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Thursday, February 24, 2011

Liberty and News

I have started to read Liberty and News by Walter Lippman. It seems to me, at first glance, that Lippman is talking about how much the media deliver opinions rather than news and how much this was bad because people would simply tend to read newspapers and article that agreed with them. I however think that although newspapers certainly do serve partisanship rather than purely objective truth, this is more the case of big publications than it is of smallest independent ones. The sad thing is that they are probably less read than the big ones, but they are still a voice in the media society. I don't know if media are supposed to express the public opinion, and the opinion of their own group, to the risk that they might just create a cycle where no one changes his mind, or if they should constantly bring novelties, shake the population, and question everything... I guess that pure reality would make that very hard or even impossible for them, because even with the YU newspapers we can see how editors can be reluctant to publish something controversial or how one someone does not follow the mainstream he runs the risk of being labeled and stigmatized. I guess, however, that a rigorous seriousness is not attackable and that a few magazines such as the Foreign Affairs Magazine still manage to talk about everything without taking a side just because they are academic, analytical, rigorous and serious.... So maybe that is the solution, but then how many people have the patience to read the FA and don't at best skim through it to go back to a daily simpler newspaper?

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Media, Duty and Liberty

Media being a watchdog, media mobilizing the population, media this, media that... It seems like each chapter we are reading is adding another burden on the mediatic shoulders. To me, though, there are different sorts of medias, with different roles and they don't exist as one entity but rather as complementary ones. Yes, some sort of medias have as their mission statement to be purely academic, objective, and provide citizens with information, and analysis. Others are openly partisan and serve to mobilize the citizens. Others are simply the voice of liberty, the voice of minorities and their claim to existence. You will never find any branch of media, any newspaper, any channel of tv, just anything that is holding on all of those roles. Maybe it's time we stop wanting media to be this ideal glory of democracy and understand that they all make for the different pieces of the same puzzle, just give them their individual liberty to be whatever they want to be, and to be useful to society not because they fill a checklist but rather because they don't and therefore represent individuals the way they are, the voice of the people in its trueness and not in its concept.

Friday, February 18, 2011

The Candidate I Would Have a Beer With

It just occured to me, while I was thinking of the watchdog and agenda setting roles of the media, that actually besides or instead of providing with purely objective images, the media really polishes the images of events as well as of candidates. It seems to make them more accessible and human-like, but really what it does is creating a show with events, and a character with a political candidate or official.

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

"These conservatives are arguing that the world's 1.2 billion Muslims cannot be trusted to govern themselves. That's not what I call loving freedom." Eugene Robinson writes on the Washington Post's Opinion section today. True, this is an op-ed column and we have mainly discussed news in class. But still. Does bias excuse the disrespect of the most basic rules of argumentation? Although the article seems to make a praiseworthy effort by quoting several sources, you can see just on this last sentence how the connection between sentences and the flow of the argument is missing. 


http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2011/02/14/AR2011021404620.html