Biased news reporting in the media…

Hear no evil, See no evil, Speak no evil

Hear no evil, See no evil, Speak no evil

As the fourth estate within an democratic society, the media, or more specifically news media, serves the role of providers of information to the masses and are required to keep watch on the other estates of society such as government, religious institutions and the upper or ruling classes – by holding them accountable and being critically in their analysis of those societal institutions. As such, the media is expected to always be un-biased and present all sides of an issue or event to the viewing public, so we the audience may form our own opinion.

However, as we all know, this is rarely the case. The media as we know it today, is a collection of companies and corporations, many of which spanning several countries and including sub companies, sister groups and shareholders. Therefore many news groups within the media have their own agendas or shared interests, which reflects on the content they produce or topical stances they choose to cover a story from – inevitably portraying a specific side of a story to the public, which we then decipher and form the basis of our own opinion. As such, we can see how media groups may choose to portray a ‘preferred meaning‘ of something to us and exclude something which may be in opposition to their own shared interests. By choosing not to cover a story the media is therefore removing it from the shared consciousness of the viewing public. In addition, as educators and outlets of information to the public, news media may choose to put a specific slant or perspective on a story – thereby affecting the opinion of the viewing public.

Corporate news - Media bias

Corporate news - Media bias

In order to see this biased approach to content in the media today, we will look at a recent news story and analyise it further.

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RTE News coverage of Occupy Dame Street camp removal

In early March 2012, the Irish protest group Occupy Dame Street had been an active protest group camping on Dublin’s financial street, Dame Street, since October 2011. At 3am in the morning on March 8th 2011, over a hundred an Garda Síochána moved on the peaceful protest camp – forcefully removing protestors, confiscating equipment and personal belongings, and demolishing the camps tents and shacks. For the best part of the camps presence on Dame Street, much of Irish news had rarely featured the protest in news broadcasts – evidently choosing not to do so. By choosing not to cover the progress or events on Dame Street during the protest, public awareness of the protest was kept at a minimum – often resulting in the physical camp becoming an public nuisance and eyesore, alien and removed from the public.

As with the camps foundation months earlier, the removal of the camp demanded news coverage. The physical absence of the camp from the viewing public had made it news-worthy and something which must be addressed to audiences.

RTE logo

RTE logo

RTE (Raidió Teilifís Éireann), Irelands main semi-state public service provider, carefully balanced the coverage of this story by providing the opinions of those in favor of the camps removal and those who were against it. However, as we can see when we analysise RTE’s coverage – more coverage, content and airtime was given over to argue in favor of the camps removal. Much of this was presented to us as an un-biased story, seeing both sides of the story – but also incorporating specific keywords (Such as ‘health & safety fears‘) and language (Such as ‘necessary‘, ‘clean-up‘ and ‘welcomed‘) to highlight why this extreme action was needed, and should be condoned by the public.

Click on the link below to view RTE video broadcasts covering the removal of the Occupy Dame Street camp news story. Once there, scroll down and click on the third video thumbnail found beneath the main video window to view the video used in this article.

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Click link below:

Occupy protesters on Pearse Street – RTE Nine News

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In this story, we see the use of footage showing us council trucks clearing heaps of debris – no where do we see the original standing tents and structures prior to to their demolition. Therefore, together with language such as ‘clean-up‘ and ‘health & safety risk‘ being used, we are given the suggestion that this site was a mess and a public danger which needed to be cleaned up for the good of public safety.

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Both party perspective

This report presents us with two interviews, one from participating protestors criticizing what has happened, and the other from a local restaurant owner blaming the Occupy Dame Street camp for the decline in his establishments customer numbers. The story introduces this second interview with a claim that local retailers welcome the removal of the camp and that customer takings are up 20% thanks to the absence of the camp from the street. This unfairly places the blame of customer decline on the camp and does not attempt to look at other possible reasons for decline. As the retailer interviewed also mentions a loss in employees over the period of the camp, we are also suggested that this protest was putting people out of jobs and therefore harmful to the countries economy at a time when jobs are hard to find. Also, by adding after the interviews that the protestors will continue to hold meetings and stage further protests on the site, paired with footage of protestors shouting, chanting and speaking on microphones – we get the sense that this group intends to continue to be an irritance to the public and make noise. It may also be pointed out that both interviews contrast in appearance quite differently. While the protestors (and footage of protestors prior to the interview) are seen in a very dark light, with lots of noise and activity – the retailer (and filler footage shown prior to it) are quite bright, colourful and peaceful. This more positive footage begins after the dark, negative-looking footage, with the words ‘After this mornings clean up…” – suggesting to us that it was the camp that was making the street look dark and depessing, while its removal has resulted in its improvement.

