Tag news media

Unbelievable

BELIEVE

I was busy yesterday and completely offline all afternoon, so by the time I caught first wind about the story with the balloon and the kid, they had just found the kid on the ground, hiding. But this ridiculous story led the local 6:00 newscast AND the network newscast, and the frothing twats at our local NBC station were ready to go wall-to-wall with it all night long if the kid hadn’t turned up about two minutes into their newscast. They had reporters live at various locations to cover this IMPORTANT STORY…even though this was happening in Colorado and NOT Boston. They had “Experts” lining up to explain about how balloons work. They had animated SCARE-O-VISION graphics and that “Voice of Doom” voice-over guy they use all cued up and ready to use over and over and over. And I will wager you any amount of money that at least one station in every single major media market in the country did the exact same thing. And all you had to do was look at that balloon to know that there was no way in hell it was going to support the weight of a small child. Is there a television news director left anywhere in the country who isn’t a complete moron?

Even if it turns out that this was a complete stunt on the part of the family involved (and I can’t make up my mind if it is or not), every working television journalist in America needs to take a long, deep look inside themselves and honestly question what the hell they are doing if this sort of inanity receives that much of their time and attention. Seems to me that maybe we would be better served if the newspapers stayed in business and the television news networks were the ones shutting down; newspapers are guilty of a lot of sensationalism, too, but this story would have had time to play itself out before a single inch of print could be wasted on it.

UPDATE: Since some people coming here via the CNN link can’t play nice, I have turned comments off

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Truthiness

Not a real graph, but DAMN if it isn’t chock full of truthiness.

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Bearing Witness

This article by Courtney E. Martin on The American Prospect’s website resonated with me quite a bit. I have always been a news junkie and an information junkie in general (shut up), but the fatigue that sets in from trying to stay abreast of the latest cycle of bad news-partisan spin-outraged response-lather-rinse-repeat takes its toll. I agree with Martin’s assertion that there is an element of obligation, of bearing witness to these events. We live in an uncertain time, and those who come after us may not truly understand this period of history if not for our ability to layer the context of our contemporary view in with their detached perspective.

In the second half of the piece, she looks around for some way to help ease the psychic weight of that burden. She wants that way to be more than just the escapism of ignorance (and I would add also the escapism of “faith”, religious or otherwise), and wonders if citizen journalism is a possible vector for positive activism. Certainly, the empowering technology of the web makes it more possible than ever, though the futility of “fighting City Hall” throughout history doesn’t bode well for this latest incarnation. One of the commenters at the end of the article rehashes a bunch of similar platitudes like “think globally, act locally” and “be the change you want to see in the world”, which are not really wrong-headed on their own but to me feel as though they are aimed at a different issue than the relationship we are compelled to have with news media. Do-gooderism tends to be very superficial, and not all of us can be the Mahatma.

I won’t pretend that I have an answer either. I think it’s imperative that everyone, and not just the bare third of the populace that the Pew Research Center study she quotes who share this sense of obligation, seek out MORE information not less, and thus turn to sources outside of journalism as a way to add balance and perspective.

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