Why News Was So Neutral in the '50s and '60s

แชร์
ฝัง
  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 31 พ.ค. 2024
  • The story of the 'golden age' of news and its subsequent fall.
    If you want to support the channel, here are the best ways to do it:
    1) Watch the full video
    2) Subscribe if you haven't
    3) Share with a friend
    4) Support me with a small donation on Patreon: / rchapman
    0:00 Intro
    0:52 Public Manipulation
    02:11 Radio
    04:18 The Rise Of Television
    06:14 Principles In Journalism
    07:25 Examples
    14:33 Exceptions
    15:48 What Happened Since
    20:36 Conclusion
    Sources:
    Public Opinion - Walter Lippmann
    On Press - Matthew Pressman
    That's The Way It Is - Charles L. Ponce De Leon
    American Television News - Steve M. Barkin
    The Underdeveloped Profession - Irving Kristol
    A Free And Responsible Press - The Commission On Freedom Of The Press
    Edward R. Murrow And The Birth of Broadcast Journalism - Bob Edwards
    Post-Truth - Lee McIntyre

ความคิดเห็น • 3.5K

  • @realryanchapman
    @realryanchapman  2 ปีที่แล้ว +988

    Thank you to everyone who supports these projects on Patreon. I wouldn't be able to devote so much time and so many resources to one video otherwise. I'm trying to make the best work I can, and the donations really do make it possible. If you'd like to chip in and support me, check out www.patreon.com/rchapman. Video notes below.
    If anyone is wondering how the networks stayed in business at the time, they had other programming that easily offset the losses that their news divisions took. Similarly, the NYT had other sections to their paper (sports, finance, culture), and when people bought the paper for those sections, they got those news along with it, regardless of how neutral their news was. Still, the NYT was the least profitable of the major three American papers at the time (The LA Times, The Washington Post & The NYT). They didn't care though. For them it was about principles and the prestige that came along with it.
    - Ryan

    • @appalachiasustainabletouri9379
      @appalachiasustainabletouri9379 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Thank you for your efforts!
      We are now following you on Twitter.
      We put you in our social sustainability list.

    • @brianbutton6346
      @brianbutton6346 2 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      Ryan, thank you. That was very well researched. I lived through the 60's (and beyond). It *was* different. Journalism was a calling epitomized by Cronkite. When Dan Rather took the helm, it was like a scepter of virtue was being handed off and he had to live up to it. Watergate drove this to new heights.
      It feels like the free market, that fuel of excellence, accelerated the slide. Ted Turner founded CNN as a for-profit organization based on the ground-breaking notion that a full time news network had an audience. Then Fox News figured out that they could cut out the field offices, crank up the bile and get more viewers. It was a recipe for profits.
      IMHO, the NY Times followed Fox News down the gully of grievance. I would never have believed that grievance was a limitless fount of viewers.
      My salute to you. A high integrity analysis, providing new information in uncharged language.

    • @browncow7113
      @browncow7113 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Nice video. Worth looking at Robert Putnam's "The Upswing" for some deeper background.

    • @elponchex
      @elponchex 2 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      I believe it would be important to adress that in either period there's been a permanent bias in favor of imperialism and a narrative of the US government always engaging in imperialist policies abroad with good intentions, and criticism being only valid when presented as "a mistake made by well meaning goals". When it comes to foreign policy, the press has always been heavily biased to support every intervention in every single country, with the most radical opinion being "we should stop our intervention for X strategic reason, even though we are noble and we are only there to help". Kind Regards!

    • @PeachesCourage
      @PeachesCourage 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      I WAS BORN IN 1950 AND HAVE BEEN COMPLAINING ABOUT THE CHAOS IN THE NEWS A LONG TIME
      I BELIEVE THAT TO SAY ON TRACK OR UNDERSTAND THE TRUTH ITSELF RESPECT ALL OF US HAZING IS SOMETHING ELSE THAT DESCRIBES EVERYONE FOR THEM? THE 60s WAS HELL HONEST THERE WERE NO CLEAR TRUTH AND TOTAL IMBALANCE THEN THE LISTS OF PEOPLE FIGHTING THE VIET NAM WAR IN THE EVENING THANK-YOU FOR THIS

  • @sailorbychoice1
    @sailorbychoice1 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5006

    I'm 60, but when I took a journalism (writing) coarse back in the late 70s, my teacher started by saying if he could tell what our political, religious, or any other point of view is from our lives by what is written, it isn't journalism, it's editorializing and there's a page for that, but doesn't belong anywhere else in a newspaper.

    • @SvendleBerries
      @SvendleBerries 2 ปีที่แล้ว +410

      Its a shame that these days he would be chased out of the school for being a "far right lunatic". News is supposed to be unbiased. Today, the only point of view anybody is allowed to have is far left.

    • @terryp3034
      @terryp3034 2 ปีที่แล้ว +130

      That's how I learned it, too. And in the same decade. Yes, everyone had personal opinions but they were NEVER to impact reporting a story.

    • @terryp3034
      @terryp3034 2 ปีที่แล้ว +77

      @Chip Belori so true! I saw a poster on campus a few years ago promoting a conference of journalism students and activists to discuss how they could work together to bring about "social justice. "

    • @jamespfitz
      @jamespfitz 2 ปีที่แล้ว +57

      As did my J-school profs. Around the time the internet took over the role of journalism changed. there are no journalists left only advocates.

    • @medexamtoolsdotcom
      @medexamtoolsdotcom 2 ปีที่แล้ว +27

      Which means even in the late 1970s they knew the way it was supposed to be. I got the impression from this video that it was a 1-2 punch of the reaction to McCarthyism and then Reagan's policies, but it sounds like it's mostly reagan's fault then.

  • @kleezer1
    @kleezer1 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3171

    THe irony of news outlets complaining about misinformation is killing me

    • @mimszanadunstedt441
      @mimszanadunstedt441 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thats because modern news is about baiting those who disagree into viewership, which is why the vax stuff was massively downvoted on youtube.

    • @drstevej2527
      @drstevej2527 2 ปีที่แล้ว +32

      Compared with social media its akin to the best university on earth.
      Journal of Futures Studies, June 2020, 24(4): 1-4
      The Internet, Epistemological Crisis and the Realities of the Future: An Introduction to this Special Issue

    • @lorefox201
      @lorefox201 2 ปีที่แล้ว +46

      @@drstevej2527 false

    • @firestorm-1154
      @firestorm-1154 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@drstevej2527 Social media is unimaginably biased, there are just so many people you can eventually gather enough information to piece together what really happened, unlike mainstream news, which for the most part just flat out lies. Neither of these are great

    • @drstevej2527
      @drstevej2527 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      @@lorefox201
      Read the research! Remember this lesson in epistemology.
      Journal of Futures Studies, June 2020, 24(4): 1-4
      The Internet, Epistemological Crisis and the Realities of the Future: An Introduction to this Special Issue

  • @Nick-ij5nt
    @Nick-ij5nt ปีที่แล้ว +628

    My dad who was born in the 60s often talks about the media he remembers when he was a kid. One instance he talks about was when he saw Walter Cronkite receive an update to some breaking news live on TV. Walter was handed a piece of paper, read it and then instantly turned to the producers and said something to the effect of "Is this really true? Because I'm not gonna say this unless it's been confirmed."

    • @susanpolice8465
      @susanpolice8465 ปีที่แล้ว +53

      Hey Nick! Was it an Assassination....?I remember exactly how He Reacted to JFK being shot and it was the first time that I ever saw him look like he was ready to cry...My Pop Loved Him!

    • @debbiedeering7998
      @debbiedeering7998 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      I miss Walter, I do wish there was just news without others views!

    • @HVACSoldier
      @HVACSoldier ปีที่แล้ว +30

      The movie “Network,” was satire, in the 1970s. Now, it’s reality.

    • @sr2291
      @sr2291 ปีที่แล้ว +22

      When I was four, I asked my dad if I could listen to his shortwave radio. He said yes. I remember l was listening to a station in South Africa and I told my dad they reported a news story totally differently than what we saw on TV. He was not impressed but I learned a valuable lesson that day.

    • @HVACSoldier
      @HVACSoldier ปีที่แล้ว +8

      @@sr2291 You have to understand, in MANY countries, Shortwave is government owned and/or funded.

  • @nehemiahmarcus308
    @nehemiahmarcus308 ปีที่แล้ว +327

    I was in high school in 1973 taking a News Analysis class. The course was about how to determine bias in journalism from subtle clues. The type of lens used in a photograph (wide angle vs telephoto) could create bias. Statistical charts and if it is median or mode has bias. I thought it was a very valuable class.

    • @Ajv516
      @Ajv516 ปีที่แล้ว +26

      The idea that high schools used to teach this depresses me. I’ve been arguing that Informal Logic should be a required course in all four years of high school…
      Now I think this should be as well. How the hell did we have these classes and then not?? How many times have I heard the Right clamor for “more critical thinking in schools”??

    • @mtn1793
      @mtn1793 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      So many great subjects so little time and concentration.

    • @mpower1969
      @mpower1969 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      finding bias in every molecule... a snowflake specialty.

    • @petergreen5337
      @petergreen5337 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Thank you for teaching me

    • @raynjpg
      @raynjpg 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ⁠@@mpower1969or, rather, a skeptic's specialty? analyzing a source's potential biases makes you a skeptic, and being skeptical doesn't make you a snowflake.

  • @ArkadiBolschek
    @ArkadiBolschek 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1588

    One thing that is worth keeping in mind: bias in media doesn't just have to do with how you report things, but also, much more importantly, it has to do with _what_ you choose to report. Journalists can keep their language neutral and non-emotional, but by choosing what is "news-worthy" and what isn't, and what information they are or aren't going to give on each issue, they can effectively inject their own bias and shape the public's perception while maintaining a façade of objectivity.

    • @ambiguousduck2333
      @ambiguousduck2333 2 ปีที่แล้ว +93

      If this was the only problem we had, I wouldn't mind it nearly as much.

    • @a.carneirozhu8104
      @a.carneirozhu8104 2 ปีที่แล้ว +61

      Certainly. I also enjoyed that little bit near the end where he explains how some believe objectivity in the 1950s may have to some extent taken everything at face value and thus defended it.
      Objectivity is important, but careful examination of the events from a more critical standpoint is also extremely valuable.

