I don't agree with the notion that news reporting should not strive for objectivity. You ditch that, and then you get propaganda like Fox News in it's place. — Marchesk
But there can be nothing objective about this, this basic act of telling a story (true story, or not). This is the realm of narrative, not objectivity. — hypericin
This is the realm of narrative, not objectivity. — hypericin
But there can be nothing objective about this, this basic act of telling a story (true story, or not). — hypericin
And what about the typhoons that don't ever make landfall?That's just going too far. There's nothing subjective about a Typhoon hitting Japan. Of course there is a selection process on what constitutes events worth reporting. And that's what tends to attract viewers. Disasters, conflicts, controversies and scandals are always good bets, because most people who pay attention to general news want to hear that stuff. — Marchesk
And that it isn't entirely neutral doesn't mean objectivity, truth or the facts have been totally lost or don't exist at all. That is just something reeking to post-modernism in it's extreme.We structure our facts into coherent narratives that communicate much more (including about us) than objective reality. So, what's important in my view is the basic recognition that communication, of whatever form, is never entirely neutral. — Baden
So, narrative in itself is not always primary in news except in the trivial sense regarding the infinite number of "facts" available to us in any particular situation and the necessity of choosing from them to properly describe any event (.i.e. decisions of salience) — Baden
The insescaple bias in news reporting is due to a simple fact: News never simply presents facts, which can be objective. It always also builds narratives, which are never never objective; never, because they must be built, not observed. — hypericin
...is that in the trivial sense there is obviously an attempt to assemble facts in a subjective way in order to make a coherent and sensible report of any news event. To take again the example of a fire, one decision of salience might be to report on the flammability of the material the building is made of rather than its colour. — Baden
According to Nikolas Luhmann, even when mass media look like reporting the essential news, first of all, they reproduce their own self-referential communicative machinic reality:For a start, news reporting is obviously not purely in the realm of narrative and divorced from objective reality. That would be a better description of fiction (and even then facts usually make up part of the mix). Sometimes, for example, the facts do take centre stage and the narrative is fairly benign and aimed at providing a minimum of structure, so there's no significant bias to be concerned about. — Baden
identity is only conferred if the intention is to return to something. But at the same time, this means there are confirmation and generalization. That which is identified is transferred into a schema or associated with a familiar schema — Number2018
If I tell you there was a fire in a department store downtown, and the news tells you there was a fire in the department store downtown, and there was a fire in a department store downtown, and neither of us gets overtly political about it, but reports basic facts such as when and where, — Baden
the media both reflects and constructs social reality and being aware of how they do that is important in interpreting events. — Baden
"It is important to understand that the possibilities, however, limited,The bias we should be concerned about is the bias shared by almost every media outlet, the bias for drama. Most media is ad supported. That is, they aren't really in the news business, they're in the advertising business. Ad prices are heavily related to the size of the audience, and this pushes most media outlets towards the lowest common denominator. If it bleeds it leads, etc. — Jake
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