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Living in Los Angeles, I’ve discovered that the biggest movie fans anywhere are the people who work in the film industry. (Okay, I’ve also heard many times the easy joke about them having plenty of time to see movies, ’cause so many of them are usually out of work.) But you can find the same affinity in many fields. My wife is a professional violinist, and her music industry friends have the largest CD and MP3 collections I’ve ever seen - and not just classical, but rock, pop, jazz, blues, funk and show tunes, too.
So you’d think that journalists would be the biggest news hounds around. For the most part, you’d be right. I was talking with some of my Annenberg colleagues at a journalism conference last month, and one asked how many hours a day we each spent reading and watching the news, whether in print, online or on TV. The consensus? About four to five hours a day.
But there is one exception to this potential rule: Many journalists despise TV news. They hate watching it, they hate producing it, and, given the opportunity, they turn it off and ignore it.
My journalism students this semester went off on this topic in class one day, raging about the rigid format, the simplistic reporting and cynicism that they found in TV news reports.
I had assigned my students to produce a multisource, multimedia feature story on a topic of their choice. Several incorporated video segments, and the influence on these students’ video storytelling was clear. So I asked them about it.
It wasn’t the evening news. It wasn’t cable TV.
“Daily Show,” one said.
“Colbert Report,” added another.
“The Onion,” one said, as heads nodded around the room.
Just as I suspected. Why not local and cable TV news, I asked?
My students complained about the titillation - fear-mongering crime reports, salacious coverage of the entertainment industries, reporters and anchor people glammed up to look like models. And when TV reports covered more serious issues, including politics, they result as little more than propaganda - talking points served up from two sides, with no analysis testing the claims, beyond petty insults.
The broadcast majors among them expressed their revulsion at moving into an industry where “good television” meant insults, violence and conflict, rather than information, engagement and enlightenment.
Many also complained about the strict format that they were being instructed to follow in their broadcast classes, in order to make their reports appear more “professional,” i.e. like the TV news that many of them despised. But I found it interesting that, when given the freedom to do whatever they wanted with news video online (which, by the way, every member of the class said that they loved), most did cling to a standard formula in producing their spots.
It just wasn’t the six-o’-clock news formula, it was the sarcastic, tough-in-cheek formula of cable TV news satire. That’s to be expected, I suppose. In college, one of my English professors suggested that all literature writers start with satire, to learn to poke fun at and “undo” others’ conventions before developing and exploring their own.
I see another parallel in my students’ experience this semester - with community, grassroots and social media journalism online. The message that I heard from my students and from people I have met in dozens of online communities is similar - they are fed up with traditional journalism narratives and conventions, especially ones that emphasize conflict without resolution.
But, even as they reject those conventions, they still need some formula within which to express themselves. They either unable or unwilling yet to devote the effort to create a new convention for news communication. So they’re willing to follow others that get them closer to what they want to say.
For my students, it’s Jon Stewart, et al. - people who are willing to challenge sources aggressively, to use video evidence to point out when sources are lying (QuickTime clip) and, through satire, to try to reveal a truth, rather than leave two sides simply to shout at one another. As one student said, “I want my work to say something.”
Online, readers want easy-to-use discussion forums and communities where people can ask, and answer, questions, where leadership is present to keep discussions civil and informative, and where the tone is less “gotcha” and more “got your back.”
As the competition between online and offline news media intensifies, news producers would do well to remember that some of what’s driving the change in the news market is not simply a preference for one medium over another, it is a desire to reject the conventions behind news production as practiced in some “old” media.
Heck, if journalists can’t stand the stuff that some newsrooms are producing, how can we expect anyone else to want it?
– By Robert Niles, editor of Online Journalism Review.
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I think we just get gatvol (South African forpissed off) with having to watch badly made repeats of news we’ve covered earlier in the day.
I’m talking as a radio journo.
Unfortunately we don’t have a Jon Stewart in South Africa. We certainly need such a show - pleny of material for satire here!