    • @Sabeximus
      @Sabeximus 2 ปีที่แล้ว +88

      This is great point. Things can still be biased even if they were represented objectively. Giving two opposing views the same amount of space on the page might, at first glance, seem like the definition of objectivity. But the problem arises when all opposing sides are treated equally when they are actually not equal. A good example would be like treating a scientific study equally against a conspiracy theory, like we can actually see so many times.

    • @Lifesizemortal
      @Lifesizemortal 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Journalism has become a profession of evil.

    • @deank7327
      @deank7327 2 ปีที่แล้ว +19

      ​@@Sabeximus This used to happen all the time. The thing is, that at least an attempt at objectivity meant that conflicting views had to stand on their own merits. Common conspiracy and extremism always had trouble standing on their own in a neutral venue. Active intentional bias in a venue often lends credibility to extreme views. It really doesn't matter if that bias is for or against. Especially with conspiracy theories, clear bias often serves to reinforce the bases of a conspiracy for those who support it, while at least the attempt at objectivity largely discredits through opacity.

  • @garyfrancis6193
    @garyfrancis6193 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1184

    It’s weird to hear young people discussing events during my lifetime as history as if it were the Trojan War.

    • @CannonRaw
      @CannonRaw 2 ปีที่แล้ว +79

      I find it'll be interesting to see how the next generations do. Like I have memories of my grandparents sharing stories of their experiences 1940s forward. So what happens when oral history becomes that of lore and written history?

    • @Jimraynor45
      @Jimraynor45 2 ปีที่แล้ว +47

      @@CannonRaw Everything will be forgotten and nothing will be learned.

    • @medexamtoolsdotcom
      @medexamtoolsdotcom 2 ปีที่แล้ว +59

      And of course everything that define the currently young people's youth, will one day be old as well. There will also come a day when pokemon is a "classic fiction" from "an ancient civilization", like Aesop's fables are today.

    • @voxnewman
      @voxnewman 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Yeah, I dunno. I didn't get that feeling from his video. I think it's possible that you're projecting this idea on him, or exaggerating.

    • @alface935
      @alface935 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Jimraynor45 Well Yes But This Will Only Happend When The Sun Destroys Earth

  • @markhuffman7516
    @markhuffman7516 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +98

    This is an excellent piece. I have been in broadcast journalism for over 50 years, 10 years at the Associated Press during the 1970s, and I have seen the changes as they happened.

    • @georgekosko5124
      @georgekosko5124 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      You should write a book mister.

  • @leftcoaster67
    @leftcoaster67 ปีที่แล้ว +81

    There's a reason Walter was probably one of the most trusted News Anchor on TV at the time. This was a guy who actually went to Vietnam to see what was happening. He covered Operation Torch in WWII, Flew in Bombing raids in a B-17, he was reporting on some of the biggest actions of the war. The only time you could see unbias is he was visibly shaken and choked up with the Kennedy Assassination. He also couldn't hide his enthusiasm with the Space Program, because he knew how historic those missions were.

    • @calkelpdiver
      @calkelpdiver 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Uncle Walter was a steady voice and hand in News/Journalism at that time. He leaned left, but kept his bias out of his reporting. He knew he had to be an unbiased referee.
      And yes, Reagan's repeal of the "Fairness Doctrine" set all of this in motion and the result is what we have today. Behind Reagan on this was Rupert Murdoch, who had been kicked out of his native Australia and then U.K. for his Yellow Journalism and Ultra-Conservative biases in news.
      I'm old enough to remember when the nightly news was "boring" and that Journalism had some type of ethics and integrity. As usual, once money got into the equation everything got fouled up.
      I consider myself a Moderate Independent who favors the Left. I believe in personal and fiscal responsibility, and also having regulations in place to keep things on a level playing field and to protect the general public. I think Social programs are needed, but also I don't want government (or religion) controlling my life. It is about balance between the two extreme views, that way everyone can benefit but also prosper due to their own efforts.
      Finally, very good job going over this subject. You did so in a very balanced manner.

    • @Loyaltoafault210
      @Loyaltoafault210 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Yes but so many on both sides were shaken up with Kennedy despite their views.

    • @KatzenjammerKid61
      @KatzenjammerKid61 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Baloney.

    • @michaelfogarty9806
      @michaelfogarty9806 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      Sadly I don't think Walter could get hired by a news network today.

    • @Brother_Piner
      @Brother_Piner 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Walter literally said you can’t be a journalist without being liberal. He was a partisan, too, just better at hiding it. The only reason things have changed is because the big news corps don’t decide the narrative anymore, due to the Internet. They’re so brazen because they’re lashing out at anyone who dares challenge their power.

  • @fish6911
    @fish6911 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1545

    It's amazing seeing old interviews from 20, 30 years ago. They actually ask real questions to people, as if they want to learn something from them or get information. It seems alien compared to the interview theater today.

    • @cagneybillingsley2165
      @cagneybillingsley2165 2 ปีที่แล้ว +74

      because iq has been trending downwards instead of up as is commonly believed. the iq tests are routinely updated for the "modern era", ie the standards are reduced

    • @urphakeandgey6308
      @urphakeandgey6308 2 ปีที่แล้ว +110

      That's why podcasts have gotten so popular. They fill this niche. I'm not saying they're perfect and quality varies, but it's a breath of fresh air compared to cable news/interviews.

    • @garymericano
      @garymericano 2 ปีที่แล้ว +40

      Sorry, they only asked questions that seemed legitimate. For example 18 years ago (fairly close to your 20-30 year range) John Kerry and George Dubya Bush were running against eachother for president of the United States. They both went to yale (Kerry 62-66, bush 64-68) and while there they were both members of the sacrifice and elite Skull and Bones Society. Only 1 journalist bothered to ask them about this and did not press them when they brushed it off, saying "if we told you it wouldn't be a secret".
      All the cotton candy questions asked during the rest of the campaign season are damning indictments of the media being fraudulent back then as well.

    • @4CardsMan
      @4CardsMan 2 ปีที่แล้ว +21

      They stopped because politicians figured out they did didn't have to answer the questions and could simply plow through with their own sound bite. A classic was George Wallace on one of the Sunday interview shows. The interviewers asked probing questions, but didn't lay a glove on him.

    • @a54109
      @a54109 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@4CardsMan George Wallace was a great man.

  • @The_gaming_gazimon
    @The_gaming_gazimon 2 ปีที่แล้ว +38

    i would GLADLY pay for access to a news agency that delivers news like this

  • @R005t3r
    @R005t3r ปีที่แล้ว +122

    Thank you Mr. Chapman for reminding me that this did actually exist at one time. Ethics, integrity and accountability all swept away by political expedience and entitlement.

    • @-Subtle-
      @-Subtle- 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      I think you might benefit from reading Asimov's full piece "Cult of Ignorance." He was referring to news media.
      I regret to inform you that it was always biased.

    • @R005t3r
      @R005t3r 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@-Subtle- Thank you. I certainly will.

    • @abominationdesolation8322
      @abominationdesolation8322 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@-Subtle- The media has been controlled by the same people for millennia. It's a trade passed down to their children and so-on. All the techniques were invented in Rome, Egypt, and Babylon.

  • @xavierhernandezpena5644
    @xavierhernandezpena5644 ปีที่แล้ว +31

    I'm 70 and from the age of 6 or 7 watched the NBC Evening News at 6 every evening. Really admired the demeanor of Chet Huntley and David Brinkley. I can say that I am a witness to the many changes in journalism style in print, radio,TV and now the web, but it was not until I came across your analysis that I was able to put everything more in context. Keep-up your journalistic professionalism.

  • @Rudenbehr
    @Rudenbehr 2 ปีที่แล้ว +853

    Your strive for honesty and integrity in the presentation of information is something that cannot often be bought or trained. Love your work Ryan Chapman!

    • @cosettapessa6417
      @cosettapessa6417 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Agree!

    • @thisisaname5589
      @thisisaname5589 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Unfortunately, Walter Cronkite was pretty crooked, too. And there was, in fact, a widespread communist conspiracy in America. The Soviets themselves admitted it, after the collapse.

    • @termitreter6545
      @termitreter6545 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      So you dont trust main stream media, but some random dude on youtube? A guys that doesnt just report, but actively interpretes information, which is a pretty big difference? Even if he is trying to be as honest as possible, his interpretation of events will be biased.
      IMO thats the bigger issue than any increase in media-bias. People seem increasingly bad at judging the trustworthiness of media. Social media made it so much worse.

    • @benjipixel1438
      @benjipixel1438 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@termitreter6545 obviously your judgment is off... what this TH-camr is doing is extremely important. He is causing viewers to question what they hear-- even encouraging them to question him. Everything he says in his video is also applied to his video. thanks for questioning and thinking with your own mind

    • @termitreter6545
      @termitreter6545 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@benjipixel1438 Im not saying what he does is bad, and most american media does seem to decline in neutrality. Critical thinking is good. But beyond that he is still presenting a narrative in his videos.
      Im a bit weirded out that people say "I dont trust the media, but I trust you!", despite not actually knowing the guy personally.
      That reminds me of conspiracy theorists that say the media lies, but then trust alex jones.
      When the reality is more like, "90% of the factual reporting in mainstream media is good, but question the narratives", and "alex jones lies 95% of the time".

  • @meatbyproducts
    @meatbyproducts 2 ปีที่แล้ว +571

    The thing that most people fail to pay attention to about news from the 50s and 60s is what stories were selected. The bias was not in the reporting of what stories they published, but in what stories they chose to publish. An anchors bias or a channels bias is now on full display instead of hidden in the production room.

    • @unknownsword9042
      @unknownsword9042 2 ปีที่แล้ว +14

      Of course they were chosen. It wasn't like one or two interesting things happened each day to talk about.

    • @meatbyproducts
      @meatbyproducts 2 ปีที่แล้ว +104

      @@unknownsword9042 you miss the point of my comment. Their bias was in the choices made.

    • @meatbyproducts
      @meatbyproducts 2 ปีที่แล้ว +68

      @FUQ CENSORSHIP STASI I worked in media and this is exactly how it was.

