Humble servant of the Nation

TV news ain’t news.

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Many years ago, an acquaintance of mine opined that the reality program, Survivor, was the best television show ever made. I didn’t share her excitement and replied, “I saw a man walk on the moon on television. I thought that was pretty good.”

Needless to say we are no longer on speaking terms but it’s reasonable to conclude that what occurred on Sentosa Island Singapore yesterday lies somewhere between the two.

While my memory of Neil Armstrong placing his right foot on the Sea of Tranquillity may be a little hazy, I distinctly recall the coverage of what remains the most outstanding event in human history, was not appended by almost endless commentary and addle-headed speculation from journos and other so-called experts.

The reporting of momentous events has changed considerably, and I think for the worse.

Yesterday I spent the day watching the coverage of the summit on Sky News and a range of US cable news channels on my iPad while ABC 24 was on the television in the background. The ABC’s dedicated news channel was hard pressed. During the many long moments of waiting for anything of any significance to occur, news presenters various sought comment from reporters on the ground in Sydney, Singapore or Seoul.

The fact is the reporters knew almost as little about what was happening than I did. They were forced to stretch as they say in the biz, waffling on about what may or may not be happening and how an outcome they could not possibly know might affect the world in the short and long terms.

It was filler, plain and simple. Most of it worthless commentary or pointless speculation.

The US and North Korean delegations were behind closed doors. The photo-op of President Trump and Chairman Kim shaking hands for the first time had come and gone. Cameras rolled revealing a closed door where Trump and Kim would emerge eventually. They were late as the subjects of press conferences or photo ops often are, leading to even more panicked cutaways to more reporters adding their eight cents’ worth.

For once I would like to see a reporter under questioning from a news presenter offer the succinct three-word reply, “I don’t know.” It might not make for great television but at least it would be honest. The reporters did not know. Not one reporter, commentator or talking head present in Singapore or indeed anywhere else in the world, did. They did not know what had been agreed to by the two delegations or indeed if anything had been.

Even after the two leaders had signed a memorandum of understanding, no one was quite sure what they had signed up to. On ABC 24, the questions put to reporters were of the tedious “Is it good that Trump and Kim have met?” variety. The answers from the reporters on the ground invariably were yes with a but or no with an if, often played over the top of a lot of file footage of missiles being launched, possibly from North Korea but they could have been from anywhere.

Is it good that Trump and Kim have met? Unequivocally yes. The fact that the two nations were on the verge of a nuclear exchange just three months ago and now the two leaders were shaking hands and generally glad handing each other is very good news. It takes the temperature out of arguably the world’s most dangerous hot spot at least in the short term. Beyond that, who knows?

See, I could have answered that question and many others like it promptly and I was four and a half thousand kilometres away at the time.

When something unusual did happen, it was overlooked. After Trump and Kim did finally emerge for the signing ceremony photo-op, a North Korean guard wearing rubber gloves stepped forward to examine Chairman Kim’s pen, presumably to determine if it was some lethal CIA gimmickry, some ghastly tool of assassination. Satisfied it was merely a harmless writing implement, he placed it back on the table and Kim commenced scribbling his ornate autograph.

This was barely discernible on ABC 24 where the camera operator had opted for tight shots on the two leaders but elsewhere it was more obvious. It raised the question, were the North Koreans so paranoid they thought their supreme leader could be knocked off by a poison pen while the rest of the world looked on?

Call me old fashioned but I pine for the days when a network would cut from regular programming to a major news event and then once reported, the scheduled program would resume. I noticed SBS did this yesterday. They ran some old repeats of Nigella Lawson whipping up some scrumptious offerings in the kitchen and interrupted only when something important was happening in Singapore.

But ABC 24 can’t do this. During quiet moments the channel can and does revert to other news which essentially is news that is four hours old or older and therefore not news. The same could be said for scheduled bulletins elsewhere on the ABC like the corporation’s flagship 7.00pm bulletin.

