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The slow and agonising death of the media..

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wanderlust

wanderlust
Nat Lofthouse
Nat Lofthouse

There were two MASSIVE news stories today - stories that would once have dominated the headlines and prompted debate and discussion across the country - but they were nowhere to be seen unless you took the time to rootle around the back pages more obscure websites.

One is that according to the government, real wages have fallen by the greatest amount in the last period since records began. The other is that  drug possession - including class A drugs - has basically been decriminalised by the government.

These stories are out there, but in terms of column inches/coverage it's unlikely that most people will even be made aware of them.

So what's changed? Have the government's backers finally managed to exert so much media control that they decide what the news should be and decide what criticisms their government should face? Or what?

Surely the tragic decline in the economy and the decriminalisation of class A drugs is more newsworthy than anything else happening today?

boltonbonce

boltonbonce
Nat Lofthouse
Nat Lofthouse

wanderlust wrote:There were two MASSIVE news stories today - stories that would once have dominated the headlines and prompted debate and discussion across the country - but they were nowhere to be seen unless you took the time to rootle around the back pages more obscure websites.

One is that according to the government, real wages have fallen by the greatest amount in the last period since records began. The other is that  drug possession - including class A drugs - has basically been decriminalised by the government.

These stories are out there, but in terms of column inches/coverage it's unlikely that most people will even be made aware of them.

So what's changed? Have the government's backers finally managed to exert so much media control that they decide what the news should be and decide what criticisms their government should face? Or what?

Surely the tragic decline in the economy and the decriminalisation of class A drugs is more newsworthy than anything else happening today?
All I've seen on tv today is people standing by pools and fountains saying 'it's hot innit'.

Cajunboy

Cajunboy
Frank Worthington
Frank Worthington

That's Warrington TV for you.

boltonbonce

boltonbonce
Nat Lofthouse
Nat Lofthouse

Cajunboy wrote:That's Warrington TV for you.
Had a walk to Moondazzle lake here in Birchwood. Felt very cooling.

https://www.facebook.com/BirchwoodParkWarrington/videos/moondazzle-lake/206421327358870/

boltonbonce

boltonbonce
Nat Lofthouse
Nat Lofthouse

One of the few lakes I haven't almost drowned in.

wanderlust

wanderlust
Nat Lofthouse
Nat Lofthouse

Seems Emily Maitlis has gone rogue and spoken about government influence in the BBC and the imbalance of "both sidesism" * - and the media has closed ranks to demonise her.

* In this case she cited that their were over 60 economists expressing concern over Brexit and only one who thought it was a good idea, but the BBC insisted on having one from "each side" in their programming giving the impression that opinion was equally divided.

Emily Maitlis is finally free to say what needed saying: the BBC has lost its nerve



In a raw and personal analysis, the former Newsnight presenter reveals a broadcaster that has been cowed by government


The slow and agonising death of the media.. 1330

When Emily Maitlis was growing up, everything stopped for the news. Her father would tune in religiously to the evening bulletins and nobody was allowed to interrupt the pips. The news mattered. For his daughter, it still does. She slid into journalism virtually by accident, but takes it very seriously indeed. As a Newsnight presenter she didn’t just live from headline to headline, but would stand back and reflect on the craft. In her memoir Airhead, in which she analyses old interviews and teases out the often uncomfortable ethical dilemmas raised by questioning a Donald Trump or a Steve Bannon, you occasionally catch a sense of frustration between the lines; something she seemingly wants to say but can’t. This week, having left the BBC to start a new podcast with fellow former BBC stalwart Jon Sopel, she finally let rip.
[*]Populism, she argued in a clearly cathartic appearance before the Edinburgh TV festival, was tying the media up in knots. Politicians were acting in ways that are “deeply and clearly deleterious to basic democratic government”, trampling over constitutional norms, making “things that would once have shocked us now seem commonplace”. But journalists still clung to an old idea of impartiality and balance – that both sides must get an equal say, and let the viewer decide – which is effectively now being weaponised against them. To have a pro-Brexit economist debate a pro-remain one on air was not “balance”, she said, if economists generally were so overwhelmingly against leaving that it took hours of ringing round to find one lone maverick in favour. Broadcasters now reject such false equivalence on topics where scientific consensus is overwhelming, from climate change to vaccination, so why not in economics?


