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This. It's amazing the differences the same news story contains depending on which outlet you read from. I could read the same exact story about the Orlando Shooting from The Hill, Fox News, CNN, Huffington Post, etc. and every single outlet would give me completely different takes on what they believe the root cause of it is and claim it as fact.
And like you said, some people that can't think for themselves are too blind to realize what "spinning" an article is or that every media outlet has an agenda in the 21st century. It's no longer just reporting the facts, it's about making a point.
It's hard to be objective about things sometimes. That used to be the journalist's job. For those who grew up being able to take the news at face value, having to fact check everything you hear must be strange concept. For the younger folks the question is how do you get your bearings to start with? How can you be sure your looking at current events objectively when all you've ever known are heavily skewed and competing interpretations of them? Interesting times I guess.
My wife is a journalist and has been for almost 40 years. She recently told me that today's writer resembles nothing like the original intent of truth reporting. It started basically when Walter Cronkite starting inserting his liberal politics into his reporting and its exploded since then. Seriously it's laughable to people who actually understand what's going on to watch NBC, ABC, CBS, MSNBC etc. It's almost like a Saturday Night Live show. Sports has become the new avenue to spin whatever your angle is. This article is exhibit A.Journalism is quite dead. It passed away a long time ago...
Journalism is quite dead. It passed away a long time ago...
Armour: Athletics come first at Tennessee and shutting down the school proves it
Welp.....took longer than I thought I guess. First slam piece on Tennessee. Can't even fathom how some people don't take the time to think out the logistics of 100,000 people on a 27,000 person campus in the heart of our downtown business district.
And the fact that we replaced the day they cancelled with an extra day. This is why I hate journalism. Very little integrity anymore.
There's still some real quality about, but it's hard to find amid the chaff.
The Internet has increased the number of writers and decreased the number of editors, so there's an awful lot of poorly researched crap out there.
At least we'll always be able to rely on the fact that the USA Today is still a fish wrapper. That paper has been a joke since it started.