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Media Coverage - Image vs Reality (standard:Editorials, 1245 words) | |||
Author: J P St. Jullian | Added: Aug 11 2002 | Views/Reads: 3696/2333 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Another commentary on the media and how it distorts reality. | |||
Media Coverage - Image vs Reality Our Idiot Culture Revisited by J P St. Jullian What do we expect of those stalwart people who report the news? A past generation of journalists prided itself on the image of the fearless objective reporter (objective being the operative word here), whose credo was, “Just the facts, Ma'am.” All editorializing and pontificating was left to the editorials pages. Then the so-called “investigative journalist,” was born. They blurred the distinction between reporting and editorializing. Investigative journalism seems to see it's job as a mission to expose wrongdoing and corruption in high places. Of course, on occasion these journalists do a good deed. And with the birth of the investigative journalist came the inevitable afterbirth, the News Shows! They've blurred the distinction between news and entertainment, often seeming to cater to the public's taste for mayhem, scandal, and gossip than for real news. Put them all together and they make up the Media. The media holds vast potential for education as well as the broadening of individual viewpoints. Con- versely, it also has an oftentimes frightening power to manipulate the minds of the masses. This last fact is demonstrated by millions who have become mediaholics, dependent for their daily well being on the media. Yes it's true. Just as there are people who are alcohol-dependent, there are millions who are media-dependent. Perhaps we are all just a bit media-dependent. Just look at the effect the media has on most people's political views. Elections are sometimes indirectly decided by what the media presents to the public. We often choose political leaders in campaigns conducted in large part in the news, whether it's in the form of newspapers or television. It's all the same. And the nastier the campaign the more coverage it gets. One main area that many people have allowed the media to shape their views on is race relations. Because of the TV images of places that few of the viewers have ever visited, and incidents that they didn't actually witness and are not truly well informed about, personal decisions are made. Our fears and doubts about child molesters, rapists and their victims, incest, world hunger or what have you, are aroused and fueled by a sensation hungry media. It is also the media that either keeps us pumped up and excited about these issues or that lets our excitement dwindle and subside. But where does it all start? Where does the finished product come from? Who is behind deciding what we all get to actually see in the end? Whatever it is that we are seeing and reading about the issues mentioned above, and indeed countless others, all depends on the judgment of editors and network executives who are more or less self-appointed judges of what is newsworthy and what is not. Do you know what it is that most often determines what goes on the front page of a newspaper and what is lost in it's back pages? Marketing. Marketing judgment is foremost in making these decisions. Secondly there's editorial judgment. “What is good for the public to hear on this issue?” That is the question that they ask themselves, and when they formulate an answer they believe to be pleasing enough, then they put it all together and present it. I have noticed that whenever the media focuses sharply on candidates for the presidency or especially for the Supreme Court, more often than not we learn more about their decadent pasts than their current standing on health insurance, abortion, the death penalty or what have you. The media tries to sensationalize their youthful experiments with marijuana or how they talk when behind closed doors, like these are truly important faults anymore. In today's permissive and often pervasive society, it would be an odd thing indeed if a candidate appeared who didn't have any faults, wouldn't it? Anyway, for many viewers, and especially our younger generations, the faces that come up on the media screens are more real and more interesting than those of their coworkers, neighbors and school mates. To take a quick detour here and revisit the article, “our idiot culture” we can see that it is not all in the media, no, no. Our judicial Click here to read the rest of this story (55 more lines)
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