    • @arminius504
      @arminius504 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      That has only gotten worse and more blatant. The whole narrative that white men are on average more problematic or dangerous is based on this. If you look at the facts the whole media narrative crumbles (and it is the opposite of what they are telling people) but their insanely selective reporting (omitting stories, motives etc. that go against the narrative) has created a „reality“ in which we now all live and policies are pushed based on that false reality and questioning that „reality“ is not allowed. Truth and facts don’t really matter. Media narrative and Story selection is far more important.

    • @nevisysbryd7450
      @nevisysbryd7450 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      "If I had my choice I would kill every reporter in the world, but I am sure we would be getting reports from Hell before breakfast." William T. Sherman

  • @tenaciousviking
    @tenaciousviking 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

    As a lifelong broadcaster, and instructor for 33 years, including journalism, I applaud you for such an accurate summary of 20th century news reporting. Thank you.

  • @backbeat3254
    @backbeat3254 ปีที่แล้ว +94

    This is almost like your whole channel in a nutshell. It's just brilliant.
    Find a few nice comments, and write them down somewhere. What you're doing is difficult, and you're going to feel discouraged and burned out. But what you're doing is important and unique. Keep going, Ryan!
    Unfortunately, I can't afford to support you no Patreon at the moment. I'm sorry about that.
    I really do love your videos. I can't think of anyone who is trying so hard to be objective about important issues at the moment.

  • @nirad8026
    @nirad8026 2 ปีที่แล้ว +521

    You're quickly becoming one of my favorite creators. This sort of rational, unbiased explanation is precisely what today's media lacks, whether mainstream or social.

    • @stevesmithy5644
      @stevesmithy5644 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      He is super biased against McCarthy who was right about communists

    • @vintageinidierocker
      @vintageinidierocker 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      He become one of favorite TH-cam creator, but unbiased is strench to me because everything has bias. Uncertainly the 50's and 60's standards of reporting is some thing I will prefer to what CNN and others are now, but there are issue with what they classified as objective. Also some issues that ful blown concern today like how reporter don't question government reports and other institutions reports were also a concern at that time as it now.

    • @termitreter6545
      @termitreter6545 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      I think theres reasonsto be concerned about the journalistic integrity of american media, but how do you know this channel is unbiased and any more neutral than CNN or FOX? Its just some random guy.

    • @nirad8026
      @nirad8026 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@termitreter6545 The way he speaks, the terms and adjectives he uses, the deconstruction. He is not trying to implicate you into believing in a certain way, he's just saying "I think it was like this, because..." and then gives apparent evidence. He's not hiding stuff, speaks straightforwardly, similarly to the news in precisely that era.

    • @nirad8026
      @nirad8026 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@vintageinidierocker That is relativization and an unfalsifiable statement. It's like saying "not everyone is perfect" or "everyone makes mistakes". You told me nothing of value by telling me everyone is biased. You can't put CNN and this guy on the same "plateau of bias" even. And indeed, objective reality is always at least slightly obscured by the limits of language, culture etc.

  • @manwithouteyes
    @manwithouteyes 2 ปีที่แล้ว +194

    I had a boss a long time ago tell me, "Once you remove emotion, all that's left is professionalism." This nugget of advice has served me well for many years in dealing with people of differing viewpoints in my field.

    • @Gandhi_Physique
      @Gandhi_Physique 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      What field is that? And I don't agree with that statement. Without empathy, you're just an ass. A mixture of logic and emotion are both important, though some are unable to properly mediate their emotions which may lead to issues. So.. maybe I disagree depending on the situation. Ironically, sometimes the most logical approach would be to act with emotion.

    • @stellaoltre3572
      @stellaoltre3572 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      In journalism maybe, in day-to-day life that sounds more like sociopathy.

    • @highroller-jq3ix
      @highroller-jq3ix ปีที่แล้ว +6

      +Justin Well, if your profession revolves around emotion, then that would be an unprofessional way to proceed. That's the problem with pithy cliches.

    • @manwithouteyes
      @manwithouteyes ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@highroller-jq3ix sorry I don't work in the arts

    • @highroller-jq3ix
      @highroller-jq3ix ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@manwithouteyes Nor do health care providers, or child care providers, or elder care providers, or social workers, or therapists, or children's educators, yet emotional connection is central to each of those professions. You kind of thought you had a gotcha because you're sort of a doofus, right?

  • @valcolon16
    @valcolon16 ปีที่แล้ว +63

    Great video! Only problem I had was that when it came to American foreign policy papers like the New York Times and the Washington Post were paramount in having the public be complicit in American foreign policy. For the most part, even in the 40s, 50s, and 60s, they would take the state department's line at face value and not be interrogative of these issues. This changed briefly after Watergate but has returned to the norm in recent years.

    • @toomanyhobbies2011
      @toomanyhobbies2011 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Both of those papers have been leftist propaganda sheets since the rise of Communism.

    • @mandyharewood886
      @mandyharewood886 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I'm going to have to watch it again, but I do think I recall his having qualified his statements with "mostly" and "for the most part".
      But yes, I am from the Caribbean, and just this morning I was talking to my son about that very issue - how Americans have been raised to see through the lens of "American interests" alone.
      I was very young, but I do remember how Henry Kissinger and American foreign policy was presented to the world as unquestionable. Where else as a pre-teen would I have acquired this image of Kissinger as a superstar except through watching the world news segment on television?
      I saw a clip today in which he, after leaving office, stated in a most cavalier manner that human rights were deemed secondary to American interests at the time. I see no reason to doubt him on that, considering the prevailing attitude I encounter in comments sections such as these.
      Comments such as, "You can't make an omelette without breaking a few eggs." Imagine civilians in Laos, Cambodia etc. being brushed off as "eggs"! Whoever made Americans believe, in a religious sort of way, that they alone should determine what kind of omelette should be made?
      That term "American lives" is presented as though these lives are more important than any other lives, in a much more emphatic way than can be explained by a natural affinity for your own. It's more dismissive of other lives than is normal.
      I doubt this attitude was cultivated in the days of Kissinger. It appears to be more deep-rooted than that. It's engrained in the psyche. We just don't enter into their consciousness.
      The average American does not think we are entitled to pursue our own interests or even that we have interests at all.
      I use the word "think" but I don't think they do this thinkingly. They just don't spare us a thought. It's like we're really eggs or something.
      And having been raised on American television, most unthinking Caribbean people aligned themselves with the narratives. American foreign policy was unquestioned.
      So that most of us, without one thought, welcomed Ronald Reagan's invasion of Grenada as a natural rescue mission. Well, my prime minister did support it, so there was that too, I suppose. But mostly, our people did see America as "a shining light on a hill", with a mandate to fix the world's problems by remaking the world in its image.
      Thankfully, that is changing, slowly but surely.

  • @totalwar57
    @totalwar57 ปีที่แล้ว +208

    I’m a liberal and I learned a lot from this. Thank you for explaining this subject as objectively as possible.
    It’s very difficult to trust any news sources. The bias from left wing networks and bias from right wing networks is ridiculous.
    The constant commentary and “panels of experts” to discuss mundane things is truly beyond me.
    And the plethora of opinion hosts on both sides who spin stories to fit a narrative is truly sad.

    • @malcolmfreeman7802
      @malcolmfreeman7802 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      hmmm i listen to Radio NZ (RNZ) radio - its a publicly (govt) funded station its neutral but ive often heard it called left by right wingers including a friend who said the best radio in USA was PBS (ironically a public and private funded station) the similarity is theres no advertising . my friend listened to !ZB talkback -which considered rightwing - when the host he listened to resigned he was "forced" to listen to RNZ he begrudgingly thought it was a good station .lol
      What you forget is left means progress and right means conserve - in a society that wants to get better its as good as saying good and bad

    • @PhxVanguard
      @PhxVanguard ปีที่แล้ว +22

      ​@malcolm freeman progress doesn't necessarily mean get better. Racial eugenics and segregation were literally the vanguard of social progressives in the 30s, 40s and 50s. American progressives still hold Margaret Sanger in high esteem.

    • @levis503
      @levis503 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      So true Sanger was a die hard eugenics pioneer. She wanted to eradicate "colors" the deaf dumb and blind. Anyone she thought was not a good candidate to reproduce. Absolutely disgusting. Oh BTW to people that don't know. She is the founder of planned parenthood.

    • @asuperstraightpureblood
      @asuperstraightpureblood ปีที่แล้ว +15

      With the exception of fox News, everything is blatantly left leaning. That includes cinema, commercials and pop music all pushing the same vibes. I hear this "admission" by liberals often and it gives me a chuckle.

    • @southerncross4956
      @southerncross4956 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      totalwars57, I am a conservative and agree with you honest observations.

  • @keyman6689
    @keyman6689 2 ปีที่แล้ว +452

    As a kid I can recall when TV news had an opinion section toward the end of the broadcast. Now the whole thing is opinion to varying degrees. It's not really news anymore. I hope more and more people see your video and start demanding journalistic integrity. It's supposed to be a watchdog and not a propaganda machine.

    • @Durzo1259
      @Durzo1259 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      It blows my mind that I've expressed my disgust with modern media to friends, who basically replied "What are you talking about? All I see are facts."
      They don't even _attempt_ to sound objective anymore. It's all emotionally-driven children using the most extreme, loaded, emotionally-charged language possible to get you as worked up as possible for exactly one viewpoint.
      Meanwhile they won't believe me when I point out that practically all MSM have been caught red-handed blatantly editing video footage and interviews to show you the exact opposite of what actually happened.

    • @keyman6689
      @keyman6689 2 ปีที่แล้ว +25

      @@Durzo1259 Yes. The editing of Trump's Charlottesville speech is a prime example. More people need to see the truth in this video. News is not at all like it used to be. And it's not just seeing facts thru the lens of a particular political bias, it's taking pieces of fact, twisting, omitting and reshaping it into a narrative to tell us what to think and how to feel.

    • @nevisysbryd7450
      @nevisysbryd7450 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      It was always a propaganda machine. These sorts of companies are inherently incentivized to be the controllers of information on behalf of those in power, rather than a check against them.

