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sifntj0r
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Nov 2001
Location: brisvegas
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don't feel like it's only the US news that should change, because around the world it's the same deal. no longer are news agencies, especially the television networks, putting out hard news with raw facts for its viewers. why? because it simply doesnt 'sell' as much as soft news, or 'infotainment'. as you know everything is about money nowadays, for television its money are its viewers, in the newspaper its money are the readers. the audiences are selfish people, common human characteristic, thus they in reality only give a shit about the news that affects them, or news that is sensationalistic and entertaining. a traditional television news presentation should address issues in the following order - international, national, local/state. however, the actual execution of news nowadays is more along the lines of sensationalistic, then national, then local/state, then international. the reason for this is, if they show boring international news about a country thousands of kilometres away at the start of a news bulletin, they know they are gonna lose viewers straight-away, because harsh as it may seem, nobody gives a goddam shit about a million rwandians dying. it doesnt affect them directly, or even indirectly, so why should they? the only reason you may see international news at the beginning of a bulletin is if it is sensationalistic. the only time you will see a major world event at the beginning of a bulletin is if it is 'shocking/surprising', and then the news agencies go into the other extreme of over coverage. it is because infotainment sells, that in a major world event, such as 9/11, the news agencies and their affiliate television stations and subsequent network shows will milk the story/incident to its fullest extent to get maximum viewers, which in turn leads to maximum dollar.
there are some news agencies/networks that still cover the news the traditional, hard, raw way. most of these, especially tv, are government operated/funded (public service tv) and thus are not relying on large viewer/reader base to fund their work.
hrm, bit too long, bit too incoherant, but yeah. it's all about the dollar these days.
end.
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c o n : f u s e d
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Mar-10-2003 12:23
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biznology
Supreme tranceaddict

Registered: Dec 2000
Location:
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i think i understand what sifntj0r was saying...(somewhat)
it is a matter of sales, whether it should be or not. you can find all the news you could ever want in the US, you just can sit there and stare at a TV screen without caring.
one interesting fact ive noticed goes between the news in Detroit Michigan, where i go to school, and Denver Colorado, where im from. In Detroit, where everything went to hell in a handbasket after the second world war, to this day you see all the shootings, stabbings, crimes and arrests that have happened everyday on the prime time news. Detroit isnt an uplifting place, but the focus on it worries me. People seeing this would assume that theres an abnormally high crime rate there, and while theres a fair bit- any big city could go on and on about crime and it wouldnt sound any better.
in Denver tho, this 'crime time' found in Detroit is filled with cushy stories about newborns in the zoo and other pandering crap. its a fair bit less depressing tho - but that doesnt mean its any better.
in discussing everything about the US its hard for many people that dont live there to fully understand the difficulty and issues surround media coverage and a basic understanding of the outside world. its not that that isnt important, its just that the US is so large, it becomes difficult to fairly cover all important AND interesting topics in a short news broadcast. and when you have a country of 300 million people separated from most other continents but a vast distance, its even more difficult to focus on what is important.
overall i think the intrest of being entertained often outweighs the caring aspect tho. but its still important to note that while important things are happening in Europe (esp to people from European countries, and elsewhere) theres a shitload of other stuff happening in the entire world that NOBODY hears about. name a major problem in Zimbabwe right now besides AIDS and maybe racism or conservation of the environment...there HAS to be other issues, but its a matter of proximity and importance to the people involved.
as the world gets smaller due to the internet and globalization, everyone expects everyone to know more about everything - the truth is that it isnt necessarily as easy as that|
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'That's like telling a Kodiak bear to stop fcking older men.'
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Mar-13-2003 15:49
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Konijn
Subverting Paradigms

Registered: Feb 2003
Location: New York City
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The parochialism of American news is due to both cultural norms (American's think they're the center of the universe and thus don't bother to learn other languages, read, etc.) and capitalist norms (the 'news as a function of selling entertainment' argument made above).
This second part is crucial, for the US media are alone in the world in having this entertainment-based component to distributing information--although this, too, is beginning to change as other countries adopt the US model.
Positing news as entertainment reduces newspersons to the role of brainless pundit/talking head. Anyone who follows news in the US knows that investigative news has been completely subsumed by the hollywood-ish cult-of-personality that surrounds people like Bill O'Reilly and Chris Matthews. Screaming and diarrhea of the mouth hence replace substantive debate.
The pundit culture also introduces the problem of concision. In a half-hour show moderated by these t.v. lunatics, real discussion is impossible to flourish because complex ideas that go against the prevailing wisdom take time to explain. What happens is everyone goes on the air and simply regurgates conventional pieties (Saddam is bad, markets are good) while obscuring the real issues. The few times that real thinkers are allowed to express contrary or radical ideas they sound ridiculous because two-and-a-half minute segments are simply not enough time to turn two hundred years of indoctrination on its head.
What ultimately happens is an uniformed citizenry stays uniformed while the spectrum of debate narrows such that conservative militarists like Ariel Sharon or Colin Powell are presented as moderate voices of reason.
Broad and substantive levels of debate are a fundamenatal pre-requisite of representative government. When no real debate exists, we start arresting people for wearing pro-peace t-shirts in malls and we start eating freedom toast and freedom-kissing our significant others.
While I do read the NYT every day, I choose to get my serious and thought-provoking news from the alternative press and, to a lesser degree, the BBC, CBC, and the Australian news.
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Mar-14-2003 01:13
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