Tag: journalism

  • We now spend more than eight hours a day consuming media

    We now spend more than eight hours a day consuming media

    We now spend more than eight hours a day consuming media

    MORE..

    On average, people spend more than 490 minutes of their day with some sort of media, according to a new report by ZenithOptimedia. Television remains dominant, accounting for three hours of daily consumption—an hour more than the internet, in second place.

    But do we know anything more than we did before those eight hours?
    Have we learned anything?
    Have we consumed anything and devoured it, or just consumed and treated it as excrement?

    By 2017, half of our waking lives will consist of some sort of media.

    Meanwhile we will forget everything and get closer to a grave sacrificing sanity..

    And that is media.
    That is reality.
    That is now.

  • Brian Williams suspended; Jon Stewart stepping down: Which one is the bigger item?

    Brian Williams suspended; Jon Stewart stepping down: Which one is the bigger item?

    Did news just die today?
    Brian Williams was suspended after a number of days of intrigue.. He lied about a helicopter in Iraq years ago. He also is being doubted over his tales of Katrina of watching bodies float through the street … And now, six months from now when Americans will undoubtedly be baking under a late summer sun, we will see if NBC NEWS really brings back the anchor..

    He may be forgiven.
    He may be forgotten..
    It also may give more time to the sleuths online who will notate any other potential lie that Williams may have uttered over the past lifetime we’ve all shared together.

    However, a bigger event may have occurred today. Jon Stewart announced on the DAILY SHOW that he is going to step down at the end of this year–he hosted the program since 1999 and has become one of the most influential comedians in history. Not just because the DAILY SHOW has been filled with memorable humor, but also because he has become the Cronkite of our age..

    He is trusted more than Williams and company.. countless Americans get their news from the DAILY SHOW each night or in snippets online the day after. His jokes are hard hitting.. they are important.. they are also game changing, often able to pinpoint hypocrisy not only within the ruling class but also within media as well. Jon Stewart brought humor back after 9/11 in a massive way.  He was the only person on television at the time who was noticing the inaccuracies in the Bush Administration during the runup to the Iraq war. After the war started, he was the sole survivor of truth on TV, giving people a humorous blend of soundbites and lies. All with a smile–but beneath the smile was the frown of truth and the exposure of emperors without clothing.

    Brian Williams played a game. He lived in an act–one where he seemingly wanted to place himself in important events only to massage his own ego and inflate his own importance. He was caught. And caught up in a web of lies. With his Twitter account vanquished of all recent memory, the memory hole will have to be accessed. Undoubtedly people will still find more inconsistencies. It’s a surety..

    It’s somewhat ironic, perhaps, that both Williams and Stewart made news today; Williams faked his way through teleprompter reading while Stewart wrote the material that would tuck Americans in each night. They could rest assured that while the world was in flames and turmoil, at least there’s a way to laugh about it all..  There was much more truth on THE DAILY SHOW than anything else on the evening newscast..

    Only days ago, Stewart even offered a hard hitting joke about Williams’ potential demise:

    Finally — someone is being held to account for misleading America about the Iraq War.

     

    And how true that is.. The amount of those playing war drums are much more important than anything Williams did. But they aren’t questioned much.. instead they show up years later as ‘experts’ on major networks.. With talking heads reading friendly questions in a corporate news environment.

    Thank God we had the DAILY SHOW.
    And I pray we still will..

    I got to like Brian Williams when I was just 16 years old watching him anchor live coverage of Flight TWA 800.  During his coverage it was entertained that a missile hit the plane…

    [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LxzWp1kbyWs]

    The record of history, of course, didn’t speak of a missile. Though conspiracy theories still abound about Flight 800, the memory hole was carefully filled in with the dirt of ‘official’ truth..

    Perhaps there is some weird confidential consideration to make.. a missile hitting an airline in 1996, and they say it didn’t happen.. Williams in a helicopter in the early 2000s saying a rocket propelled grenade hit, but it didn’t..

    Tonight the news died.
    But not because of Williams and his verbal missteps.
    Instead because the real newsman of our time left one of the last remaining vestiges of truth in our time..

     

  • THE TIME PICK: EBOLA FIGHTERS

    TIME made its call.. the yearly ritual of waiting to see who a nearly irreverent magazine will decide was the most important person of the year is here again. This one was out of left field for me.. I did not expect them to choose a series of people, ‘the Ebola fighters,’ as the person that mattered.. I thought for sure TIME would focus in on the Ferguson story and name the ‘protester’ as the person—though they did that in 2011..  I was wrong.

    Perhaps if EBOLA gets really, really bad, next year’s person could be the EBOLA patient. And then TIME could just include another mirror on the cover like they did for the ‘You’ as the person of the year in 2006.

    This could also be a clever way to sell magazine—five covers?? I have always been aware of the theory that local newspapers utilize local sports to sell fishwrappers—every high school football player, baseball player, or track star buys up the issue when they are featured. As do their family members and friends.

    In this regard, TIME will sell at least 5 magazine this year, and maybe a few dozen more will buy because they know the person on the cover.

    But seriously..The reception for TIME’s choice has been positives, according to the TWITTER feeds I follow. People are roundly applauding TIME for picking brave people who fought Ebola and risked their own safety..

    I personally think this is a safe choice for TIME to make—one that will have no opponents and be affectionately thought of as a positive decision for the corporate magazine..Nurses and doctors could get the choice as person of the year every year.. As could police officers and others.

    I think my choice for person of the year—the one who most influenced the news and changed the course of history over the past 12 months (by definition, this is how TIME decides) would be: Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the soccer playing Ph.D. who became the leader of ISIS.

     

  • The perils of being first: You can get things very wrong

    The perils of being first: You can get things very wrong

    Getting the story first often means the wrong person is dead.

    CBS news today was one of the first sources to report that actress Sarah Goldberg was dead.. And quite sadly, too.. the 7th HEAVEN star died in her sleep from ‘natural causes’ at the young age of 40..

    Sometimes begin first is fraught with danger.. CBS news posted an image of Sarah Goldberg .. but not the right one.

    The photo depicts THIS Sarah Goldberg, a Canadian film and television star.

    The one that died, and not pictured by CBS, is Sarah Danielle Madison. This one. Her legal name was Sarah Goldberg.

    Being first is fine. But try to be right.

    But there are at least three commenters that deserve a  job as fact checker at CBS NEWS:

  • TIME MAGAZINE Robin Williams Cover

    TIME MAGAZINE Robin Williams Cover

    This week’s magazine honors Robin Williams with an RIP cover..

    I think there are certain moments, like this, when print is still king. People will buy this issue because of the keepsake nature of its existence.. A digital copy isn’t as good as holding history in your hands..

    I still subscribe to TIME and also THE WEEK magazine. And I am grateful I do when big things happen.. this is one issue I’ll keep.