Yet the heart of her lecture was something unmistakably more raw and personal. Two years ago, after a call from Downing Street, her bosses publicly rebuked Maitlis over a Newsnight monologue accusing Dominic Cummings of having broken Covid rules with his lockdown jaunt to Barnard Castle. There was, she claimed, no “due process” to consider whether a script that had been cleared by the programme’s editors was actually defensible. It was almost as if someone wanted to send a “message of reassurance” to No 10.
There’s nothing new about spin doctors ringing up broadcasters or newspaper editors to rail against unflattering coverage. It happened regularly under Blair and Brown, just as it did under Cameron, May and Johnson. But when that furious late night call comes in, what matters to reporters is knowing that – at least so long as your story is right – someone has your back. Once those in power learn that your boss will surrender at the first hint of displeasure, they’ll keep pushing. Reporting “without fear or favour” becomes virtually impossible if someone senior in your organisation seems open to both. In its handling of that complaint, the BBC effectively hung one of its most senior female journalists out to dry. One wonders if they’d have done the same to Jeremy Paxman. The Match of the Day presenter Gary Lineker, meanwhile, seemingly continues to enjoy great licence to offer his views on Twitter.

The BBC is hardly alone in being accused of having an incestuous relationship with power. Maitlis will now host a show for LBC, which recently offered up presenter Rachel Johnson interviewing her father, Stanley Johnson, about her brother Boris Johnson. James Slack, the former director of communications to the latter, is now deputy editor of the Sun – which must have made for some awkward morning press conferences when the big running story was a raucously drunken Downing Street lockdown leaving party held for one James Slack. There has long been a pretty greasy revolving door between Fleet Street and Downing Street, but viewers expect a publicly funded institution such as the BBC to rise above all that; to remain unimpeachable and unflappable, whether under fire from left or right. Instead it looks increasingly cowed, still spooked by a referendum result it didn’t foresee six years ago, and worryingly inconsistent.
Why has our national broadcaster lost its nerve? The government’s threat to remove the licence fee, a sword of Damocles now constantly hanging over its head, is the most obvious answer. Another might be the installation of Richard Sharp, a pro-Brexit Tory donor, as chair. Maitlis, however, took aim at what she called an “active Conservative party agent” on the BBC board – a reference to Robbie Gibb, the smoothest of smooth operators, who has moved seamlessly between politics and journalism all his life. (Having initially worked for the then Conservative shadow minister Francis Maude, Gibb moved to the BBC, then became Theresa May’s head of communications, before returning controversially to the BBC, where he wields significant influence over journalistic output.)
Yet the BBC’s troubles go well beyond any one individual. The corporation is buffeted by forces it cannot seem to grip; a chilly commercial climate, a post-truth political culture where even categorical denials from No 10 can no longer be believed, but also rising tensions with some staff who see neutrality as uncomfortably close to complicity in the current climate. The basic journalistic principle of divorcing your own feelings from the story sits increasingly uneasily with a younger generation of reporters, and perhaps also viewers, raised to “call out” what they believe to be wrong and to prize authenticity. It will take more than a revised set of corporate guidelines to reconcile all this with the still timeless need for trusted news free of bias. But if the BBC can’t square the circle then its stars will keep leaving, each time declaring that they want the freedom to say what they think. Only Maitlis, however, has so far used it to say what actually needed saying.

Ten Bobsworth


Frank Worthington
Frank Worthington

I don’t know why it occurred to me that this last post might have been copied  and pasted from the Grauniad.

..dunno.. ..dunno.. ..dunno.. ..dunno..



Last edited by Ten Bobsworth on Fri Aug 26 2022, 08:39; edited 1 time in total

boltonbonce

boltonbonce
Nat Lofthouse
Nat Lofthouse

GB News. That's what you all need to be watching. It's absolutely hilarious.
Once again you can hear from Christine Hamilton, and her lapdog husband, Ann Widdecombe, David Starkey, Lady C (I know what the C stands for), and even David Mellor, who appears to be turning into Iggy Pop.
It's a veritable shitshow of lunacy, and I can't recommend it highly enough.
Check out Neil Oliver, who appears to have lost his mind. They're now pushing a theory that elite sprtsmen, and women, are dropping dead because of the vaccine.
It's comedy gold.
They're also obsessed with 'wokeism', and the 'trans agenda'.
Grab a Carrs pasty and a brew and get watching.

Whitesince63


El Hadji Diouf
El Hadji Diouf

There is none so bitter as a woman scorned. Thankfully we don’t have to put up with her any more but I really did nearly choke when she tried to claim that the BBC were even handed over the Brexit debate. She’s not worth discussing any more so let’s just rejoice that Marxists like her and Marr aren’t given the oxygen to spread their opinions on national television any longer.

wanderlust

wanderlust
Nat Lofthouse
Nat Lofthouse

Whitesince63 wrote:There is none so bitter as a woman scorned. Thankfully we don’t have to put up with her any more but I really did nearly choke when she tried to claim that the BBC were even handed over the Brexit debate. She’s not worth discussing any more so let’s just rejoice that Marxists like her and Marr aren’t given the oxygen to spread their opinions on national television any longer.
Makes me laugh when time and time again, the Tory's only response to being caught out is to try to demonise the messenger to close down the discussion of the actual message.

There's something ironic in a would-be totalitarian government calling out middle-of-the-road journalists as "Marxist".

All is not well in Airstrip One.

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