British writer Nick Davies is an inspiration to a lot of young journalists, and rightly so (you can read more of his writing on social issues here). But now he has moved from covering drugs and criminal justice to report on journalism. And in doing so, he commissioned some research to back up his criticisms and analysis. Continue reading
Tag Archives: John Dewey
Why The Public Doesn’t Deserve The News
It depends on the habit of attending to and looking into public transactions, and on the degree of information and solid judgment respecting them that exists in the community, whether the conduct of the nation as a nation, both within itself and towards others, shall be selfish, corrupt and tyrannical, or rational and enlightened, just and noble.
John Stuart Mill
Everyone has a purpose in life. Perhaps yours is watching television.
David Letterman
The public doesn’t deserve television journalism as currently mandated by British public service broadcasting, because Britain’s political system provides no incentive for an informed public, and because the idea of an informed public is one of contemporary politics’ necessary myths. There’s actually little evidence that broadcast news is the unique medium by which the public can be morally transformed, but plenty of evidence for a long tradition of social criticism that sees the dominant information technology as an agent of radical change.
So where did the idea come from that the public deserved the news from television? The answer that used to spring to people’s lips was a single name, John Reith. Reith developed the argument that a shortage of waveband made broadcasting a public good, to be held in common. It was a monopolist’s argument with an austere coating of paternalism, and went by the name of ‘spectrum scarcity.’ Just as imperialism followed empire, the justification came after the political fact of monopoly. Continue reading