Re: Fairness Doctrine
Okay, at the risk of hijacking the thread that I started here --
I started this thread with just a question, w/o offering my opinion to see where you gents stood on this issue.
Synopsis:
1) The majority feel that the FD has merit -- in theory. Though some feel that government involvement would be questionable.
2) Most feel that the news we get, be it from the big three networks, Fox, msnbc, cnn, etc., should be unbiased and should present both sides of all issues.
3) Many argue that talk radio has some issues to resolve.
Up to this point you've killed your own thread.
My question to you all:
How do we resolve this?
My first thought was to ask that commercials be removed from newscasts to strip any bias or influence.
But, last I checked -- advertisers pay a pretty penny to be included in the nightly news.
Second, in this day and age, many of the younger generation do not get the news from the 6 o'clock news. They have the internet, text news, etc. to get their news. That would have to be monitored as well.
Third, who will be the judge of ensuring fair, two-sided coverage? We have already said, on this forum, that the govt should not be the deciding factor. It would have to be an entity outside commerical and/or political influence. That will be hard to find.
Just throwing it out there......
Well, I honestly don't feel that the Advertisers or those who provide the money by supporting our "buying time" in certain news slots are the problem here. I don't see how the Fairness Doctrine would change the way that Advertisers do business. They're free to pay the market price for time within any given time slot.
As to your second point, I think that if many people truly understand what the Fairness Doctrine is that it would give the major networks a boost in credibility, because they're compelled to present both sides of a story.
The
"If it bleeds in Leads" mentality in the news isn't necessarily news. Leading with the most sensationalized story of the day because everyone else is doing it is group think. Not a service to the American Public IMO.
There's nothing "objective" in the news when Paris Hilton leads the evening broadcast when a dozen or so of our Soldiers were killed in Iraq that day. Info-tainment isn't news.
I believe that America has been "dumbed-down" by our Media by giving the American public what they want instead of what they need, in order to stay competitive in the "market" that has become Broadcast News.
To your third point, when the Fairness Doctrine worked, networks didn't just report one side of a story. Many of the news outlets felt compelled to find other views. There were many more investigative journalists working in the medium then than there are now. Now they have what they call in the U.K. "news readers." With the news being fed to them through teleprompters put together from various other sources.
When ABC, CBS, and NBC were forced to compete with the likes of FOX NEWS they had to cut corners, and since those at FOX NEWS were no longer under any journalistic integrity they could hire "air-heads" and "pretty faces" to "read the news" that the likes of Rupert Murdoch felt were important.
It's my position that a return of the Fairness Doctrine would restore the integrity of how American's get their news, and the other's will be forced to compete or be relegated to the fringes of reliable news sources.
Imagine a story from Iraq that only reports the bad news coming from that region (which is all that we're getting now), but this time with equal coverage of some of the good that our military is accomplishing there; rebuilding schools and hospitals, securing areas of the country that are no longer in complete chaos, etc.
We're not seeing that because there's nothing sensational about it. "If it bleeds it leads."
If those stories truly don't exist, then the public needs to be aware of that as well. I believe that the Fairness Doctrine would help to eliminate any propoganda that we be watching and seeing everyday on our "nightly news," and it would force the 100% right, and the 100% left to devote some of their time to covering more "centered" issues.
Your thoughts?