    • @Durzo1259
      @Durzo1259 2 ปีที่แล้ว +26

      ​@@keyman6689 I was hesitant to bring that up because the second you mention media lies against Tr-mp, all people do is say "No way, I hate Tr-mp so it has to be true!" and refuse to even look into it. I watched for 4 years as they blatantly edited footage and interviews to make him say the exact opposite of what he actually said, or just keep repeating claims about him based solely "an anonymous source claims".
      Sometimes I feel like the only person on Earth who questions claims made in support of my bias as much as those that go against it. Nobody seems to see the bigger picture when you operate on this ideology that "a lie isn't a lie if it's in furtherance of a greater truth."

    • @CPSPD
      @CPSPD 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Durzo1259 I think you might be missing the forest, not for the trees, but for a different forest. The first one is misleading and fabricated editing shifting opinions, and the other is the actual unedited rhetoric and imagery phrased by figures to receive specific reactions and incrementally shape peoples worldviews. The rhetoric and strategies used by Trump and especially Steve Bannon participated in both, receiving the first and dealing the second. Do not downplay it.

  • @spydude38
    @spydude38 2 ปีที่แล้ว +225

    One book I had to read in College was, "Amusing Ourselves to Death", by Neil Postman. Written in the early 1980s, this book explains how public discourse has been shaped by the medium in which it is used. Starting with smoke signals, to flags, to the written word, to the telegraph, then radio and by then in the book, television. An excellent read, you learn that as the medium changed to the television that more and more so, entertainment became preferred over all else. Although Postman never saw what became of cable television and the internet, after reading his book, you will understand that he was spot on. Its all about entertainment to shape opinion, with bias intentionally used as the tool. Journalistic integrity as my age knew it hasn't existed for decades. Our society and the world around us today exhibits the results of that.

    • @Hadvar
      @Hadvar 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      A mentor of mine lended me that book, and I was quite intrigued by its message. It was one of the things that started to open my eyes to how our society works.

    • @nevisysbryd7450
      @nevisysbryd7450 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Your age group never knew it. They were no better then than they are now. We had less access to tools and information to expose their fraud back then.

    • @blackhawk7r221
      @blackhawk7r221 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Took a turn for the current surreal after the FCC’s Fairness Act of 1949 was rescinded back in 1987.

    • @titsbitchmcgee7502
      @titsbitchmcgee7502 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Hence why so many late night shows have a political angle to them.

    • @josepha.r5839
      @josepha.r5839 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Yes! got Postman because it was kind of 'underground'. (Not sure that's the word I want.) There are others out that I need to read.

  • @josephinewhite6224
    @josephinewhite6224 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    This was one of the most informative and interesting posts I've seen . I lived through all of the shows you included and now refuse to watch any "news" on television because of how it's become, all the yelling and talking over each other and vitriolic behavior, not to mention the obscene language some feel free to use. News today is a circus full of lying, biased performers. The public can not believe anyone anymore.

    • @CoralCopperHead
      @CoralCopperHead 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      "News today is a circus full of lying, biased performers."
      It's *_always_* been like this, I'm sorry you never noticed.

  • @josepha.r5839
    @josepha.r5839 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Damn this is good! I'm going on 76 in a couple of weeks and most of this resonates. Now, in the mid / late 50s I couldnt' perceive subjective vs. objective very well, except for one instance to which I'll return shortly. But your analysis is spot-on, far clearer for me as we moved into the 60s abd 70s. Excellent analysis. Also, I remember when Cronkite delievered his speech on tv in 1968. It was stunning to hear and so many across the many were grateful for his bravery coming against the was. It was so clear in his voice and look on his face that he had gone through tough self-serching. I was so struck by it. Never have forgotten it. I also remember Cronkite and his presentation of the election and George Wallace. I remember his voice, face.
    The one instance that I cite above is when Edward R. Murrow's Harvest of Shame was broadcast in 1960. I was 14 at the time and lived in the Central Valley of CA (Fresno County) where cotton was still king and where poverty was rife among African-Americans, poor whites, and Hispanics who toiled in the fields. (Including my mother who picked cotton to help bring my brother, sister, and I from the Azores.) Although the presentation centered mainly on the vegetable fields of the nation it was stunning and so incredibly bold that even a 14 year-old could understand ... and had seen time and again around him what Murrow was talking about. Though Murrow's journalism was certainly not 'main-steam' for the time it certainly had an effect that, slowly and with the help of others such as Chavez, helped change public views on the plight of these people.
    I would like to see possbily a video on him and others who, usually stating his/her 'bias', had the courage to do so. And, as others below have mentioned, hope you keep them coming. I've subscribed.

    • @wildfire9280
      @wildfire9280 ปีที่แล้ว

      That’s an excellent example and I believe it makes a strong case against the arguments of left-wing activists at the time of the necessity to move away from objectivity, at least the form it was in post-McCarthy.

  • @stanleyromanowski9816
    @stanleyromanowski9816 2 ปีที่แล้ว +93

    When I was a kid, the local evening news was an half hour long, followed by half an hour of national news. Reporters just delivered the facts of the stories without editorializing every story or expressing their personal opinions, or repeating the same story 6 or 8 times per program for 6 or 8 days in a row.

    • @kevincousino2276
      @kevincousino2276 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Stop watching cable 24hr news

    • @vinegarpisser2992
      @vinegarpisser2992 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      The editorializing already happened in the selection of how and what is a “fact” so while it did look and sound different it really wasn’t much of at all different.

    • @dreed7312
      @dreed7312 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      No they didn't, you were a kid and had no idea what they were talking about.

    • @shadeburst
      @shadeburst ปีที่แล้ว

      The official name for that is brainwashing and at the end of it you will confess to crimes you didn't commit and couldn't have.

    • @shadeburst
      @shadeburst ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@dreed7312 Some kids are smarter than others.

  • @MrStrikecentral
    @MrStrikecentral 2 ปีที่แล้ว +41

    This should be required viewing for all American citizens. Imagine a time in which journalistic integrity was actually a thing. Instant sub.

    • @MackNcD
      @MackNcD ปีที่แล้ว +2

      You don’t have to imagine, you can watch old news reports right here on YT!

  • @Tekorekore
    @Tekorekore ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I’m rewatching this a second time. One of my favourite videos on TH-cam currently.

  • @williamdejeffrio9701
    @williamdejeffrio9701 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    This was EXCELLENT!!! I am 67 y.o. and I remember when news was far more balanced. It is distressful to see what's happening now and your report provides excellent detail about what happened. I didn't realize old Ronald was instrumental in creating the mess we have today. This report was detailed, informative and reassuring (to see a young person do solid research and provide such a well-informed essay with a commitment to facts to support a viewpoint). Many thanks!
    ...by the way you won me over. Liked and subscribed!

  • @nyariimani7281
    @nyariimani7281 2 ปีที่แล้ว +176

    It was actually your piece on Orwell that made me think that maybe the world has always been the way it is now. Maybe everyone has always been wrapped in a story, detached from reality. One of Orwell's quotes from your video was about valiant soldiers being portrayed as cowards, and battles that didn't happen portrayed with champions and heroes (something close to that). It's interesting to hear that there was at least some news that was still trying to give facts without spin.

    • @marcusdavenport1590
      @marcusdavenport1590 2 ปีที่แล้ว +29

      This video is inaccurate sadly.
      He provided examples of the emotionless journalism which many prefer.
      However, these journalist were very biased and they shaped opinion by the information the left out /omitted and what they didn't cover.
      For instance you can find the video of Walter Cronkite celebrating with a secret society... bragging about how he kept them secret or the country would have been outraged etc...
      He was a Socialist who acted impartial when in reality he was anything but...
      The media was so dishonest which is why Fox news was created.
      I don't love Fox News but they are leaps and bounds better than other outlets.
      This is not a compliemnt to Fox... simply pointing out how terrible the other outlets are.
      If you'd like we can look at any important story for the last 8 years and see which side was accurate.
      Covington Catholic kids
      Economic issues
      Trump impeachments
      Trump fake rape allegations
      Trump being a racist
      Central Park 5
      Kyle Rittenhouse
      Climate Change
      Covid data on lockdowns and masks
      Trump called white nationalist and white supremacist "good people"
      Literallly almost any story that shaped publilc opinion.... I can confidently say that I'd put money that the media got 95+% wrong...
      So we can look at any 10 stories... and see if the media was wrong...
      What's worse is you have to read from all of them... because that's how you debunk the narrative they are pushing.. you have to read their articles... then piece together 20 different sources just to find the truth.
      With Covid I had to read countless studies and see why some studies were not reliable etc...
      With Trump I'd have to watch entire rally speeches just to find out what was actually said.
      But unfortunately people have been told over and over for decades that it's "both sides" or that both sides are evil, etc....
      One side is clearly more the bad guy... Republicans are weak... Democrats are evil.

    • @joelanderson5285
      @joelanderson5285 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@marcusdavenport1590 Marcus how would you define your politics? I'm guessing left leaning.

    • @marcusdavenport1590
      @marcusdavenport1590 2 ปีที่แล้ว +21

      @@joelanderson5285 in a libertarian. My background is in economics. I was a Marxist for over a decade
      In reality one side is oblivious to the truth on pretty much every issue.
      The other side has people who have varying levels of knowledge.
      When you find out you're being lied to you move to the right naturally.

    • @exituscaeli959
      @exituscaeli959 2 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      @@marcusdavenport1590 It was pretty well known Cronkite leaned left in private. And no media was perfect. But their were rails and lines on the highway then that don’t exist now. Most journalist felt their reporting should not reveal their opinion. It was a badge of honor.

    • @marcusdavenport1590
      @marcusdavenport1590 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@exituscaeli959 I'm saying that this was a myth.
      They did a good job not letting you know their stance so you didn't know they were lying to you and didn't know that you even had to question them...
      They would intentionally not give you enough information and they'd ignore topics to benefit the left.

  • @lavendarcrash2941
    @lavendarcrash2941 2 ปีที่แล้ว +225

    As a kid in the late 80's I remember being bored out of my mind by the MacNeil/Lehrer News Hour on PBS. As I grew up I began to appreciate more the quality of their reporting and the marked difference in that program, sponsored locally by a utility company, and the news programs with national corporation ads playing in the breaks. A steady diet of PBS - who seem to have stuck close to the fairness doctrine - is definitely part of why I grew up with the healthy critical thinking skills I have now.