If you spent the afternoon watching ABC 24 as I did yesterday (albeit with a bit of bored flipping to a bit of Nigella on SBS) by the time the seven o’clock bulletin came on, you’d have already seen everything, even some of the lightweight magazine guff that runs between the sport and weather that we in the news caper like to refer to as “cat that does the ironing” segments.

Do yourself a favour and examine the lag between television reporting of an event and what appears through trusted news sites on the web like this one. You’ll find what comes up on the web is at least an hour faster. Worse, once that news is reported on television, it will be reheated and rehashed, almost always without revision sometimes for a day or more.

While the debate rages over the diplomatic and geopolitical consequences of the summit, one question was answered: television news is often not news at all.

555 Comments

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    In relation to Paul’s letters, someone in the previous topic suggested I may wish to have a look at Catherine Nixey’s book, “The Darkening Age”.

    The author, a journalist, apparently deleted her twitter account because she could not face the absolute widespread deluge of criticial reviews, many of which indicated her work was simply a bunch of poorly researched generalisations largely influenced by a dramatic over-reaction to her religious upbringing. The widespread view was that the book was simply nothing more than a piece of sensational writing, not to be confused with historical analysis.

    Journos may well be writing similar stuff about Trump’s great work in years to come.

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Letters to Timothy were not written by Paul, mate. Get over it.

      • Carl on the Coast says:

        Roger wilco Jack, I was over it until the book review request popped up.

        • Jack The Insider says:

          It’s a subject I’m always interested in. As I said before and if you’re interested read up on the Council of Nicea. Plenty of skullduggery going on there, mate.

    • Dismayed says:

      Cotc you mean that you “Christians” don’t like free speech especially when it highlights your delusional fantasies? No surprises.

  • Boadicea says:

    Listened to an interesting discussion on the FIFA World Cup on RN yesterday.
    The opinion was that football is secondary to the glorification of Putin in this tournament and the corruption so rife that there was some sympathy for the players, who could be forgiven for regarding themselves as mere pawns in the corruption and political games.
    In fact a couple of seasoned commentators declared that they would not be watching at all.
    Any odds on Russia reaching the finals?

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    Quick clip of CBS News coverage with Walter Cronkite, Mr Insider, of the historic 1st Moon Landing on July 20th 1969. Imagine today with all the Electronic Media we have of the quality and volume of the Coverage. Yet today there are a few “dinosaurs” who label this event “Fake News”. Strewth
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0TYuXj5sq6A

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    Great read, Mr Insider, and having lived through, and watched live on TV, the Moon Landings and the Trump/Un Summit one notices that the Media today is all over a story no matter how trivial. Also in 1969 we simply did not have the Electronic Media we have today, just a TV and Radio/Print coverage. Today we see the Media hanging off every word or action and live too and suspect as time goes on and technology advances the intensity of News and Events Coverage will increase. The Trump/Un meeting was only a 1st in the process yet so many built it up to be the end all full stop, and as we know it will be a long process for the two Countries. Interestingly POTUS Trump, as we all know, riles against “Fake News” and we have seen some of this exposed here in Australia too.

  • Jean Baptiste says:

    The meeting was a photo op, albeit a massive one for both. Both of whom know any deal will have to pass congress. And how likely is that?
    “Peace in Korea!” FGS what a beat up, there haven’t been too many shots fired in Korea in the last 60 odd years while Yemen is a bloodbath. No breathless on the ground reports coming from there.

    If they do ever sign a treaty, Kimmie quits the nukes and he US stops the exercises you can be certain that the military industrial political complex will want another venue and milking cow client state with which to cream the treasuries of both by way of compensation. How does “The Butcher of Ottawa” sound?

    Oh! And after the US abruptly cancelled the Apollo program things did go surprisingly quiet. Except for the clunk of pennies dropping.

    • Henry Blofeld says:

      Only your “penny” dear Mr Baptiste, only your “penny”. Cheers

      • Jean Baptiste says:

        Not so Henry, if you ask around you will find there’s not many “moon flakes” such as your gullible self who believe in the impossible, still about.

