“We” didn’t do this. News outlets are not elected. Cable news was packaged and proselytized in the 80’s and advertising revenue has never let it go away. Lazy political campaigns glommed onto a captive audience and continually underfunded grass roots organization for media buys. That became it’s own industry and here we are.
However, at no point were any of these decisions made by the population at large. We didn’t all get together and collectively decide, hey let’s really fuck up our media diet and incentivize our most reactive take on an issue to further politicize the holidays and vaccines. This was done to us. It’ll take a lot of work to undo, if it ever gets undone.
Yellow journalism, specifically the USS Maine and Pulizer and Hearst don’t really factor into the 24hr news cycle. They absolutely factor into how the news has always been a tool for the wealthy to shape and alter public opinion. However that’s been a problem since the stratification of wealth. You can go all the way back to cuneiform tablets to show this. It’s human nature.
Our political news is divisive, polarizing and isn’t telling us anything we don’t already know. There’s basically no objective news outlets in the country. They’re either heavily left-leaning or heavily right-leaning, and everyone watches the ones that align with their pre-existing views, which is only reinforcing what we already believe, or is designed to make us angry without offering any actual solutions, which is just tiring.
Where’s the heavily left-leaning news? I’d like to consume some. Late-stage capitalism, rights of labor, single payer healthcare, CEO/corporate greed, abolish cars, eat the rich-type news would be nice to see somewhere.
Not that I’m any kind of authority on the biases of publications, but I tend to think of ProPublica as more about investigative journalism than any political theory.
All three of those publications you list either contribute to or source articles from ProPublica on a regular basis. All three also tend to cite sources and first hand reporting in their articles. You cannot say the same for far right publications, especially rumor mills in the Breitbart, InfoWars, Fox News sphere of influence.
There is absolutely a difference between the “left” and the “right” when it comes to journalism. The patterns I’ve noticed are more rigor in fact checking on the “left”.
However, you bring up a good point in that the media amplifies tribalism. I think social media is amplifying the opinion pieces that drive the wedge issues. Finally, I’m noticing a trend of podcasters sourcing opinion pieces as fact.
Heavily left leaning meaning non authoritarian bigoted racist anti LGBT piece of shit.
There are no mainstream heavily left leaning news channels in USA, they are all right leaning or extreme right.
I think only an extreme right wing American can fail to see that.
It’s our own dumbass fault for making our news particularly exhausting
“We” didn’t do this. News outlets are not elected. Cable news was packaged and proselytized in the 80’s and advertising revenue has never let it go away. Lazy political campaigns glommed onto a captive audience and continually underfunded grass roots organization for media buys. That became it’s own industry and here we are.
However, at no point were any of these decisions made by the population at large. We didn’t all get together and collectively decide, hey let’s really fuck up our media diet and incentivize our most reactive take on an issue to further politicize the holidays and vaccines. This was done to us. It’ll take a lot of work to undo, if it ever gets undone.
I think it’s just part of the US return to its roots as it’s post WW2 advantages are beginning to wane.
The American population bought American exceptionalism hook line and sinker so it’s going to be a bit of an adjustment.
The “return” of yellow journalism is just part of the trend as the modern US returns to its late 1800s roots.
Yellow journalism, specifically the USS Maine and Pulizer and Hearst don’t really factor into the 24hr news cycle. They absolutely factor into how the news has always been a tool for the wealthy to shape and alter public opinion. However that’s been a problem since the stratification of wealth. You can go all the way back to cuneiform tablets to show this. It’s human nature.
https://www.museum.ie/en-IE/Collections-Research/Collection/Documentation-Discoveries/Artefact/Cuneiform-Tablets-the-Genesis-of-Documentation/1ba0af04-af97-4b68-b9c1-4cc40946a3b0
Seriously. Fuck Ted Turner for lots of reasons, but in this case specifically for inventing the idea of 24 hour cable news.
I didn’t have any part in that, and I don’t know anyone else that did either.
and then thinking it’s okay to bury their heads in the sand afterwards.
Our political news is divisive, polarizing and isn’t telling us anything we don’t already know. There’s basically no objective news outlets in the country. They’re either heavily left-leaning or heavily right-leaning, and everyone watches the ones that align with their pre-existing views, which is only reinforcing what we already believe, or is designed to make us angry without offering any actual solutions, which is just tiring.
Where’s the heavily left-leaning news? I’d like to consume some. Late-stage capitalism, rights of labor, single payer healthcare, CEO/corporate greed, abolish cars, eat the rich-type news would be nice to see somewhere.
Just off the top of my head
Where do you think ProPublica stands in that spectrum then?
Not that I’m any kind of authority on the biases of publications, but I tend to think of ProPublica as more about investigative journalism than any political theory.
All three of those publications you list either contribute to or source articles from ProPublica on a regular basis. All three also tend to cite sources and first hand reporting in their articles. You cannot say the same for far right publications, especially rumor mills in the Breitbart, InfoWars, Fox News sphere of influence.
There is absolutely a difference between the “left” and the “right” when it comes to journalism. The patterns I’ve noticed are more rigor in fact checking on the “left”.
However, you bring up a good point in that the media amplifies tribalism. I think social media is amplifying the opinion pieces that drive the wedge issues. Finally, I’m noticing a trend of podcasters sourcing opinion pieces as fact.
Heavily left leaning meaning non authoritarian bigoted racist anti LGBT piece of shit.
There are no mainstream heavily left leaning news channels in USA, they are all right leaning or extreme right.
I think only an extreme right wing American can fail to see that.