    • @SineN0mine3
      @SineN0mine3 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Unfortunately national broadcasters interest's run directly counter to commercial broadcasters, particularly when they are the only ones willing to discuss the state and quality of journalism in real terms. As a result they are continually lobbied agaisnt by the powerful media lobbies and right wing parties with close ties to the murdochs and other media barrons will do anything in their power to dismantle public broadcasters to increase their monopoly over news.

    • @athom716
      @athom716 ปีที่แล้ว +23

      PBS does deserve a lot of credit for their journalism. From the Newshour to Frontline documentaries to broadcasting international news in otherwise parochial markets, they take great pains to do good journalism. It's bananas that PBS gets a rep as too liberal, when it is largely funded by the federal government and of course, viewers like you.

    • @johncatto9454
      @johncatto9454 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      I agree with your sentiments about PBS. They are definitely the best source for Unbiased reporting. At times I do question their choice of stories and believe if there is any bias, it is there.

    • @Magnulus76
      @Magnulus76 ปีที่แล้ว +16

      Even PBS New Hour isn't as good as it used to be, and reflects the biases of its funders alot more, as compared to decades ago. It's still some of the best journalism on television, however.

    • @hurch1915
      @hurch1915 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      @@athom716 Yep, all of my conservative friends (who think they're centrists) think PBS is a totally left-wing organization. I consider myself pretty middle of the road, as far as politics goes, but of course, they all think I'm a complete "liberal". They like to use the term "liberal" as if it were a slur of some kind. They look at me sideways when I mention that Thomas Jefferson and those guys were "liberals". Damned liberals!

  • @jorgemartin3057
    @jorgemartin3057 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    This channel is gold. For years I've been looking for this sort of content, wondering why it didn't exist. Keep doing what you are doing, and I hope that you continue modelling your videos in a similar line as those old new reporters.

  • @jeffatwood9417
    @jeffatwood9417 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I really do appreciate your journalistic analysis. I remember in high school (85-89) that I realized I’d be in the last generation of the “old school” as well as the first generation of the “new school” ethics. I realized it through fighting, though. We used to be able to duke it out without a real intent to destroy…mostly just dominate. By the time of my junior year, however, the movie Colors had come out and everybody seemed to want to prove themselves as gangstas. Guns started to be worn and egos needed to show off.
    The distraction of media to manipulate the minds of a populace was long in the making. News papers in the 1800s were mostly artistic writing highly biased propaganda. Academic journalism began with “just the facts, man,” kinda ethics, as you detail quite well.
    Raygun’s policy that you brought up came along with new cable TV 24/7 programming capabilities. He was no stranger to mythologizing the Truth…and I’m surprised you never brought up the social impact from the “War of the Worlds” broadcast that terrified people. The realization of how powerful “fake” news might be could no longer be ignored at that point, don’t you think?
    After 80s TV lifestyle and sitcom series cultivated social identities, the end of the decade saw a different type nonprofit boom. We Are The World “charity” foundations began using music festivals on the image of Woodstock to manipulate a restructuring of elite wealth (aaaaasssss China refined its corruption tactics).
    Why am I saying this? Because DARE and the Nixon-Raygun War on Drugs became the nonprofit model for crusades of Wars on cancer, obesity, homelessness, hunger, etc. Add to this the birth of Reality TV, and we can see the influences to the new millennium.
    Trump being crowned King of Reality TV by the end of the decade only seeded his public popular image for presidency later. He brought that corruption of gaslit reality to to our white house, which Pelosi and Schumer all too gladly embraced. 911, a state of emergency, cannot be ignored as Facebook and the birth of Social Media evolved into Revolution stimulus machines.
    Finding reporters looking for factual neutrality is so difficult today Science must be filtered for biases. Market Interests in pathetic extravagances and unscrupulous sales ethics have corrupted the logical faculties of human groups.
    You say “interpretation” of what it is to be American is what varies to create conflict. Being merely idealism, identity joins this variable…again, as you detail. Yet, I would also look into the quality of applying the “American ideal” into a real manifestation. I feel you might say the variability of the ideal inhibits the manifestation of varying forms by which the ideal may be applied. I would also add that the inherent tribalism, which you mention in the communal animal that is Man, reminds me of the Chaos movement refusing to allow any other alternative to what was being protested against to be heard.

  • @thomaspinney4020
    @thomaspinney4020 2 ปีที่แล้ว +96

    Having lived through this period, I have to say that this video is spot on. The transfer of news to the network entertainment divisions forced them to put ratings (and therefore profits) ahead of any other consideration. Rating are increased by making viewers afraid or outraged. We all look for that echo chamber that confirms our own biases

    • @ZeroKitsune
      @ZeroKitsune 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      This is the best comment I've seen in this entire section and is dead-on. They just want people angry or scared, that's what gets people tuning back in. It's like a political drama, only they get to base it off real events and make people believe their lives hang in the balance of watching it.
      Unplugging from all that is the healthiest choice I ever made. Even if I wanted to keep up with all those events...you just can't do it that way, they lie and stretch the truth too much to get useful information.

    • @theboombody
      @theboombody 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I was a fan of Fox News for that reason. But I got tired of listening to how wrong the other side was ALL the time. Even Michael Savage once said, "A broken watch is right twice a day." I don't want to listen to far-left or far-right news anymore when it never attributes any wrongs to its own side, or to something other than the "enemy." So I quit watching Fox News.

    • @yanmak2363
      @yanmak2363 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I remember my English teacher wrote on the board 'News is Entertainment', then wrote it in reverse 'Entertainment is News'.
      Palindrome

    • @MackNcD
      @MackNcD ปีที่แล้ว

      I hear this as the reason for why news is the way it is all the time. There may be truth in it to an extent, but it completely ignores the control aspect. If this model were the truth, than the ms media would probably have slightly above dirt poor ratings. It’s not what sells best, it’s what is most important for those who own it to be predominant thought forms, and it’s then also important that it is viewed. Unfortunately for the ms news media, a genuine nature is more discernible then they’d like, and it sells a million times better.

  • @JAMWITCH
    @JAMWITCH 2 ปีที่แล้ว +45

    Brilliant job, I'm heart broken to see objective old news papers. This explains why people used to connect staying informed with intelligence and why everyone used to have a newspaper in photos.

    • @ZeroKitsune
      @ZeroKitsune 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Now, if anything, I connect "staying informed" with people who are overly emotional and reactionary...I mean I doubt that's actually true for everyone but social media leads to believe it's true for a lot of people...

    • @coalkingryan881
      @coalkingryan881 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@ZeroKitsune basing society on social media is like basing the Earth on a remote Pacific island.

    • @theavidgamer6213
      @theavidgamer6213 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      ​@@coalkingryan881so much of the world is online today that this comparison just doesn't hold. I guess it depends on what social media you consume, but the internet has become a far better indicator of where society is going than before

    • @petercarney5995
      @petercarney5995 ปีที่แล้ว

      Thanks, Einstein.

  • @orangehoof
    @orangehoof ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Wow, Ryan. This was outstanding. I was born in 1957 and received by journalism degree in 1979. I worked in news for a year then my career took me in another direction.It's not that there were no opinions on television. There was an "editorial" or "opinion" segment at the end of the newscast with a 3-5 minute speech labelled "editorial" or "opinion" at the bottom of the screen so you knew it was not "news". News was meant to be a series of factual statements along with what the newsmakers said. There was still subtle propaganda in what was omitted or what was emphasized but it did not match the blatant opinionating we see today. News anchors and news reporters were ordered to leave their opinions out and "stick to the facts".
    What really changed journalism was Ronald Reagan. The media despised him and the animosity was clear but Reagan won large majorities anyway. It was explained that Reagan would engage in well-planned stops across the country where he was always surrounded by American flags, cheering throngs and up-tempo patriotic songs. If that sounds familiar, that's exactly how Donald Trump does it now. News reporters like Sam Donaldson would rip into Reagan in their reports but they were also showing the adoring crowd which provided positive optics before Donaldson ever began speaking.
    That's when journalists dropped all pretense off objectivity and became "advocates". They would just tell one side of the story, not both.
    You're correct that news had a blind spot in their objectivity regarding communism but you must remember the country needed a boogeyman to rally against to maintain order. That was Hitler in the 30s and 40s then the Soviets in the 50s, 60s and 70s.
    BTW, if you ever heard Sir Walter's radio commentaries, it was clear he was a hard-core leftist but he felt newspeople were to be informers, not persuaders so he tried to leave his opinions out of the newscasts. Today, it's largely the opposite. The New York Times has also changed from fact-tellers to opinionists. The defeat of the Fairness Doctrine set this in morion but, while there was a Fairness Doctrine, most broadcasters simply steered clear of controversial subjects like abortion, race or womens rights. The news was blander back then.

    • @briane173
      @briane173 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      _"There was still subtle propaganda in what was omitted or what was emphasized...."_ That's one thing that is not so subtle anymore. Biased news organizations display their colors less from what they report and how, and more by what they choose _NOT_ to report -- and the only way to get past this cheap method is to watch, read, and listen to literally _everything_ from every different news outlet. That takes a lot of time to devote to that much homework and I think most people aren't going to expend the effort, and that's one reason why silo journalism has proliferated the past 20 years or so. Just tell 'em what they wanna hear and leave out the stuff we _don't_ want them to hear and call it good.

    • @JT-rx1eo
      @JT-rx1eo 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@briane173oh yes. Even back in those old mid-century days when journalists were professional, conscientious and intellectually honest, they still on the whole were of similar left-of-center ideologically. Walter Cronkite even admitted this. And so subtle slanting inevitably occured.

    • @briane173
      @briane173 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@JT-rx1eo Thing I respected about Cronkite though was while he was doing his job one never sensed what his political bent was. He didn't bleed ideology. After he retired the gloves were off among the "star" TV journalists, and it's gotten steadily more and more over the top since.

  • @smit5983
    @smit5983 ปีที่แล้ว

    Watching this for a second time because I've found it so amazing. Love your work. I hope the channel continues to grow!

