Posted on 07/27/2003 9:09:09 PM PDT by Pokey78
Edited on 04/23/2004 12:05:44 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
The BBC and New York Times scandals show that "objectivity" is dead.
With the New York Times and the British Broadcasting Corp. both in the soup, something big must be going on in journalism.
Let me give you one view of what that is, based on watching my craft evolve over 30 years as a senior editor. I think we're coming to the end of the era of "objectivity" that has dominated journalism over this time. We need to define a new ethic that lends legitimacy to opinion, honestly disclosed and disciplined by some sense of propriety.
(Excerpt) Read more at opinionjournal.com ...
We don't have to stridently call for this, though, you know.
With the wind at our backs, we just have to patiently keep doing what we're doing and WAIT.
One the the BBC's core tenets:
First, there is distrust in the concept of absolute and objective truth. Truth is viewed as contextual, situational, and conditional.
IE, "truth" as whatever suits the current motive.
This is a Deux ex Machina argument--all journalists have the same politics, because they were born that way. Sorry, but more explanation is needed. And forthcoming from your interpid commentator, as follows:The businesses which make money in journalism do so by following the rules of the business. People who don't want to follow those rules don't decide to become journalists--or go to work for newspapers which fail because they do not attract enough attention. The ones that attract enough attention to be able to charge enough advertising rate to be able to survive, do so by following the rules.The joker is that the rules:
No news is good news, because good news isn't news, andmean that the news is atypical of reality in general, and is predominantly about things which call into question the institutions upon which we depend. The news as defined by commercial viability is inherently slanted to the idea of the need for change. People who like the job of writing such stories are--surprise!--opposed to conservatism.Man Bites Dog makes a better story than Dog Bites Man
Media in the US probably is way too big and powerful. I insist that the Ivy League and wannabees teach this as part of a Postmodern, Anti-Enlightenment curriculum. Is its European- I think so. Capitalism is being abused.
PS: My poster boy, Keith Doberman is a Cornell grad. with an in your face attitude and its sounding like his Countdown is more a countdown to cultural Armageddon.
Criticism, of the government or of important private organizations, is patriotic when and only when that criticism is valid and in perspective.Unjustified or out-of-proportion criticism is mere gratuitious crying "Wolf!"--and not remotely "patriotic." Whatever else one might say of the idea that criticism is good in-and-of-itself, it most certainly serves the interest of those best postioned to profit by complaining.
Journalists, trial lawyers, and liberal politicians fit neatly into that category and are therefore special interests.
Why Broadcast Journalism is Unnecessary and Illegitimate
Fox News is "Fair and Balanced," meaning that it includes the liberal POV. But the liberal POV is heavily skewed toward the assumption that it is easy to identify, and should be easy to implement, improvements to American culture and tradition. The fatuous nature of that proposition makes the liberal POV a poor predictor of the effects of its proposals.Therefore even Fox News is predictably degraded by the respect it pays to liberalism.
There is absolutely nothing to be said against "attempts at objectivity."Indeed I believe the ethic is a more powerful influence than disgruntled readers and viewers often seem to believe; it's simply not true that journalists conspire to slant the news in favor of their friends and causes. Yet it's also true that in claiming "objectivity" the press often sees itself as a perfect arbiter of ultimate truth. This is a pretension beyond human capacity.
It is not the attempt at objectivity but the presumtion to believe in--let alone claim--objectivity for one's own thought and writing which turnss entirely understandable and inherent individual perspective into a flaming bias.
The issue isn't conspiracy, it's slant, and whether they meet in secret or just simply do it is irrelevant. It happens. It is persistent, blatant, and unapologetic. It is also, on occasion, a deliberate policy at least according to this observer.
The bottom line is that with the advent of multiple alternatives the market will rule, and if blatant bias is as unpalatable to the audience as it appears to be, the Times and the BBC will end up empty-handed and wondering what happened. It's their problem.
Irony.
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