        Heavens to Betsy though, I declare I didn’t know Tom Hanks had been outside of low Earth orbit. But I seen it the other night on the television so he must have done it alright.

    • Razor says:

      Come now old bean surely credit where credit is due!

      On another note I recently saw a movie which I’m sure you and many here would find amusing. ‘Death of Stalin’. I was on a flight with earphones in and chortled all the way between Melbourne and Brisbane.

      Writing this missive from the Perth QANTAS lounge, business naturally, hope this finds you well. Teeth strong, coat shiny and all that what!

  • Huger Unson says:

    Jack, are you watching ‘Fourth Estate’ on SBS? In NYT newsroom the team pick up words as they are spoken in interviews by their reporter on-the-spot, and spin them out *in seconds* onto their Twitter feeds. Then they monitor the “reach” while writing up the articles for print.
    TV is pretty much a vehicle for spectacle – for nice hair, flash teeth – and for the hope of a glimpse of a smooth thigh, and the distant prospect of a fist-fight. Not to mention product placement, of course, which brings it all back into perspective. More beer, anyone?
    That doco on NYT brings the question – What’s the point of print? How many train travellers are re-folding their newspapers while hanging off straps? I’m a news junkie, but we haven’t had a newspaper in this house for years (other than the local freebie).

  • Milton says:

    Watching Nigella Lawson separate eggs is enough for me to forget about world peace.!!

  • BASSMAN says:

    Well what do you expect when the guts have been kicked out of the ABC since
    the Liberals stole government? And more cuts to come=do more with less.
    Souths tomorrow nite-7.50pm WHAAAAAAA!!!!

    • Jack The Insider says:

      No, management made a decision to create a dedicated 24 hour news channel and it has been a disaster. Many of my friends at the ABC regard it as unnecessary and a big drain on limited money. It should never have happened.

      • Boadicea says:

        Agree Jack. It just recycles the same newsclips all day long. I guess one is not supposed to watch for more than 30 minutes.
        By the way, re the pen Kim used to sign the agreement, in the broadcast I was watching he eventually used a pen handed to him by his sister who was in the wings. After the circumstances of the assassination of his brother I’m not surprised he would be a bit edgy!

      • Penny says:

        I have to say that I am quite confused with how many ABC channels there are now. As far as I can see there’s ABC, ABC News 24, ABC kids and ABC ME (?) I like to watch that bizarre ThinkTank show, but have to switch through each ABC channel to find out which one it’s on…..not easy when you are in a country town and you may or may not get good reception at all.
        Give me the Australia Plus network in Malaysia where you get to see every AFL footy match that’s played from Friday to Sunday and the ABC news. What more could you want?

        • Jack The Insider says:

          ABC 2 is for kids during the day and becomes ABC Comedy at night to make it more confusing. To be fair I have enjoyed watching repeats of the Office (US) and Parksand Recreation both sitcoms produced by Michael Schur. Anything with his name on it is worth watching.

      • The Bow-Legged Swantoon says:

        Exactly right. The ABC seems to find it necessary to replicate every format provided by other networks in an attempt to dominate the media landscape. The problem is they are not very good at a lot of it and it just comes across as an excuse to spend money; the public service mind-set expressed in the media space. Compared with similar international networks ABC 24 is slow, stodgy and doesn’t give the impression that anyone is working too hard.

        As for the ABC having the guts kicked out of it, come on, B’MAN. What they have “suffered” doesn’t even amount to minor liposuction. When a government-funded organisation has the physique of Mr Creosote a bit of gut-kicking doesn’t go astray:

        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GxRnenQYG7I

        • BASSMAN says:

          U don’t call a loss of 600 jobs an issue. These people have mortgages and
          families mate.