  • @supremepartydude
    @supremepartydude 2 ปีที่แล้ว +23

    Great job. The bias in mass media today is outrageous and unacceptable. We need commentary like this guy showing media bias.

  • @steveshirley2250
    @steveshirley2250 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Found your channel today and loving it. Sharing your content with everyone I couldnt share the facts with before.

  • @jasonreeves496
    @jasonreeves496 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    DUDE!!!!!!!!!!!!! Great work! I am late to the party, but I just had to express my admiration for piece of media that had me rewinding innumerable times just to pick up every friggen word; each was OBVIOUSLY chosen soooooo carefully. This video is GOLD and surpasses any effort that I have ever made, or ever saw/heard anybody else make in explaining how our media has evolved and the resultant changes in how each of us deals with our own countrymen regarding social/governmental issues of our time.
    Brother ........... PLEASE keep doin what yer doin! Kronkite would be proud!

  • @Sidera17
    @Sidera17 2 ปีที่แล้ว +112

    I went into journalism right as the age of Gawker was beginning and got out. Quickly. I love your analysis on all this! I’d love to see another on how social media has shaped journalism and propaganda, because we’re entering the age of what I call “Digital Populism,” for better or worse, and for the first time, technology is making decisions sometimes independent of humans.
    Fascinating stuff. Love this channel!

    • @slevinchannel7589
      @slevinchannel7589 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Anyway: Have you seen some videos of 'Telltale'? Its really interesting. I say this just cause it's heavily on my mind right now, so why not.
      Random question, yes, i know, but i just wanna hear peoples opinions on it. People-of-all-flavoos.

  • @toolgdskli2434
    @toolgdskli2434 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    The way Ryan delivers his points is like the unbiased reporter of the golden era.

    • @StaK_1980
      @StaK_1980 ปีที่แล้ว

      I think that was his whole point all along 🙂

  • @michaelvickery5547
    @michaelvickery5547 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Excellent, thank you. I am 71 years old and have seen everything you talk about and you are right on.

  • @d.carelli8036
    @d.carelli8036 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    You blew me away! What incredibly intelligent content! Bravo🎉

  • @infinityslibrarian5969
    @infinityslibrarian5969 2 ปีที่แล้ว +34

    Well done man, you've produced something genuinely of value here. I hope your channel does well

  • @DrFranklynAnderson
    @DrFranklynAnderson 2 ปีที่แล้ว +94

    I got a graphic design job at my local newspaper in mid-2016. I had no interest in the news, my motivation was the purest one possible-$3 more an hour. At the time I believed that there was bias in the media, but only the unconscious kind that was impossible to avoid. But it wasn’t long before I started noticing strange patterns in the state/national stories and op-eds-very specific wording, odd leaps of logic, sensationalized headlines, etc. Naturally curious, I starting googling, and-without a single shred of journalistic training-I was soon able to sus out misleading facts and half-truths with a five-minute web search. Things only got worse once our paper was bought out by a national chain, and the non-local news took up more and more pages. I could literally watch the narrative change in real time-I still remember having to put a “Doctors say Coronavirus is less dangerous and less common that the flu” article on the front page of a February 2020 issue and thinking at the time it was BS. Eventually, another corporate merger made my entire department redundant, and we all got laid off. Ever since, I don’t listen to _any_ corporate news source. I’ve seen how the sausage is made, and I don’t trust any of it anymore.

    • @MackNcD
      @MackNcD ปีที่แล้ว +1

      So you’re saying it’s a bit like an octopus in shape?

    • @DrFranklynAnderson
      @DrFranklynAnderson ปีที่แล้ว

      @@MackNcD Trying to parse your metaphor... a single body, with a thousand tentacles reaching out to all the local news outlets? I guess that's accurate, but it could describe any large corporation with tons of local franchises, like McDonalds or Target. Nationally-owned local newspapers at least have different names and the veneer of reporting on local news.

  • @dereklawr
    @dereklawr ปีที่แล้ว +14

    This is a really well-made video. One of the takeaways, for me, was that the news had been biased in the early 20th century, but then evolved into a 'golden age' of unbiased reporting. It makes me think that, despite differences in the medium (i.e. the internet vs. tv and radio), it could be possible to return to something like that. It won't happen overnight, nor did it happen quickly in the 20th century, but it did happen, and still could again.

    • @leftcoaster67
      @leftcoaster67 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Producers, and Editors, need to just report facts. Expose lies, and break the spin doctoring on all sides. Give people facts in an unbiased way and let people make their own decisions.

    • @willumbermarchant5510
      @willumbermarchant5510 26 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I think it unlikely, when there were 3 channels (1 or 2 in the UK) and you got your news from each at a certain time of day, they could afford to be honest. Now there is too much competition, they have to be racey, entertaining and most of all preach to their own choir. TV and print news are dying, and will need to become more and more extreme to keep the loyalty of their customers. Then it will just be the Internet left, and all will be madness.

  • @TroyLFullerton
    @TroyLFullerton ปีที่แล้ว

    Fascinating! I really enjoyed this. Thank you for such well-researched information!

  • @connerjoyce1451
    @connerjoyce1451 2 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    I like your contribution to the internet. Not sure why but it makes me feel calm that someone wants to point these sorts of things out. Must have been nice to get straight facts and live in a society that valued them.

    • @MackNcD
      @MackNcD ปีที่แล้ว +1

      We still do

  • @RN1441
    @RN1441 2 ปีที่แล้ว +43

    This was an excellent description of how things used to be, and how we got to where we are today. I was previously unaware of the introspection coming about as a result of the McCarthy years, and while I understand the desire to do better I think I would also call that a dangerous slippery slope in retrospect. We've gone from a press that will present the rantings of McCarthy and let their audience figure out for themselves that he's making things up, to a press that is happy to editorialize, suppress, or amplify based on their political leanings. To a press that has no crises of conscience over hiding stories that they want to be ignored, or omitting inconvenient facts. To a press that is focused on an outcome rather than reporting.

    • @katies6287
      @katies6287 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      No, if they are going to present the "rantings" of McCarthy, then they have a duty to tell the readers/viewers whether McCarthy has provided any evidence to back up his claims.

    • @JosephRussellStapleton
      @JosephRussellStapleton 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@katies6287 No.

    • @16m49x3
      @16m49x3 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      @@katies6287
      Isn't todays media enough evidence of his claims

    • @katies6287
      @katies6287 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@16m49x3 Evidence of RN1441 claims ?

    • @dragonhold4
      @dragonhold4 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@katies6287
      No. The press should have simply presented public figures who had counterarguments and let the public decide which was more credible.

  • @johnscales206
    @johnscales206 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thank you Ryan for making this video. This is one of my favourite you have made

  • @ALTERNATIVEMIXTAPES
    @ALTERNATIVEMIXTAPES ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I’ve been watching all of your videos and I still can’t identify what your position is on these subjects and that is awesome. Very well done.

  • @greasybumpkin1661
    @greasybumpkin1661 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    The irony of this video is that the old media wouldn't take this channel seriously and yet this, to the best of my ability to observe & analyse this, comes across as more objective or at least fair than any media I've seen in my lifetime.

  • @StormyMusic9
    @StormyMusic9 2 ปีที่แล้ว +21

    One of the best videos on the history of journalism objectivity I have seen. Good work on this and well done on your research! Really felt I have gained something from this video.

  • @johnviktora6014
    @johnviktora6014 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great show!!! Thank you, Ryan.

  • @robertortiz-wilson1588
    @robertortiz-wilson1588 ปีที่แล้ว

    This video blew my expectations! Thank you for putting this together.

  • @peterfmodel
    @peterfmodel 2 ปีที่แล้ว +130

    There has always been bias in media, but back in the 1950’s news was listing specific events and less opinion. The 21st century has been a century of opinion rather than listing of events.

    • @blackhawk7r221
      @blackhawk7r221 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Not between 1949 and 1987. The FCC’s Fairness Act was in effect.

    • @peterfmodel
      @peterfmodel 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @@blackhawk7r221 I suspect you are correct; the rot had really set in by the 2000’s but probably started well before that and could well have been 1987. My theory is the main reason is the decline of traditional main stream media, people get a lot of news from the internet and do not rely on papers and TV. With the reduction of revenue the production cost had to go down, so the quality went down as well. Opinion is very cheap to pump out, while news is more expensive.
      However the effect occurred in other countries as well, which are not subject to the FCC fairness doctrine, so there must have been other factors at work. In 2018 a journalist at Der Spiegel admitted that he had "falsified his articles on a grand scale", inventing facts, persons and quotations in at least 14 of his stories. The journalists name was Relotius.
      The UK Guardian is also well known for making up stories, between May and September 2018 the guardian made claims about Assange which provide to be false. The Journalist was Luke Harding, Dan Collyns, and Stephanie Kirchgaessner. They did the same two year prior. Not sure why the Guardian had it in for Assange, but it’s a good example of the media just making up stories.

    • @blackhawk7r221
      @blackhawk7r221 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@peterfmodel True words

    • @tunguska2370
      @tunguska2370 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      That why in the title it is "less"

  • @DeclanMBrennan
    @DeclanMBrennan 2 ปีที่แล้ว +46

    Very thought provoking. However I think there might be a middle ground between objectivity and activism. Objectivity often meant giving both sides of a question equal time regardless of merit and level of support and this caused problems with, for example, climate change where it gave the incorrect impression that science was very divided on this important issue.
    I think the middle ground is *facts based reporting* where quotes are always fact checked and there is a crystal clear dividing line between objective fact pieces and more activist opinion pieces.
    And to nurture a democracy so it has a long term future, *Critical Thinking* should be a mandatory subject in schools so people are more aware of situations where they are being manipulated and more aware of their inherent biases. Social biases get plenty of coverage but biases that cause us to misjudge information are even more important.

    • @jeffmorris5802
      @jeffmorris5802 ปีที่แล้ว

      That only works if the people doing the reporting actually care about what the facts are. The 1619 project at the NYT demonstrates that is obviously not the case.

