I designed this blog to be a place where people can find positivity, hope, humor, and light-hearted human interest topics. I think there’s plenty of negative, politically-based, biased, heavy things to read these days and I vowed when I started this, I would not participate in any of those. But I have a growing fire in my belly that I decided to write about for my own sake as well as for those of you who may be feeling the same. I’ve taken the news in small bites in recent years, especially the last two. There’s a reason for that beyond that it’s dark and depressing every single day if you listen to the major media outlets. More than being wearied by the bad news bears to the point of complete disillusionment, it’s because I no longer trust our news sources to deliver objective, truthful reporting. For those of you from countries outside the US, I’m guessing some of this might apply to your news agencies as well.
If you are a regular follower of my blog, you already know
that writing has been my forte most of my life.
I got involved in every print publication opportunity that came up in my
schooling. I was a reporter on school
newspapers, I was the editor of our high school yearbook. It wasn’t just what I enjoyed doing, it was
my passion. There were no questions in
my mind that I would pursue a career in journalism. It’s what I went to university to study. I wasn’t sure how my passion would play out
in the journalistic world, but I knew there was something really good about
objective reporting of facts so that readers could know what truly was
happening.
In my home growing up, my parents watched the evening news and read the newspaper every day. We followed all the major world events and talked about what was going on locally, nationally, and worldwide. It was the era of famous news anchors like Cronkite, Huntley, Brinkley, Jennings, Reasoner. What each of these had in common was their objective, passionate reporting of the facts of events. It’s not that they never did editorials or commentaries, but when they did, it was made very clear that those were opinion-based.
In a recent interview with Ben Swann by Ben Raue, it was
pointed out that a lot of things in the news world began to change with the
television program, “60 Minutes”. It was
a weekly “news magazine” on CBS. It
offered hard-hitting investigative reports by well-known journalists. It was transformative in that the format was
different than anything before it. What
was also different was that it was financially lucrative for the network, while
regular news programs were not.
Companies could purchase advertising that was aired between
segments. It also mingled sponsors and
journalistic integrity because what network was going to out something less
than desirable from a sponsor of their program? While they should, and some
did, it still started news coverage down a very slippery slope.
You’ve probably heard of the Associated Press. It’s a non-profit, independent news agency that provides breaking news from all over the world to national and local news organizations. It’s been around a long time (since 1846!) and nearly all journalistic organizations have relied on them for up-to- the-minute, fact-based information. Its members are US newspapers and broadcasters. What you may not know is that news organizations may draw from an AP release and edit or tailor it to fit their news audience. When that happens, it’s no longer a firsthand source. But since it’s impossible for journalists to be everywhere, organizations must rely on their writers and editors to keep the integrity of the information before it’s distributed.
I can tell you in no uncertain terms that the integrity of
the news has become very cloudy in recent years. If you listen to news programs today, or read
articles in print publications, you can hear a definite bias. In this digital age, reporters are influenced
by their own political leanings and personal preferences that shape the
reporting they do. It's now generally accepted that news organizations lean either liberal or conservative. They are told what to
report by higher ups who are not journalists but have profit agendas for their
companies. With social media choosing its own “fact-checking” systems, it’s
very hard to sort what really is true and accurate. The phrase, “something’s rotten in Denmark”
comes to mind. That’s a euphemism for
corruption or something being less than reliable. Walter Cronkite must be turning over in his
grave, so to speak.
I long for the “good old days” when news was “just the
facts, ma’am”. Edward R. Murrow said it
best, “To be persuasive we must be believable; to be believable, we must be
credible; to be credible, we must be truthful.”
In all my journalism classes, my teachers would check us on anything
that wasn’t firsthand information or anything embellished in any way to make
the story more interesting. I think that
kind of teaching isn’t happening anymore.
It’s breaks my journalistic heart.
I write this to remind you that all you read or hear isn’t necessarily fact. As has been said, “Don’t believe everything you read on the internet.” Also don’t buy into everything you read or hear in the mainstream media. If it smells like a fish, it probably is a fish. Look at varieties of sources and don’t take everything at face value. There are good journalists out there, but they are getting harder to find. In the meantime, back to my regularly scheduled programming. Maybe my next post will be about baby animals or what I plan to eat for Thanksgiving. Thanks for indulging me.



Yes!! I am appalled at what passes for "reporting" these days.
ReplyDeleteYep, the inability to rely on the reliability of news has people believing anything.
DeleteGreat blog Cathey. I never know what news to trust. I follow several on Telegram, hoping they are telling the truth.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Donna! It is very hard to know what to trust. Even on sites like Telegram much is based in opinion. We have to stay on our toes!
DeleteGreat words of wisdom....and precisely why I no longer watch the news at all.🤷♀️
ReplyDeleteI totally get it!!
DeleteCould not agree more! I gave up watching the "news" about 18 months ago and my life has been much more peaceful! I long for the "good old days" when it was reporting what happened, with no bias or skewing the story, and I could make up my mind for myself!!
ReplyDeleteSo true, Martha! It's no wonder people don't know what to believe these days.
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