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Sunday, September 19, 2010

The Usual Suspects


When the ABC's Lateline told its audience on Friday afternoon to tune in that night for a review of the week in politics with Tony Burke and Scott Morrison, a collective groan was almost audible on the twittersphere.

We immediately knew what to expect - another vapid, predictable and non-informative on-air clash between political partisans mouthing hackneyed talking points

So when does this groundswell officially become a story? When does the media ditch the usual suspects and start inviting fresh voices onto its panel shows to start talking about the real issues - the ones the politicians don't want to talk about, the ones the media don't want to talk about, but the ones the public desperately need to hear?
Don't hold your breath.

See also Professor Jay Rosen's new piece on how journalists operate within the "sphere of consensus" - excluding interesting and non-mainstream voices from issues of public interest.

13 comments:

  1. Unfortunately those who agree with you will have read this story and those that don't, won't. Should be printed and laminated and put up on the tea room, lift well, studio walls.

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  2. Exactly who was it that "widely praised" Labor's stimulus program - other socialists? Many people see it as a complete and utter farce given that Australia was not exposed to sub prime loans, had no banks at risk and was alone in the Western world having no federal government debt. It'll be a very long time, if ever, before we claim to be debt free again.

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  3. Sometimes I can't understand why anyone would believe the waste, debt, boats arguments when reading economists blogs and o/s newspapers, then you read the above comment and you can understand if people are ignorant of the facts then they will believe anything.

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  4. The ABC is paranoid about political bias because it is clearly biased. Leftie nitwits jump on and say the ABC has a right wing bias; rubbish.

    The facts of the matter are ex-PR hacks for ALP PMs fill positions of power on air and permanently recycled current hacks like Karen Middleton endlessly drift between ALP offices and the left wing broadcasters.

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  5. Mr D,
    It seems that the media are seeing themselves as the voice of the people, the guardians of corruption. But what happens when the media become corrupt - distorting or lying about the facts is corruption, slanting stories to fit a partisan view point is corruption, threatening a political party with negative comments on an article is corruption.

    The media will never be self critical let alone take criticism on board and change. The media ref is toothless, which makes the consumer powerless.

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  6. If you read between the lines of John Menadue what he was basically saying was this: If the media had given due scrutiny, skepticism and challenge to Abbott's slogans the election wouldn't have even been close.

    On that there is no doubt.

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  7. Dogma, I think many in the media are currently caught between their old role as guardians of the public interest and their newly emerging and self-appointed role as "players" in their own right. But I'm afraid you can't be half-pregnant in relation to news and opinion.

    While there has always been a place for comment and opinion of all stripes in our newspapers, we lose something when the commentary is sold as news. That's what Menadue's saying. The MSM has a responsibility to give people the facts before they start opining on what the facts might mean.

    The media has decided, partly for economic reasons, that straight news has been commodified and there is no profit margin in it. So they fill the resulting vaccuum with speculation dressed up as "analysis".

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  8. Very good article. I enjoyed it a lot. I have to say that some people would prefer to live in ignorance and others want to feed off it.

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  9. And of course Laura Tingle.

    "SpringHillVoice" has been criticising the Murdoch machine on exactly these lines for over six years on its "media" page. Others have too. Nobody cares.

    'Tim Dunlop'? He used to run a great and popular blog called 'RoadToSurfdom', a few years ago he announced he was going to work for Murdoch. We were among a small number who warned against that and his followers went feral accusing us of jealousy and negativity. Of course it worked out exactly as warned. He got up with the fleas a small number of people warned him about.

    Having apparently been 'guaranteed' (hilarious any intelligent person would accept a Murdoch promise on anything!) complete editorial freedom, he promptly had a piece spiked and never spilled his guts about it despite saying that he would. Anyway, now he wants to tell us about the evils of Murdoch.

    All Murdoch wants is to 'own the debate', and he usually gets that result.

    Nobody cares.

    What appears to be different right now, and is slightly encouraging, is that something must be hurting in Murdoch-land. They never used to care that what they were doing was sheer rubbish, water off a duck's back, soldier on, repeat the lies louder etc..

    The shrill cries of persecution, the loud protestations of being attacked. Why do they suddenly care that everyone is saying they are nothing but shills? Something must be slipping from their grasp.

    Small hope that finally they're getting comeuppance. We'll see...

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  10. 'Stop Murdoch', I wouldn't despair. Certain elements in the MSM are sounding hyper-sensitive because they realise there's a conversation going on independently of them. It's not the way it's supposed to work!

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  11. Mr Denmore,

    The sooner the Govt. starts to release policy announcements on sites such as Crikey and gives exclusive interveiws to bloggers the better.

    My guess is that Google news, as an aggregator will pick it up.

    They may as well take the fight up to Murdoch and have him fighting on our territory....not his.

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  12. Thanks for this. Now we just have to buy the Australian off Murdoch and change the agenda.

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  13. Thanks. Glad someone besides me is saying this. All those who think this is a problem should also send complaints to the ABC as well as use the power of the Internet, Facebook (lots of ABC pages there), and Twitter to keep the pressure on for the ABC to get back to serious and proper news coverage. The ABC has become embarassing in its lack of serious debate and journalism not to mention the sloppy work done by the ABC during the election (they helped to get Abbott close to being PM...think about that).

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