          • The Bow-Legged Swantoon says:

            Even if we accept that figure for the sake of the argument (and no other reason), I honestly really don’t care. The ABC should not be a make-work scheme just so people can pay their bills, any more than any other area of government operations. If your argument is that the ABC is the only place those particular people can get work and that otherwise they’ll be on the dole it doesn’t say much for their intelligence or work ethic, which makes it doubly important that they get the arse ASAP.

            • BASSMAN says:

              I should have stated this earlier. I don’t watch any ABC TV, well very rarely, but I listen to over 30 radio programs. I don’t even watch Sales or Q and A anymore or even the news. Programs like AM/PM have been cut to ribbons. Many programs I used to listen to-Tell Me Straight, The Real Thing, What Keeps Me Awake have just disappeared along with many others.

              • The Bow-Legged Swantoon says:

                Perhaps if they didn’t indulge in expensive boondoggles like ABC24 or fill so much of the rest of their TV space with garbage you would still have your shows.

    • Razor says:

      Exactly how did the Liberals ‘steal’ government Bassy?

      • BASSMAN says:

        Easy question-by LYING….please try harder Raze-you are sharper than that!

        On the eve of the 2013 federal election Abbott tells SBS there will be “no cuts to education, no cuts to health, no change to pensions, no change to the GST and no cuts to the ABC or SBS”
        “Under the Coalition you will always pay less or electrcity than under Labor” Josh Frydenberg 31st May, 2018.
        “They’ll be no wrecking no undermining & no sniping. I’ve never leaked or backgrounded against anyone & I certainly won’t start now” Abbott.
        Hockey….The National Press Club, 2012… “The condition of the budget will not be an excuse for breaking promises” AND “We will achieve a surplus in our first year in office and we will achieve a surplus for every year of our first term”.
        Christopher Pyne:- “That has been a hallmark of ultra-conservatives for centuries, to sow fear in the community,” 17th September, 2017. At last the Liberals told the truth for once!
        During his first budget reply on May 12, 2011, Abbott said: “People can be confident that spending, debt and taxes will always be lower under a Coalition government.”
        “There should be no new tax collection without an election,” Abbott, August 16, 2011

        • Razor says:

          Would that be a lie like mediscare?

          Would the cutting of funding to the ABC / SBS have had the same influence on the general populous as mediscare did?

          They’ll go hard this time and get an increased majority unless Albo is leader. End of last year I thought they were goners. Now, short of another self inflicted disaster, they are certs.

          You and Dismal know that. It’s the reason you both have been particularly shrill of late.

          • Dismayed says:

            razor. Medicare care call centres and administration work has already been privatised. It is not a scare campaign when it is fact. you are delusional. Small town syndrome, a bit like Tasmanians you exhibit all the signs of an inbred. No surprises.

            • BASSMAN says:

              I had a great reply to this providing exact quotes from Snedden and Howard stating how they wanted to “Stab Medicare in the stomach” and …. “It doesn’t care how long it takes, we will destroy Medicare over time” but it must have got chopped or lost in cyberspace. The Liberals want everybody privately insured.

            • Razor says:

              Call me an inbred. How’s that outside home gym going?

        • smoke says:

          c’mon big bassy. can’t steal what ya bought eh?

  • Gryzly says:

    The AFL kicks off on Thursday this week, get ’em in on time.

  • Dwight says:

    Agree with you wholeheartedly Jack. I often have the TV on to a news channel, while working on a laptop with my iPad at hand. The reporters interviewing reporters is a pox. And the inability to say, “I don’t know.”

    But, you’re not in the only profession with that flaw. Academics among the worst offenders. In a moment of pique at a conference in Vegas years ago, I nearly brought a presenter to tears. I’m not proud of this, and even the two English profs who taught me how to do it castigated me after. I asked an innocuous question about her research and she dissed me. So before she could move on I asked a follow up question.

    There were three safe answers. I knew she wouldn’t go for “I don’t know.”. That left, “Yes I have thought about that and you’re wrong because…” and “That’s an interesting question, can we talk about it after the session?”

    She decided to bluff. And it wasn’t pretty. I stopped short of eviseration, but only just. I’ve never done that since.

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