Too bad big news media will blow this article off as being biased. It’s nice to hear that our future news journalists may have a chance at being something other than puppets of mindless propaganda. That is, unless the media brainwashes the students first.
Years ago there was a group called the Tattooist in England. Preistly and Dick Fountaine. In the basement of Cinema Action there were Pythons or I ought to say proto Pythons and there was Riot Squad. Didn’t last long the coppers spent a lot of money running us out of town.
When I got home to Chicago I told that cannot be done in the United States. And even to this day one will not see much really happening. Look at the up coming non coverage of the Democratic Convention.
Look at PBS dead from the waist down. And look at these poor students who have been watching the box for ten hours a day between puberty and twenty.
They cannot craft the medium because they are totally part of the Matrix since age five.
In radio Ira Glass is the only new thing going with his audio Ex-Lax. Wish Goodman (best bumper music, best radio news) or someone would try interactive radio as and alternative to talk radio which has had the same format since Santa Fe 1936.
There have been lots of attempts at change but they are either underfunded or sophomoric (sophomoronic). The best cut off the talking heads or have Noam Chomsky singing No Expectations. Reifcation is the name of the game and if you don’t lie you die.
This article and your response to the “News?” was just a little incomplete. How about bending the truth to the limit, either by insult or just complete irresponsibility, by IGNORING or outright blatantly INSULTING all the women in the world with their bias disrespectful, manipulating, “Kill Hillary - Fix Obama” reporting but especially their non reporting of the Hillary Clinton Campaign including your precious “Jon Stewart(’s), et al” assassination of her bid for President. And “Democracy?” Since when is the will of well over 50% of the voting Democratic public (counting the votes that where stolen from Hillary Clinton and so graciously given to Mr. Obama by the so called “”Democratic” Party” who are seemingly ruled by Kings and Queens) completely ignored ? And who in the hell thought up the idea of a bunch of ‘father knows best’ men and a very small group of seemingly -self-serving; Women called “SUPER DELEGATES” get to elect the possible next president of the United States- What kind of DEMOCRACY is that?????????????? The “super delegates” should in all fairness take their lead from the voting Public, without the public behind you, you have nothing. Why isn’t anyone reporting all of that? It seems to have been swept under the proverbial rug.
I have an uncomfortable feeling, having lived through this kind B,.S. before that this article is nothing more than the start of trying to mend the credibility of all the news media, Too Little, Too Late - I can’t speak for anyone else but my belief in 99.9% of the American style Media is completely and utterly damaged. I am praying extremely long and hard that the rest of the world does not take your lead.
I am deeply hurt.
Don’t kid yourselves- if I am deeply hurt, I suspect there are many others who feel the same way?
If everything in the article–why journalists don’t like tv news–is true, then why aren’t the journalism schools responding?
Not mentioned in the article: the banal, mind numbing tv “news” is not accidental– it is done on purpose to dumb down Americans and to provide distractions from the real problem–the powerful corporations who have a vested interest in not letting anyone focus on the real problem: the Establishment.
Naturally the students will run into this wall when they get out of school and try to find jobs. and if they don’ t conform, they WONT get jobs.
The system must be changed before anything will improve. The system only tolerates people like Stewart and Colbert because they are “comedy” and are on the margins, but they would not tolerate either of them on the nightly news.
Great article - right to the point. Of course corporate America controls the media news which won’t change until the Murdochs of the Corporate World loose their fillthy paws from our air waves. And one commentator is correct- new journalists will not get jobs if they buck the system. Also the state of our education which stresses the test score and not the acquisition of a thinking mind tends to make the viewing public want quick easy answers that are fast thrilling and comprehensible to a 2 year old.
By Danny Schechter
As millions of homes are foreclosed upon, as unemployment grows and inflation mounts, it is time to understand the origins of the crisis and the need to fight for economic justice.
Written by veteran media critic and Emmy winner Rory O'Connor, Shock Jocks features unsparing profiles of the ten worst conservative radio talkers in America, including Michael Savage, Bill O' Reilly, Rush Limbaugh, Don Imus and the rest.