1. The Problem of Journalism
2. A Century of Radical Media Criticism in the United States
3. Upton Sinclair and the Contradictions of Capitalist Journalism
4. Telling the Truth at a Moment of Truth: U.S. News Media and the Invasion and Occupation of Iraq
5. How to Think About Journalism: Looking Backward, Going Forward
6. The Battle for the U.S. Airwaves, 1928-1935
7. The Payne Fund and Radio Broadcasting, 1928-1935
8. Media Made Sport: A History of Sports Coverage in the United States
9. Public Broadcasting in the Age of Communication Revolution
10. The New Theology of the First Amendment: Class Privilege Over Democracy
11. The Commercial Tidal Wave
12. Noam Chomsky and the Struggle Against Neoliberalism
13. The New Economy: Myth and Reality
14. The Political Economy of International Communications
III. Politics and Media Reform
15. Off-Limits: An Inquiry into the Lack of Debate Over the Ownership, Structure, and Control of the Media in U.S. Political Life
16. The Internet and U.S. Communication Policymaking in Historical and Critical Perspective
17. U.S. Left and Media Politics
18. Global Media and Its Discontents
19. Theses on Media Deregulation
20. Rich Media, Poor Democracy: Communication Politics in Dubious Times
21. The Case for U.S. Public Broadcasting and Implications for Philanthropists
22. The Escalating War Against Corporate Media
23. The U.S. Media Reform Movement Going Forward.