
Who do we trust in the media? This question might sound depressing to many of us but people need to realize that media and technology are controlling our minds constantly these days. Sports new, political debates and news in general are covered by different media outlets, but where do we stop and actually listen?
Charlie Brooker’s Newswipe series on BBC tends to pick up on Fox News, one of the five highest rated television in America, and how they excaudate the problem of violence among the people in Haiti after the tragic earthquake. On the other side CNN is showing how much America helped Haiti and the positive outcome for them. Here we see how the media can shape people’s opinion based on the network they are used to watch. The people who always watch Fox will never know the other side of the situation. According to Manjoo, “we indulge information that pleases us and cocoon ourselves among others who think as we do.”
A great example given by Public Policy President Dean Debnam identified the real reason for Fox’s power: “A generation ago you would have expected Americans to place their trust in the most neutral and unbiased conveyors of news, but the media landscape has really changed, and now they’re turning more toward the outlets that tell them what they want to hear.” Following the same idea, people who watched Fox will look for stats that say how much people died after the earthquake rather than looking for statistics that will say how much people survived because of the rescue teams who went to Haiti and helped them in the struggle.
I am an immigrant and I remember how back in 2002 my grandparents used to call us after every hurricane in Florida and ask us if we are OK. The media in Europe presented the damages of the hurricanes in the worst possible way by showing the most tragic video footage that they had. On the other hand, here we knew that it was just a storm and nothing happen, but because of the media outlet oversees my grandparents have formed their knowledge. Here we see how the media can push the objectivity of the news called hostile media phenomenon.
By reading “True enough” by Manjoo I realize why people tend to stick to what they think is true even though the facts show the opposite. Selective perception and naive realism described in the book and backed up by the facts around the 9/11 tragedy theories. Another example like this would be the liberalization of the visa regime between Bulgaria and the United States. It use to be only three months and now is ten years for all travelers and business visas. All American people were against the liberalization of the visa regime, while Bulgarian’s were thinking that this is the best thing that can happen for their country. Both sides were not experiencing the same thing even though the facts were the same for both parties. American people can freely go to Bulgaria for vacation, but they don’t want Bulgarians to come freely to their country.
Another interesting issue that Majoo touch on in his book is the age of easy lying. I can’t mention the Ipad and all the blogs, videos, and photos that are available on the Web. More and more people are using the web to get their news, communicate and form their own opinions. “iPad Tortured to Death in Mass Social Experiment “ is a video in which Alex Jones, radio host, takes on a mental experiment that proves how the Ipad takes over people’s minds and they tend to forget that they are humans. Technology changes and manipulates people’s views. Alex Jones destroys the Ipad because he wants to prove a point, “whether humanity will concern itself with more with the senseless destruction of a computer than it does with the torture and senseless killing of more than a million Iraqis (to put forward one example) along with countless others across the globe.” To view the video by Alex Jones visit: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OyEhWeAseSo&feature=player_embedded
Charlie Brooker’s Newswipe series on BBC tends to pick up on Fox News, one of the five highest rated television in America, and how they excaudate the problem of violence among the people in Haiti after the tragic earthquake. On the other side CNN is showing how much America helped Haiti and the positive outcome for them. Here we see how the media can shape people’s opinion based on the network they are used to watch. The people who always watch Fox will never know the other side of the situation. According to Manjoo, “we indulge information that pleases us and cocoon ourselves among others who think as we do.”
A great example given by Public Policy President Dean Debnam identified the real reason for Fox’s power: “A generation ago you would have expected Americans to place their trust in the most neutral and unbiased conveyors of news, but the media landscape has really changed, and now they’re turning more toward the outlets that tell them what they want to hear.” Following the same idea, people who watched Fox will look for stats that say how much people died after the earthquake rather than looking for statistics that will say how much people survived because of the rescue teams who went to Haiti and helped them in the struggle.
I am an immigrant and I remember how back in 2002 my grandparents used to call us after every hurricane in Florida and ask us if we are OK. The media in Europe presented the damages of the hurricanes in the worst possible way by showing the most tragic video footage that they had. On the other hand, here we knew that it was just a storm and nothing happen, but because of the media outlet oversees my grandparents have formed their knowledge. Here we see how the media can push the objectivity of the news called hostile media phenomenon.
By reading “True enough” by Manjoo I realize why people tend to stick to what they think is true even though the facts show the opposite. Selective perception and naive realism described in the book and backed up by the facts around the 9/11 tragedy theories. Another example like this would be the liberalization of the visa regime between Bulgaria and the United States. It use to be only three months and now is ten years for all travelers and business visas. All American people were against the liberalization of the visa regime, while Bulgarian’s were thinking that this is the best thing that can happen for their country. Both sides were not experiencing the same thing even though the facts were the same for both parties. American people can freely go to Bulgaria for vacation, but they don’t want Bulgarians to come freely to their country.
Another interesting issue that Majoo touch on in his book is the age of easy lying. I can’t mention the Ipad and all the blogs, videos, and photos that are available on the Web. More and more people are using the web to get their news, communicate and form their own opinions. “iPad Tortured to Death in Mass Social Experiment “ is a video in which Alex Jones, radio host, takes on a mental experiment that proves how the Ipad takes over people’s minds and they tend to forget that they are humans. Technology changes and manipulates people’s views. Alex Jones destroys the Ipad because he wants to prove a point, “whether humanity will concern itself with more with the senseless destruction of a computer than it does with the torture and senseless killing of more than a million Iraqis (to put forward one example) along with countless others across the globe.” To view the video by Alex Jones visit: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OyEhWeAseSo&feature=player_embedded
Farhad Manjoo and his book “True Enough” helped me understand how the media effect people’s views about the world around them. I knew that the media is a powerful persuasive tool, but not as far powerful as Manjoo presents it with his examples. After I read the book I think that professors in mass communications schools should make it a mandatory reading for students who want to become journalists. Al I can say is that “True Enough” helped me understand the difference between being a regular viewer and being a journalist.