Occupy Dame Street camp (Prior to removal)

Occupy Dame Street camp (Prior to removal)

Current situation of news story

The last segment of the story consists of a reporter reporting from Dublin’s Pearse Street where she describes earlier events which took place that evening, where protestors moved to the street to protest in complaint to the camps removal. The reporter tells us that the protestors had ‘minor scuffles‘ with Gardai and that they caused ‘distruption to traffic‘. This paired with the close-up images of protestor groups filling camera shots (Which suggest large crowds of protestors to us – even if that may not be the case), shouting and chanting protestors, and a close-up image of Gardai struggling with something – suggest to us that this group of protestors on Pearse Street were very large in number, angry to the point of physically encountering peaceful Gardai, and a physical hinderance to the peaceful public around them.

In addition, the reporter uses language such as ‘minor injuries‘, ‘minor scuffles‘, and that the camp was ‘dismantled‘ rather than demolished or destroyed – so as to play down the protestors claims and right to be angry. She also goes on to suggest that Gardai were willing to give the protestors their belongings back so as they returned later peacefully, but that the protestors rejected this and wanted their belongings back ‘immediately‘. This suggests the idea that the protestors were unwilling to come to an agreement with the peaceful Gardai and that they were overreacting to what the Gardai had done.

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Example of biased reporting (In favor of protestors)

Click on the link below to see an example of the same news story, also covering the Occupy Dame Street camp removal, by Irish news agency IrishTimes.com. However this time covering it entirely from the perspective of the camps supporters and Occupy Dame Street participants:

Irish Times.com: ‘Occupy Dame Street’ protesters removed - YouTube

Vote for ‘The Begrudgers’ on RTE Storyland!

Cavan production ‘The Begrudgers’ has been commissioned for RTE’s Storyland 4 (platform for ‘Hardybucks’) and needs your vote! Webisode 1 is currently available to view online.

To check it out, click on the link below:


http://www.rte.ie/drama/featured/storyland/begrudgers.html

If want to see webisode 2, make sure to vote! :)

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‘The Begrudgers’ is directed by Philip Doherty, Produced by John McKeown , Aine Corby and Jessica Duggan. With Director of Photography Finn Keenan.

Starring: Shane Carroll, Ray Fitzsimons, Shane O’Connor, Brianne Fitzpatrick, Will Govan, and Hugh O’Brien.

A hilarious comedy not to be missed!

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For a taster, heres the promo video for ‘The Begrudgers’:

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For more info, follow The Begrudgers on Twitter:


https://twitter.com/#!/TheBegrudgers

Or check out the Facebook page:


http://www.facebook.com/TheBegrudgers

The Gonzo Theatre website:


http://www.thegonzotheatre.com/

The Sixem Production company website:


http://www.sixsem.ie/

What is my reality?

reality is the state of things as they actually exist, rather than as they may appear or might be imagined”

On the 26th of January 2012, the Irish government passed new legislation aimed at the control of un-copyrighted and pirated material both over physical state borders and virtual borders online. In addition to this, this new ‘Irish SOPA‘ (a joint legislation known as ACTA) makes it easier for holders of copyright, such as large movie companies and record labels, to call for legal action to be taken against individuals they deem to be infringing on copyright, essentially enabling a new environment online where websites can be pulled/restricted and users persecuted for sharing copyrighted material. Affecting sites supporting the sharing of information such as Wikipedia or Twitter. This was passed without parliamentary discussion or a say on the matter by Irish citizens, even when 80,000 individual anti-ACTA signatures were signed online. Meanwhile, state news on RTE chooses not to cover a story involving huge implications for free speech on the Internet and legislation with such a large number of citizens in opposition. As an active user of Twitter, i get a regular feed of information important to me, from sources worldwide, fed on to my Twitter feed page as its is announced. Keeping me up to date, and giving me information and opinions from many sides of an event, i like to think i am quite informed on world events and aware of things of importantance to me, or which affect me in some way. Maybe not everything, but pretty close. As such, prior to the day this ‘Irish SOPA’ legislation was due to be passed, i was made aware of it and its possible implications to me as a media student and an Internet user. I continued to follow news of it as it came, involved myself in some capacity by signing some of the ‘Anti-ACTA’ petitions organized online, and watched video footage uploaded or streamed online from news sites and video sharing sites on the topic. I followed news on similar situations across Europe of other ACTA-like laws or legislations and the previous SOPA bill considered in the United States. I also followed the retaliatory actions of Internet hackers and virtual anti-ACTA/SOPA activists such as Anonymous and their downing of government department, music label and other websites online.

Had i solely watched state televised news, which aims to provide information to its viewers of domestic and world events, i would not of heard a single word about Irelands ACTA legislation or of the massive opposition it garnered online.

