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Death of media neutrality

  • Nov. 12th, 2008 at 9:32 AM
Politics
It seems that the New York Times may be on its last legs.  Broadly speaking print journalism is dying quickly as revenue from print publishing declines and revenues from Internet operations have not caught up.  With the down turn, they are having an additional problem in that getting lines of credit to keep them afloat have become difficult and ad revenues are down.  They are not in good shape.

My biggest concern with this is that, broadly speaking, the trends that have pushed our news media to become more opinion oriented and partisan seem to be accelerating.  This has happened because simple reporting of fact has become a commodity with rapidly declining value.  To illustrate the point, go to Google news and look at the headlines and see that there are hundreds of newspapers all reporting the exact same thing.  Much of the "reporting" is just rehashing of the same wire service article.  

The problem, of course is that as these news outlets struggle to survive, the resources dedicated to news gathering and objective analysis are dwindling.  They can't survive on rehashing the same wire article and so they cannot maintain a staff of reporters to cover local events that would ultimately make them the source of other wire articles.  Yes, amateurs have stepped up to an extent, reporting on what's going on around them, but they have limited resources, and you end up with a serious signal to noise problem. 

In the long run I feel like this will lead to people being less informed and less aware of the world around them.  People will seek out their information sources and be informed in limited ways, but there will be less common basis of understanding between people.  This has already happened to an extent and if you saw the folks who genuinely believed Obama was a Muslim, you got a glimpse of the kind of idiocy that can happen when people are lost in their own little media bubbles.


 

Comments

[info]elmegil wrote:
Nov. 13th, 2008 12:46 am (UTC)
1) The New York Times as an illustration of Neutrality??? They're not the liberal rag that Faux Newts makes them out to be, but they're not what I'd consider the poster child for neutrality either.

2) The semi-modern emphasis on news fact and impartial reporting is a relatively recent phenomenon, as compared to the history of the printing press. One might even reasonably believe that it's an aberration, historically. Which doesn't mean I welcome its demise, but it's not like it would be the end of the world. The Founding Fathers did without "impartial journalism", I think we probably could too.
[info]sterno wrote:
Nov. 13th, 2008 01:44 pm (UTC)
1) There is no such thing as perfect neutrality. However, broadly speaking the New York Times is a pretty reliable and relatively neutral news source. In describing it as such I ignore the editorial staff of the newspaper as I would with the Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal.

2) There is a fundamental difference between the environment we have today and that of the founding fathers. Back then the country was a largely agrarian country where the most relevant news was what was local and you could readily verify directly and through people you knew. Today, that is not the case. We live in a world where everything is interconnected and we are far removed from the sources of information, and the ability to have credible sources of information is hugely important.

I can see this played out in political conversations I have had in the last year. People who I consider intelligent and overall reasonable people who think Obama is a Muslim (and think that'd be a bad thing). People who are genuinely afraid that Obama is going to take all their money and give it to a bunch of lazy poor people. They have these distorted views of reality because they are able to get their news exclusively from news sources that merely reinforce existing opinions.
[info]elmegil wrote:
Nov. 14th, 2008 12:17 am (UTC)
we are far removed from the sources of information, and the ability to have credible sources of information is hugely important.

If that is really true, the population will eventually realize it and balance will be restored.

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