    • @danreyn
      @danreyn ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Hard agree. Kids should be taught formal logic and it's common fallacies, statistics, numeracy (that's critical thinking applied to numbers), and mindfulness. It's one thing to say "teach them critical thinking" but so many teachers and politicians don't have it themselves and so couldn't guess what to teach. Those subjects are what forms the framework of critical thinking. If we can ensure every child is taught that, the world will get better.

    • @DeclanMBrennan
      @DeclanMBrennan ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@danreyn Hard agree with you also. Working out a syllabus with materials and training for teachers is key. Interestingly *Logic* had been one of the basic three building blocks subjects for a classical education in Europe for perhaps *1500 years* until relatively recently. *Rhetoric* was another one which was training for speech making but also clued one in to what tricks another speaker was using to manipulate his audience. The *Trivium* had to be completed before other subjects such as Geometry or even Music could be approached.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trivium

    • @keith6706
      @keith6706 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Okrent's Law: The pursuit of balance can create imbalance because sometimes something is true.

    • @lukedupont8564
      @lukedupont8564 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      In theory, maybe, but with the state of modern "fact checking," I have to disagree. Firstly, there are rarely ever true "facts", most complex issues being multifaceted, nuanced, and nobody really knowing the full truth of the matter, and secondly, attempts at "fact checking" generally amount to partisan arguments oversimplifying the argument, leaving out opposing views/facts/possibilities/nuance, and driving home a particular political narrative.

  • @user-fc7is6jo2e
    @user-fc7is6jo2e 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Outstandingly well researched and presented! I searched for this topic to answer a question that my very intelligent 76-year-old mother had. I had a general idea, but you really provided such a wonderful tool for communicating those very important concepts. Thank you!

  • @scacco1
    @scacco1 ปีที่แล้ว

    Good job Ryan! And thank you for putting an effort into presenting topics in an unbiased way.

  • @wheelsofmercury
    @wheelsofmercury 2 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    Very interesting video. It looks to me that the TV news stations back in the 50s/60's also seemed to have an air of class and professionalism that today's news sorely lacks.

  • @aimhigh3701
    @aimhigh3701 2 ปีที่แล้ว +49

    News and media in general used to be a one way street. Now it's an infinite multilane high way where random commentators (who often don't even live in your own country (or may be bots)) often get more attention for their comments on the media than the actual media itself. I believe its this difference between news today and news in the past that is the most striking and worth considering.
    Just take this comment for example. The video above is the media. But here you are engaging with the social element of the media. For some, my comment may be the key point they take away from this video which is kind of crazy considering the effort Ryan put into his video.
    We are social, imitative creatures who, despite what we like to believe, often prefer to be accepted by "the group" than stand up for truth. This is why social media and particularly social news media is so troubling. Back in the early days we thought that it would pave the way for truth, but all it really does is cultivate groupthink, imitation and incentivise conflict.

    • @nevisysbryd7450
      @nevisysbryd7450 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Any sort of news institution is always going be subjected to some of the greatest levels of pressure to aid and abet those with power. The nature of being an institution trusted to tell people what to believe, let alone value, in itself makes it among the least trustworthy institutions conceivable.

    • @nedames3328
      @nedames3328 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@nevisysbryd7450 Amazing how objective US media was up till Ronald Reagan's presidency then isn't it? Certainly the US's enemies never want to see that dedication to the facts make a comeback.

    • @ZeroKitsune
      @ZeroKitsune 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      This comment is very very true...social media can be a great thing, but it should never be mixed with politics, because it just leads to ridiculous levels of tribalism and groupthink. It's scary.

    • @nevisysbryd7450
      @nevisysbryd7450 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@ZeroKitsune Politics has always been tribalism and groupthink. Social media made it marginally more obvious.

    • @useodyseeorbitchute9450
      @useodyseeorbitchute9450 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      "where random commentators [...] often get more attention" If random commentators start to look like a serious competition to multi-billion dollar business, then this business must be doing something wrong.

  • @kristiyaniliev4002
    @kristiyaniliev4002 ปีที่แล้ว

    I just found the channel! Thank you! Very well done!

  • @howtoappearincompletely9739
    @howtoappearincompletely9739 ปีที่แล้ว

    That was a really good video. This is the first of yours I've watched, but I'm now subscribed to you on the strength of it.

  • @williamtrainor2091
    @williamtrainor2091 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    In a short presentation you have done remarkably well at describing the problem. Neil Postman wrote "Amusing ourselves to Death" in 1985 (one year after a remembrance lecture of 1984) describing entertainment and profit in the News industry. Internet also rewards eyeballs instead of circulation numbers for nutrient ads, so you have to see the outrage headlines before the Baseball scores. In recent years we have learned of Schadenfreude and Dunning-Kreuger and an unnamed amusement based on Outrage, similar to the others. We are no longer asked to wait patiently for Gunsmoke to hear Cronkite for 30 minutes we have 24 hour news that makes more money. No need for Seinfeld, Cheers or Gunsmoke, just keep watching that outrageous story over and over.

  • @ApplesOranges123
    @ApplesOranges123 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Thank you for your thoughtful and balanced analysis, Ryan. Your service to society is appreciated. Dan

  • @isaacmaxham6804
    @isaacmaxham6804 ปีที่แล้ว

    That was a superb presentation. Thank you.

  • @pierrelabounty9917
    @pierrelabounty9917 ปีที่แล้ว

    Good Ryan. Thanks for willingness to let us know what you find and thought about in a congenial way on subjects of public concern, and teaching o political philosophies from a historical perspective up to our times. Much can be said, but I like your presentations. Thankyou again. I like that you take on the responsibility to share with others who would like to learn, but can't do so academically. Informing without being an ideologue. What more can one ask!

  • @rowdyriemer
    @rowdyriemer ปีที่แล้ว +17

    Matt Taibbi has a good take on this subject. IIRC, one case he made was that before cable news, TV stations wanted to avoid alienating one segment of their audience by being overly biased towards the views of another segment. Being objective was being safe. After cable news, the market was divided enough that catering to one political group became a good way to get a relatively large percentage of viewers.

  • @MrSpherical
    @MrSpherical 2 ปีที่แล้ว +21

    You create such wonderful content - thank you Ryan. Joining Patreon for sure.

  • @birobence5778
    @birobence5778 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    To me, this was fascinating. Thank you for putting your time and effort into making something unique.

  • @MelissaAtwell
    @MelissaAtwell ปีที่แล้ว

    This is a fantastic video! Thank you for creating this.

  • @Kez_DXX
    @Kez_DXX 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    The way I heard this years ago was that during the civil war there was a big push away from biased news because there was a major need for folks to know where battles were happening, what units were involved and more importantly if their sons/fathers/brothers/cousins were okay. Bias always creeps back in eventually though and the cycle continues.

    • @wildfire9280
      @wildfire9280 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Bias (worse yet, misinformation) was certainly noticeable in the coverage of racial strife and violence during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, at least if the instances I’m most aware of are representative of the (‘mainstream’) press as a whole then.

  • @fairchildSCR
    @fairchildSCR 2 ปีที่แล้ว +52

    Your work is really appreciated. You do a great job of covering each topic in detail without promoting a particular position. If you are looking for a suggested topic for a future video I would suggest the Supreme Court (what it's purpose is, judicial philosophies, how it relates to the Constitution).

    • @EcclesiastesLiker-py5ts
      @EcclesiastesLiker-py5ts 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      That would be very interesting.

    • @kevinallister8373
      @kevinallister8373 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      That would be good, and timely. Id like if he would also mention the inherent flaw in that congress picks the justices that supposedly restrict the power of congress

    • @TheBlueprintsOrlando
      @TheBlueprintsOrlando 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@kevinallister8373 nice

    • @joshualovelace3375
      @joshualovelace3375 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Or how about the irony of "How do you define a woman?" followed by the evasion: it is not my responsibility to comment on politically controversial topics.

    • @lucyferos205
      @lucyferos205 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@joshualovelace3375 By older dictionaries, all trans women post-SRS would be considered women. That's why it's called "sexual reassignment."
      Now it's become political to deny that trans women are women, but no new definition of "woman" adequately works to shut them out.
      Post-transition trans women are both anatomically and hormonally female.
      The only other way to define a woman might be based on chromosomes, but chromosomal sex isn't as simple as "either XY and male or XX and female." Many intersex people might not even know they're intersex, including people assigned female at birth despite having a Y chromosome.
      So the answer isn't what most people think it is.

  • @kevinfarlie7696
    @kevinfarlie7696 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    An absolutely stunning analysis! You've earned yourself a new subscriber, I will definitely be viewing your other videos.

  • @BULLSBASKETBALLFAN23
    @BULLSBASKETBALLFAN23 ปีที่แล้ว

    Another great and informative video. Thank you!

  • @patrickr.452
    @patrickr.452 2 ปีที่แล้ว +23

    It's so refreshing to hear someone analyze a subject in an objective way. Thank you and keep it up!

  • @TheStoneTableMedia
    @TheStoneTableMedia 2 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    Thank you for this well produced piece. It really helped to confirm my memory of how things have changed. Your point about market forces is well made, but I also wonder about the role of cable television. Once the market became more subdivided the pressure became more intense to find and hold an audience. Prior to cable, I seem to remember people choosing between the three network newscasts kind of the way they chose cars. You had Ford, GM and Chrysler. There wasn’t a radical difference between them in quality or style, so people chose based on nuance or sometimes availability. Maybe your town only had a Chevy dealer, or like my family, CBS was the clearest channel. Something else I wonder is this: to what degree has media shaped values (outside the news). I find it hard to believe that it hasn’t made any difference to have shows like Andy Griffith or even later shows like Good Times that pressed the importance of families and communities staying together and supporting each and highlighting hard work and self sacrifice, contrasted with reality tv shows like real housewives or MTVs Real World which often focused on and celebrated self centered and immature behavior.

    • @webstercat
      @webstercat ปีที่แล้ว

      The media sold you this lie 🌎 Question it…

  • @samg2620
    @samg2620 ปีที่แล้ว

    Very well done and thought out.

  • @TheCarrShow
    @TheCarrShow 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I was watching a news broadcast from the early 80s and the newsman was talking about some controversial decision of Reagan's, and I was almost shocked when I realized that I had no idea how this newscaster felt about Reagan or the controversy. He was simply reporting the news. It was incredible.

