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re: [Update] The News Corp scandal
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You argue that print is dead, and it may be, but 3 to 4 million people still read the Times and The Sun everyday, and if they are basing their beliefs on what they read (and there is some evidence they do), that can mean the difference between one party winning an election and another. That, IMO, is too much power for one man to have over our electoral system. The BBC, while it has it's own political bias (slightly left, I'd say) also has strict rules governing political bias in it's output. Not just self enforced rules, but laws. It's political stance is also not set by one person. It's also worth remembering that the two primary sources I've seen for complaints about BBC bias (The Mail and News International) have their own agendas that have little to do with BBC bias, and it's entirely possible that they are using the bias claim as a weapon to attack the BBC. |
re: [Update] The News Corp scandal
Could I just point out that there appears to be some confusion between source of news and choice of source of news.
The graph shows that 73% of news is sourced from TV (which consists (mainly) of BBC News, ITV News, Sky News, and a couple of smaller players). BBC is then the choice of source of news for 70% of the 73% (which equals 51% of news sourced). No one makes anyone watch the BBC news, viewers just prefer it. |
re: [Update] The News Corp scandal
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re: [Update] The News Corp scandal
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re: [Update] The News Corp scandal
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I would speculate you read the Guardian, Damien? http://www.google.co.uk/search?sourc...+guardianistas There is supposedly impartiality in all TV news. I do wonder how an organisation chartered to be impartial, etc, can reconcile impartiality with... Quote:
BBC Five Live, May 10th, 2007, recalling May 2nd, 1997. Quote:
BBC Drama Commissioning Controller Guardian, July 16th 2009 Quote:
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The BBC also has domination over radio, print is the only media in which it does not have by far the largest share of viewership / listeners. I would imagine some people prefer it because we're all forced to pay for it if we own a TV. Anyway I'm starting to turn this into an attack on the BBC, which is somewhat OT. My initial point still stands that the idea of News International getting their hands on Sky News somehow causing issues with plurality is farcical. |
re: [Update] The News Corp scandal
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re: [Update] The News Corp scandal
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re: [Update] The News Corp scandal
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As for the BBC recruiting in The Guardian. They have a big media section, I mean really big. It's viewed in pretty much the same way the public sector views them as a place to get jobs. Rather disingenuous to use that as evidence as it will be very heavily influenced by the fact The Guardian is viewed as the place to look for media jobs. The other papers either don't have a job section at all or the section is very small compared to the massive Guardian one. As for the quotes. Well that's what I said, they have a typically left wing staff but also as I mentioned they are in a large part working in Comedy, Drama and other non-news programming. It's impossible to have individuals who are unbiased. Just Impossible. Everyone will have political opinions and professions can often tend to be self-selecting. It's true across the creative industries, from which the BBC employs, that it's heavily liberal. It is that to which Marr was referring. This is also true of ITV, Channel 4 and so on. You can't get a balance of left/right opinion in media. The question is the influence of a editional line of reporting. This is very evident in News International where there is a strict line to which the staff will write too. This is not in place at the BBC News which attempts to be impartial. They do reports to measure the impact their staff's personal bias is reflected in news reports and they do admit it happens. That is a far cry from a institutional attempt to stick to a left wing position. Also worth noting their Political Editor was a member of the Conservatives when he was younger. |
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The same argument that applies to the BBC, that people watch it because they choose to, applies to The Sun. People buy it because they choose to. Quote:
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These issues are largely issues within the political arena though, these are issues replicated wherever there is some freedom of the press. ---------- Post added at 11:08 ---------- Previous post was at 11:07 ---------- Quote:
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I don't remember mentioning that there was an institutional bias within the BBC, merely that it has a high proportion of Guardianistas, which you appear to have agreed upon, so it's all good. Of course it's only bias if it's not what you think :D |
re: [Update] The News Corp scandal
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/13/wo...n.html?_r=1&hp
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re: [Update] The News Corp scandal
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I also find no real evidence that they intentionally seek to recruit left wing staff for their news output. I think that their recruitment in The Guardian is a result of The Guardian's position within the media industry as a good place to look and advertise for jobs. I can understand bias when I see it. Even if it agrees with my own beliefs. I am aware of The Guardian's left wing bias and know when it's being pushed. I have to say that, like most broadsheets (i.e not The Independent), most of their bias is confined to their columnists, the editorial and the stories they choose to cover. I find most of their 'straight' reporting on matters is objective. I believe this is because that is what broadsheet readers want, they dislike facts being omitted. I do not see that bias in BBC reporting. Even the few opinion pieces on their site are mixed. ---------- Post added at 11:36 ---------- Previous post was at 11:30 ---------- That said I also read The Times online and on the iPad so I guess I am a big ol hypocrite there.... |
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Most left-wing papers think the BBC is right-wing and establishment-orientated, and right-wing papers think the BBC is pinko commy liberal tree-huggers - imho, that means the BBC are doing it right....:D |
re: [Update] The News Corp scandal
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