Journalists have an ethical duty to report the news - somewhere. You have the entire internet. As someone who works in the media and someone who knows how daily newspapers are run, I was there in a newsroom in the 1980s of a daily newspaper. I saw a strip of paper that was printing stories as they came in through the various wire services in the correct width to be laid out on a printed page. I asked about how and why certain stories were selected and why certain stories were not. I was told that daily meetings were held to determine what was used and what was cut. Those cut and paste days are gone but journalists have the ability to reach a global audience. I can read Izvestia in English, the same with China Daily.
So some teenager can write a blog about his day and trained journalists can’t write about something other than sports or celebrities? I understand the relationship between stories, maintaining readership and maintaining advertising dollars.
aim.org/
translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=ru&u=http://izvestia.ru/&prev=/search%3Fq%3Dizvestia%26biw%3D1024%26bih%3D675
chinadaily.com.cn/
Of course, proper journalistic procedure must be followed. Fact checking must occur. Rumors must be avoided. And while it’s true that people can pick and choose among news sources to get “what they want to hear,” one pillar of a strong democracy is an educated public.
It doesn’t have to be a constant diet of rapes, murders and the latest about some Hollywood types. It should include direct from the source news about the current STD epidemic in this country, for example, and stories about normal people that do normal things, along with stories about how just walking can improve your health, not dark, darker and darker still, with heavy doses of death, scandal and misery.
Life - your life - is not all about that. We live in a 360 degree world. A look at the bright side, reported accurately, would be nice.
Peace,
Ed