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Being an active user online, i frequent social networking sites such as Twitter and Facebook, read over blogs posted by others online, and watch several videos on sites such as YouTube and Vimeo; all in the space of a day, many times seven days a week. I rarely ever watch news on terrestrial or satellite TV, only watching it in passing when another person is doing so. In fact, i can certainly say that i currently dont actively watch any TV; that is to say, that if an internet connection is available, whether by mobile broadband or public WiFI, i would choose to view media online rather than on TV. The  Internet provides a freedom of vast information, compiled and continually by milliions of active users worldwide. Recent technology such as smart-phones, broadband, WiFi and  laptops have added to the Internet and computers, to provide a easily accessible network, making the searching and gathering of information far easier than it has ever been. Online, video sharing sites such as YouTube and Vimeo allow users to upload videos captured on digital cameras or camera phones from any location with Internet access, allowing that footage to be shared with others across the world. Social networking sites such as Twitter and Facebook provide users with the tools to connect with others online, develop a vast network of contacts, upload and share information, form relationships, organize groups and mobilize physical events; drawing together individuals of shared interests from all corners of society. Thoughts and ideas on the world are given an outlet through the use of independent blogs and community forums, where users can speak openly and converse with others on issues important to them, without fear of suppression for speaking their minds. All these tools combined, create a ‘global community’ of people worldwide, largely devoid of the physical defects of the physical world.

To the more conservative, or those of older generations, may consider my idea of a typical day, with a percent of each day spent online, a tad extreme and that this time could be spent better doing other things. My view is that a time spent online is a time spent learning about other people, places and events across the world. The traditional media outlets of yesteryear where most of our daily news and information was fed from: the televised news bulletin, the broadsheet or tabloid newspaper, or broadcast radio programs; these are limited in their resources. Programming must be scheduled, news stories gathered by teams, sources of information found and gathered, news organized into a easily comprehended story, and then broadcast at designated times. On top of this, the news given can only then be considered news if it is then received by an audience of individuals,  waiting at the designated time to hear the stories and information being fed. The Internet puts aside many of these restrictions; the availability of technology to the public today, combined with the free time available before, after or between work and other activities (or ‘Cognitive Surplus’ as Clay Shirky calls it in his book ‘Cognitive Surplus‘), along with the ease of access to technology (smartphones, camera phones, Internet, social networks, video sharing sites); means anyone worldwide with the access, time and the means to contribute to online information will do so, sometimes more so than others. This new worldwide community of active virtual contributors lowers the resources needed to gather and organise new information and news; providing a vast and continuous feed of current information from sources worldwide.

Sites such as Twitter (which i admit to being quite shackled to at times) have harnessed this worldwide feed of information, allowing users to organize news and information according to their individual preferences and interests; gathering information from sources worldwide and thereby filtering this it down to news important to you. With access to a resource such as this, televised or radio broadcast news looses its immediacy and detail, as well as its relevance to you as an individual.

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One of the days following the passing of ACTA in Dáil Éireann, got into a conversation with some friends over things we had seen on TV or online the night before. After some chat on a few funny videos seen on YouTube, some gossip from Facebook and different programmes watched on TV; i spoke about the ACTA legislation passed in Ireland a few days before, the effect it would have on the freedom the Internet and the massive opposition it has online, 80,000 signatures are not to be ignored. One or two responded to me with some passive interest in the topic, them having read something about it on a Facebook post and such, while others responded with blank faces or a simple response of “I didn’t hear about that”. With televised news or occasional use of the Internet for basic email or socializing, this major topic had simply passed them or failed to weigh an impact on them due to its lack of exposure in major media outlets.

In conclusion, if my reality is how i see “the state of things as they actually exist”, i would say mine is social media, mainly Twitter. Being the medium through which i recieve most of my information, whether by providing important details from sources of interest, links to articles or linking me to images and videos, it gathers sources of information important to me and feeds it to me there and then when it happens. So until the next most efficient social network or news feed comes along: my reality is Twitter.


https://twitter.com/#!/eamonncahill

2nd Masterclass – Donal Dineen

Today was the second masterclass of the new semester with a guest lecture by Irish radio presenter, former television presenter, filmaker and photographer Donal Dineen. Having worked on the tv series ‘No Disco’ on Network 2, and currently presenting The Small Hours (formerly ‘Here Comes The Night’) on Today FM, he gave us an interesting insight into the inner workings of the Irish radio and television industries, as well as an insight into how he came to be where he is now and advice to others on how to succeed in the media industry.

Link to Donal’s blog:


http://www.todayfm.com/Shows/Weekdays/Donal-Dineen/Blog.aspx

An great in-depth lecture where Donal shared with us his early days in music magazine Dropout, his time on RTE’s flagship music programme ‘No Disco’
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No_Disco
, his inspiration for simplistic visuals in the form of a Palace Brothers music video, his professional inspiration in the form of RTE presenters Eamon Dunphy and John Kelly, his love of Super 8 film and its dying existence as a film format, his time at Radio Ireland, his struggle in front of the camera as a television presenter, his love and passion for radio presenting and music, and an interesting interview with Lou Reed resulting in friendship.

Altogether an enthralling talk and some sound advice for those of us considering a future in the media industry.

As part of his guest lecture, Donal treated us to two works of his. The first of which being an interview with artists Liam O’Maonlaí and Niwel Tsumbu during his late night show The Small Hours in December 2010:

And the second being a experimental music video he worked on for artist Niwel Tsumbu. An example of how good visuals can be created using basic tools at hand and with limited time:

Thanks to our course head Caroline O’Sullivan for organizing another guest lecture and Donal Dineen for coming to talk to us! :)