by Claudia » Mon 20 Jun 2005, 07:02:00
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')'m amazed at how anybody (whether American or otherwise) can claim a lack of news sources in the US... it's quite the OPPOSITE... In fact the US is the KING of access to news in quantity, quality and diversity.
That's it. We don't lack news. We lack
consensus news.
Since there's no one single default news source that everyone turns to, people tend to pick a few sources they feel comfortable with and stick with those. I get about 80% of my news from national public radio and the remaining 20% from The New York Times, Time, and online glances at The London Times, Norwegian Aftenposten. My dad, on the other hand, gets his news from either FOX news, Rush Limbaugh or the New York Post.
You can imagine we have trouble even agreeing on basic facts, never mind opinions. I'm not saying which of us has the "right" facts, just that we live in two parallel worlds where news is concerned.
The European countries I've lived in, on the other hand, always had one major news program that the majority of the population watched in the evening after dinner, usually broadcast on the nationally-funded public television station. Like NRK in Norway, BBC in the UK. These programs are commercial-free, and therefore not as likely to be swayed to get ratings by covering human interest stories like babies trapped in wells -- something that has eaten up at least half of the news time on the major networks in the US (ABC, NBC, CBS). 20/20 is not news -- it's People Magazine on TV.
We simply lack a default, noncommercial, well-funded news source like many European countries have. Public television has The Newshour with Jim Lehrer, which I love -- but it's more like a university seminar than a general news summary, with endless roundtable discussions.
So, my original point: we don't get less news than they do -- we just get less consensus news. And because we are allowed to choose our news from a dizzying range of sources, many choose news that is most fun and makes them feel the best -- heavy on entertainment, very, very low on foreign affairs. They don't even know what they're not hearing.