Act of 1934 as essentially allowing monopolistic rights to broadcasters who had shown the greatest propensity for profit. Subsequent to this act were the provisions of the Fairness Doctrine, which had provisions for public interest broadcasting due to the scarcity of the broadcasting resource. These restrictions were later overturned in the 1980's under the banner of "deregulation."
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