Heisenberg
Well-Known Member
This thread is for criticism of any kind of the news media. Obviously news outlets can be politically biased, and we can discuss this, but lets try not to delve too much into the ideology behind politics. The political forums would be a better place for that discussion.
What I am interested in is opinions about the media influencing what we find important and what we find trivial to human existence. Has the introduction of a 24hr news cycle improved our awareness of the world, or skewed our understanding of it? If occurring, is misinterpretation of reality inevitable because of the limits of human communication in this style, or it is largely due to reporters being poor at their skill?
I feel that journalists and reporters trade relies heavily on the human language. If I were a reporter I would want to have as masterful as skill as possible over grammar and articulation. I often hear reporters making basic definitive mistakes, or leaving terms in ambiguity.
"The snowstorm literally brought the city to it's knees."
Obviously a city does not have knees, so this can not be true in any literal sense. The meaning is still conveyed and this is a trivial point in lite conversation, but a news reporter should have a better sense of responsibility when it comes to communication.
"As the building burned, the emergency team evacuated 17 people."
The emergency team apparently had enemas on hand and gave everyone's bowels a good cleaning, or perhaps it was the building which was actually evacuated.
These are just pet peeves, but below is an example of a news reporter not doing anything that resembles responsible communication of information.
[video=youtube;gb0upNDhKPA]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gb0upNDhKPA[/video]
Do you suppose the purpose of this was to investigate and report, or to entertain and sensationalize? Did this woman do her job?
Being in ohio I was sent this link several times when it was reported. I was later delighted to see Captain Disillusion present his take on it.
[video=youtube;xyR_WHEmO_4]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xyR_WHEmO_4[/video]
Does the news media help shape our understanding of the world, and if so does the media have a responsibility to apply critical thought and fact checking to their trade?
What I am interested in is opinions about the media influencing what we find important and what we find trivial to human existence. Has the introduction of a 24hr news cycle improved our awareness of the world, or skewed our understanding of it? If occurring, is misinterpretation of reality inevitable because of the limits of human communication in this style, or it is largely due to reporters being poor at their skill?
I feel that journalists and reporters trade relies heavily on the human language. If I were a reporter I would want to have as masterful as skill as possible over grammar and articulation. I often hear reporters making basic definitive mistakes, or leaving terms in ambiguity.
"The snowstorm literally brought the city to it's knees."
Obviously a city does not have knees, so this can not be true in any literal sense. The meaning is still conveyed and this is a trivial point in lite conversation, but a news reporter should have a better sense of responsibility when it comes to communication.
"As the building burned, the emergency team evacuated 17 people."
The emergency team apparently had enemas on hand and gave everyone's bowels a good cleaning, or perhaps it was the building which was actually evacuated.
These are just pet peeves, but below is an example of a news reporter not doing anything that resembles responsible communication of information.
[video=youtube;gb0upNDhKPA]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gb0upNDhKPA[/video]
Do you suppose the purpose of this was to investigate and report, or to entertain and sensationalize? Did this woman do her job?
Being in ohio I was sent this link several times when it was reported. I was later delighted to see Captain Disillusion present his take on it.
[video=youtube;xyR_WHEmO_4]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xyR_WHEmO_4[/video]
Does the news media help shape our understanding of the world, and if so does the media have a responsibility to apply critical thought and fact checking to their trade?