Friday, 23 September 2016

We Media and Democracy- Lauren

As an individual with ample access to the internet at virtually all times in my day-to-day life, I find it almost difficult to escape the news. With breaking news alerts disrupting radio shows, events being posted about on social media websites by those affected or concerned; and even by simple word of mouth (e.g “Oh my gosh did you hear about Mary Berry leaving Bake Off?”). Without making a point about personal first-hand consumption of the day-to-day news, I feel as though, one way or another, it will find me.

That said however, I do make a point about finding out the news first-hand (not first-hand in the sense that I appear at the scene of recent news events, this must be stipulated), and have a couple of apps downloaded to my phone, with banner alerts notifying me when terrible or less-bad-than-terrible things are happening around the world. The app that notifies me about breaking news alerts is BBC News, I chose this app to be my primary news source as, due to being funded by the Taxpayer, the BBC has a duty to deliver the news in a relatively unbiased manner, meaning that the information I should receive about global events should carry no interpretations or lexis to sway a reader into thinking a certain way about a particular topic.

Whilst I personally am suspicious of hidden agendas even within PBS’ (Public Service Broadcasting Channels), I have a tendency to read a BBC news alert and believe the first pieces of information I read to be true (with exception of the news alert about David Bowie’s death, which had the adverse effect, encouraging denial). Topics such as the current affair with Great British Bake Off’s move to Channel 4, I often hear about through headlines to articles which I don’t read, or through conversations that interested parties have about the matter in the dinner-line: since the topics are of no particular interest to me, I do not research into them as I would do with subjects that I regularly follow within the news.

Recently, I enabled the ‘My News’ section of the BBC News app, which allows you to pick categories of personal interest and filters articles of those categories out of the regular news feed, generating a personal feed. It can be assumed that the idea behind this is to save scrolling through a mass of headlines to find articles that you wish to devote your time to, but there is a danger that, by being curators of our own information, we may become unaware of news that is important to know or could be affecting us without our realising it. It could be argued that there is an element of ignorance in choosing which news topics to dismiss and which to be presented to you, for instance: with the recent EU referendum, I found that those who had no view or were on the fence tended to be quite uninformed (largely through no fault of their own) and those who had a view were strong on their views and weren’t necessarily well-informed about their opposition. Adding personal news into the equation could mean that people’s own views are perpetuated through what they choose to know (notice that I’m using the holistic term ‘know’ to sway the reader to think a certain way about the matter, I’m sorry if I’m annoying you).

BBC News isn’t the only source of information through which I hear first reports of world events. Surprisingly, the social media sites I frequent can often be the first and, on rare occasions, the only way I find out about certain news. By searching keywords into Twitter, I can scroll through the top tweets on my search, which I usually do when tweets about a news event appear on my regular Twitter feed and get my attention. Mostly this year, it’s been news events about American police brutality and the Black Lives Matter movement that I’ve read the first information on through Twitter. In events of injustice such as this, I am more inclined to read most about the event through my social media accounts, as I believe conglomerates feel the need to be suitably delicate or evasive about situations concerning high authorities (sometimes though, I just want to be angry about the situation). This could make me an oppositional consumer in this case, meaning I am more likely to reject information that news organisations distribute and trust that @magalufLAD95 is providing me with credible information.

For those who do not seek out the news personally, they could be at an even further disadvantage than those who choose their own news, with little clarity being gained in the passing news they’ll hear on the television in the background, or in the line for a small Pomodoro. It is more often than not that people, especially those who do not actively consume the news, will know little about many current news events rather than a lot about a few. Whether this a positive or a negative effect of the proliferation of news is down to interpretation. In researching the ways in which others consume the news, I found that an overwhelming percentage (I don’t know the percentage) of people mainly get their news from the BBC. Whether it’s the news app, television, or the radio, the BBC are or are among the public’s main source(s) of the news.


In this oligopoly, with 75% of British newspapers being owned by only 3 people: with the BBC owning a 75% share of radio (of which around 44% of people said they got their main source of news from) and being one of the most watched news channels, would it be paranoid to question the authenticity of the news that we receive? To wonder if we ever really receive truly unbiased news? In my research I’ve found that most people viewed The Guardian as a trustworthy source of news, but my research lacks generalisability, as I didn’t survey a panel of representatives for the whole nation, I only questioned those who lived in my area, went to my school, or were my mother. The Guardian is often regarded as a more left-wing paper, and by only interviewing a small number of people from the same area, it’s no surprise that there is not a wide variety of beliefs. 

In conclusion to this rather weak analysis, there is a plethora of ways that members of the public can consume the news, and they aren't necessarily different formats of established news organisations. It could be the comedy panel shows you sit down on Thursday nights to watch, hashtags that you search for when a person has retweeted about that gorilla story, and many other ways. The news is everywhere, which, in a way, is democratic in the sense that everyone is able to gain information and form their own opinions on subjects; but on the other hand, with the incredible amount of power that few people have over our news organisations, it could be that we're one nation under, not a groove, but a set of heavy influences that in time, will come to make a less democratic Britain that we know today.

Cheers for reading, and sorry again.










1 comment:

  1. A really good read (even with the proliferation of 'knows')- thanks for that Lauren!
    I agree with you that 'It could be argued that there is an element of ignorance in choosing which news topics to dismiss and which to be presented to you', in some ways it almost feels like a very consumerist and individualistic direction and some media commentators believe it may be one of the factors that's driving greater polarisation of political viewpoints. People are able to consume more of the stuff that makes them angry, can avoid engaging with more nuanced criticisms of a viewpoint that they may hold and, by excusing themselves digitally from topics or stories that they are not interested in, may even be fooling themselves into thinking that an issue is cared about more than it is.

    I like your knowing explanation of accessing first-hand/citizen journalist reports on twitter because sometimes you just want to feel angry about it, however, could it be argued that people posting angrily about an issue as its unfolding can often create more problems and make an issue worse? Also, one of the writers we will study (Morozov) doesn't dismiss the power of activism or protest on social media but argues that it often replaces real and sustained action that may actually make the world a better place (as the cliché goes). When it comes to your questioning of big media's news production, I think you'll find Chomsky's ideas around 'Manufacturing Consent' interesting when we cover them.
    Good stuff.

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