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:

    Jean Baptiste says:
    June 23, 2018 at 7:32 am
    “You can try as hard as you want to put lipstick on the pig of Australian conservatives , that’s your right.”

    You’ve been regularly whacking a bit of lippy on your Kimmie comments and having a good chuckle to yourself JB; and that’s your right. Or is it left?

  • Milton says:

    Interesting read by Chip Le Grand in todays paper.

    • Trivalve says:

      Yep. There was also one I read yesterday by Tom Meagher, Jill’s husband, with a very different angle (no monsters). It’s hard to argue with him but I lean towards Chip’s take. I’m mystified by some of the auto-responses to all of this. The all-men-are-to-blame argument strikes me as stupid, to be honest. I understand the anger but I don’t understand a lot of the finger-wagging.

      • Boadicea says:

        Agree Triv. Men are not all bastards who are going to attack a woman walking alone. There is always going to be the odd lone wolf out there who is deranged and dangerous to anyone.
        After the Jill Meagher tragedy I am surprised that any woman would walk alone, late at night, especially in a deserted park in Melbourne. Crime in Melbourne is scary.

  • Dismayed says:

    duttons dirty deal with Taiwan says all you need to know about this government. FN disgrace.

  • Dismayed says:

    Congrats on your health JTI. Peter Norman has been posthumously honoured with the Australian Olympic Committee’s highest accolade, the Order of Merit. About FN time. His treatment by conservative AOC members is a National Disgrace. He never represented Australia again after the Mexico Olympics even though he was still our best runner. The documentary by his Son sends chills down my spine, tears to my eyes, pride to my heart and makes me angry as all hell. I thought I saw your name in the credits? Congratulations Peter Norman and family. ( coates is another of those dogs not fit to represent this Nation.)

  • Dismayed says:

    Charts proving just how bad the coalition polices have been for the Nation. These don’t even show the Doubling of debt in 5 years at a faster rate than any other government in the Nations history. Enjoy your reckless wins now cons. you will not enjoy what is coming to you. You will though continue to blame everyone and anyone rather than looking at your toxic selves. No surprises.
    https://tinyurl.com/y9h2jocw

  • Dismayed says:

    Macrobusiness today has a series of ABS produced charts on various economic indicators. The charts show just how bad the coalition policies have been for Australia. The charts on the tax changes show again that the conservative coalition reckless unfunded tax changes are overwhelmingly geared to the highest earners in the Nation. Labor’s policies are better for those on incomes up to $100K. 80% of Australians earn less than $80K per year. It is clear when the two policies are stood side by side Labor’s policy benefits MORE Australians and therefore the Nation as a whole. those who continue to blindly support the reckless tax policies of the conservative coalition are doing so for purely selfish self serving interest over that of the National interest. Talk about UnAustralian. No Surprises.

    • BASSMAN says:

      I hope and pray Hanson backflips yet again and lets the corporate tax cuts through:- Just do it!
      -She will be voting against her own constituency-80% of No Nation polled are against the gift.
      -$144billion plus $68billion will break the economy coz it is unfunded
      -The voters won’t stand for giving the banks $17billion in tax cuts after the Royal Commission ‘kd them
      -As Economist Judith Sloan said….the tax cuts to Big Business will mean the end of the govt. Labor will eat them
      with this in any campaign.
      -Labor can use the money that was going to be showered on Big Business to fund more worthwhile programmes for ALL Australians

  • JackSprat says:

    Interesting the anti-plastic bag ban lot’s propaganda.

    They say one would have to use a re-usable plastic bag 275 times (number seems to increase every time I see it) to make up for the green house gases in the disposable ones.

    Are they not missing the point that ,if one did not use a non-disposable one , one would have to keep using the disposable ones.?
    So on day 2, the number is 177.5 times etc.
    Something Dwight can give to his students.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Comprehension is not your strong point is it?

    • BASSMAN says:

      Just heard Woolies will save $500million by cancelling the bags…then add on the plastic bags they are SELLING-GULP!

      • Trivalve says:

        We have had it in Canberra for about 7 years. I still forget to take bags. The supermarkets make a killing from it. Thumbs down.

        • Boadicea says:

          I have several hessian bags hanging in the kitchen and in the boot of my car. They last for years and were $2.00 each to purchase. It’s very east to adapt.

          • Bella says:

            Yes it’s such a simple exercise B, but I s’pose the change doesn’t make sense to some folks who haven’t seen images of the immense plastic dumping ground in our oceans or the insides of dead marine mammal choked with our plastic disposal.🐬
            It’s a start anyway.

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    Penny says: June 22, 2018 at 4:41 pm
    “CotC…..well said. But no-one wants to know why people are fleeing to escape these fates….not while they live in comfortable Australia … ”
    Further to my earlier response to your 22 Jun 8.31pm post, have you noticed that me old mate JB obviously enjoys having a regular guffaw on here about another despot, his DPRK’s “Kimmie”, whose people are also attempting to “escape their terrible fates.” One wonders what points he is attempting to score in this regard, eh?

  • Dismayed says:

    HB, Milton and few others. You are a disgrace and typical of the sheeple who support the coalition. you and your coalition use human tragedy to support your lies. your coalition refused to support regional processing and highlighted every vessel that left a port increasing the pull factor. You are the worst kind of creatures, sycophantic feeble minded sheep like creatures. where did your people come from? People like you should be deported and make a place for those who want to contribute to society goodness knows all you do is suck from it like parasites.

    • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

      We should be Deported you say Dismayed! Buddy or Lass we haven’t stopped laughing for 10 minutes since we read your “gut spill”. Get a grip dear Lad or Lass. However, if your humble correspondent is to be “deported” let it please be to the USA! Looking forward to more of your “gut-splitting’ humour! Cheers

      • Milton says:

        He or she’s the goods, Henry. Laugh out loud stuff and exceptional when it’s obvious that English is not its first language. I, like you, await the things next missive, Henry. Even a pinhead like Dismayed lifts the spirits under the stumbling Turnbull regime. Alas the alternative has more ambiguity than the conspiracy cultists and climatologists.
        Like you, Henry I love a laugh, Milt!

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Come on you big softy.

      Give ’em heaps man!

    • Boadicea says:

      Here you go again, Dismayed. Just when things seemed to be going along without the need to slag people off. JTI getting through a tough time and all.
      What a disgusting post – personal insults once again rear their ugly head. Do you ever smile? Jesus. There are better things to do than read this muck

      • Henry Donald J Blofeld says:

        Dismayed is “not as others” Boadicea we had a huge laugh and put his/her post up on our board of the “Lunatics and Losers”. Cheers

        • Boadicea says:

          Good on you, HB. You’re right. Laughing is the way to go. He/she’s certainly no asset to the causes he/she tries to promote

          • Carl on the Coast says:

            He/she may also be non-binary Boa.

          • Mack the Knife says:

            Seems “It’s a gas!”
            Just when I was going to applaud the bloggers for resisting the urge to respond to his posts, BASSMAN went and blew it.
            From the volume of posts replete with mistakes, I’m sure it’s a gas.

            Bless his/her chipped out chip.

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