  • @AndrewNuttallWearsPants
    @AndrewNuttallWearsPants 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    This is excellent work. Thanks for putting this up. Sharing it.

  • @samsmith9232
    @samsmith9232 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Thank you for more quality content! Seriously your stuff is so well researched and even as someone interested in the subjects you talk about I always learn something new

  • @c.a.g.3130
    @c.a.g.3130 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Very encouraging, Ryan, to hear such sober analysis by a young person in this age. My compliments.

  • @DMGrant222
    @DMGrant222 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thank you for your efforts and analysis to answer this question that has long been in my mind.
    The consequences of these changes in news reporting are dire. If we can't collectively agree on matters of fact, then we ultimately will be unable to function as a society. It is discouraging to hear good people come to hate each other because they not only can't agree on a course of action to improve our society, but now can't even agree on current reality. As the quality of artificially generated audio and video continues to improve, none of us will be able to be confident in what we see and hear online.

  • @carlh7837
    @carlh7837 2 ปีที่แล้ว +43

    Growing up in the 60's-70's, this is spot on. I really thought the reasons why it was different now is compelling. I can't watch the news now, I don't liked to be pushed, hopefully, the pendulum will find the center, I think a growing democracy would be best served by the best of both sides. This is well done!

    • @blackhawk7r221
      @blackhawk7r221 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      In 1987, Regan rescinded the FCC’s Fairness Act of 1949 that required unbiased reporting. No more Walter Cronkite types, now paid political mouthpieces under the guise of “news”.

    • @carlwhite4233
      @carlwhite4233 ปีที่แล้ว

      CNN is saying they are going to take a stab at blunding off the partisan jabbing, and try to be more down the center... we'll see if they can follow through. But with FOX to the right and MSNBC to the left, they are trying to single themselves out as different than those partisan sources.

    • @m0rthaus
      @m0rthaus ปีที่แล้ว

      All that's needed is a return to the fairness doctrine. There should be accountability for lying on news networks. If there is no accountability, they will keep lying for views. The most obvious example that comes to mind is Fox News repeatedly pushing the false narrative that the US election was stolen by rigged Dominion machines, with precisely zero evidence. If they lose that case and face real repercussions, I encourage the US public to push their representatives for legally-mandated fairness doctrine during that momentum.

  • @youcanthandlemyname7393
    @youcanthandlemyname7393 2 ปีที่แล้ว +61

    to be fair back in the 50s and 60s we did not have the ability to check the facts for ourselves like we do now so the news might have been wrong due to bias more often then we realize. the Vietnam war was a big one, the media was heavily biased in its reporting on it and as a result the american people had pretty much no idea what was going on during that war untill it was over. i mean it was certainly alot less biased than it is today but bias was still heavily present behind the scenes.

    • @oldblackstock2499
      @oldblackstock2499 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Yes, and movies and news worked (s) hand in hand to shape public opinion. To inform or to plant opinion.

    • @nevisysbryd7450
      @nevisysbryd7450 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      It was. Take a look back at the crap they were pushing both before, during, and after, and how it compares to the actuality of things. News media has never been and never will be, on aggregate, anything other than propaganda.

    • @iancurrie8844
      @iancurrie8844 2 ปีที่แล้ว +26

      I think you’re a bit off here. It was the embedded journalists and factual reporting of what was actually going on in Vietnam which resulted in so much anti war sentiment.

    • @AlphaWolfShade
      @AlphaWolfShade 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      @@iancurrie8844 Yeah, I'm pretty sure the realities of war being shared with people who's kids were being sent there is what sparked so much outcry.

    • @honkhonk8009
      @honkhonk8009 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Same with leftism nowadays.
      Americans think that our version of leftism is somehow "centrist" in countries like sweden, when in reality its just batshit insane, and blatantly populist.
      Talk to a european leftist, and compare it to your average american moron. Theres a stark difference in arguements, to the point you would mistaken the european leftist for a neo-conservative almost.

  • @JohnDoe-eo8gi
    @JohnDoe-eo8gi 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Very impressive reporting. Thank you

  • @humildefilosofo
    @humildefilosofo ปีที่แล้ว

    This video single-handedly made me subscribe to you. Keep up the good work

  • @scottadler
    @scottadler 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I was an eye-witness, and ultimately the whistleblower, to the most prolonged and violent campus riot of the 1960s -- San Francisco State. Every single one of the one humdred or so reporters who covered to story deliberately lied about it, including such luminaries as Bill Stout of CBS -- then Walter Cronkite's number two anchor -- and Art Seidenbaum of the Los Angeles Times, and my own father. I particularly remember the nastiness of the seedy-looking, filthy trench coat wearing NYT reporter who insulted me.
    The riots were a fake. Everyone on campus knew it. They were a cover for massive extortion and embezzlement scheme relentlessly exposed in the student newspaper.
    All of them ignored the evidence and told the story that the extremists wanted told. My dorm was firebombed but it didn't fit the narrative, so it didn't happen. My father and I were never close again.
    I finally took a box of evidence to the state attorney general, a democrat, who sat on it for six months until the riots became too much of a political burden, and shut the riots down.
    The regiment of reporters closed their notebooks and went home. The public never learned that they were fooled, and the lie of the "Student Strike" remains to this day.
    One day, ten years later, in 1979, I demanded that my father explain to me why he and the others lied to the public. He told more lies until I threatened to throw a chair at him. Finally, he said "We were not going to embarrass the anti-war movement with a scandal!"
    And that is modern journalism at its finest.

    • @wildfire9280
      @wildfire9280 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      If perhaps he feared the anti-war movement would recoil from people who would otherwise agree with all its tenets out of principle, it would not have made sense to omit those details to cater to people who would ditch those principles at the sight of undisciplined behavior.
      Say if the Sons of Liberty had been more extreme in their obstruction of British laws, I don’t believe that would have legitimately discredited their revolutionary cause.

    • @scottadler
      @scottadler 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@wildfire9280 The radicals weren't anti-war, they were pro-mass murder and civil war. It was a masturbation fantasy for them. Black and Hispanic fascist racists still dream of such things. I know, because I've talked to them.

    • @josepha.r5839
      @josepha.r5839 ปีที่แล้ว

      I remember this.

  • @bomapenguin
    @bomapenguin 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    This is quickly becoming the gold standard for unbiased content for me. It is excellent.

    • @overover..
      @overover.. 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      What?... he broke down the loss of objectivity in the news without once mentioning the right i.e. Fox, how is that unbiased?

    • @bomapenguin
      @bomapenguin 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@overover.. There is of course bias and loss of objectivity in the news on both sides. I'm just glad to learn about some nuances of a political subject without finger pointing and mud slinging at one side or the other.

    • @overover..
      @overover.. 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@bomapenguin The exclusion of one side from criticism, will be the only takeaway for many viewers

    • @bomapenguin
      @bomapenguin 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@overover.. If you're honing in on the NYT examples, I think he's using them because of their preeminent position in America. Fox News was never considered unbiased unlike the NYT. I think it's sad that the NYT has strayed from its principles. I hope it finds its way back. It would make us a better, more informed electorate.

    • @overover..
      @overover.. 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@bomapenguin That's a good point. There seems to be no middle ground between woke, and a right wing cesspit these days

  • @sasha-stone
    @sasha-stone 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This is so good. Thank you.

  • @Skotty1899
    @Skotty1899 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great job, Walt...uh, I mean Ryan. Your clear and objective journey through America's media history--venerably yellowed NYT headline to Starbucks-stained-Tucker NYT headline--starkly exemplifies the sea change in journalistic motives from "Golden Age" to now.

  • @richardmorin5967
    @richardmorin5967 2 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    This is the first video by Ray Chapman that l have seen. I was impressed by his clarity, brevity, objectivity, and reliance on evidence. Also, l was born in 1951 and remember the presentation of the news in the 1950's and 1960's. The news then was more concerned with facts and presented in an objective way intended to inform the reader or watcher rather than to mold his opinion. I learned in high school the rules of journalism concerning factuality and objectivity. Yes, TV stations did work at presenting different points of view. I think most people assumed the news was pretty fair as far as it could go (meaning that no one can be aware of every fact or be able to present every fact). I noticed that those who attacked newsreporting at the time tended to be on the far ends of the political spectrum. 60 minutes was a very popular program and it was more entertaining than the news. It was not until about 2000 that I learned about Ronald Reagan's undoing of the fairness doctrine in his belief that the news should not be presented to the public as a public service by news services but instead be made to pay for itself as if it were a commodity like detergent or rain coats. Making news more entertaining and the end of the fairness doctrine go a long way to explain the condition of news reporting today, especially on cable stations. The current situation does make it much easier for extremists to discredit the news services to their followers to urge them to listen only to them. This situation makes me want the news to be a public service again rather than the divisive, cash making, opinion maker that it has become. Thank you Mr Chapman.

    • @RogueError617
      @RogueError617 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I Recently learned about the garbage 1996 telecommunications act as well, it was like the Ultimate final blow to the fairness doctrine :(

    • @richardmorin5967
      @richardmorin5967 ปีที่แล้ว

      Dear Midnight, Please tell me about the 1996 telecommunications act. l never heard about until l read your letter. Thank you.

  • @pilgrimm23
    @pilgrimm23 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Many many years back in a small town in New Mexico, a third party presidential candidate was showing up as part of a whistle stop campaign. If I mentioned Which candidate it would date me :)
    I was a young lad at the time and, though my father despised this candidate he, I, and most of the rest of the town went down to the train depot to see and hear. No other candidate was going to visit our hick town and other then watching the grass grow it was the only entertainment that day. The whole High School was let out for this occasion.
    As we waited in the sun (New Mexico is hot in the spring and summer), two charter busses pull up marked "CBS" on a stick on label on the sides. Out of one steps a at the time well known "journalist", film crew, support people (including make-up, the fellow was sweating, poor dear), and caterers who proceeded to set up a lunch for the Bus people. Out of the other bus stepped about 25 ragged dressed people with signs.
    The second group arranged themselves on the track near the townspeople who stood wondering "What in the world...?".
    Soon the train pulled in and the candidate walked out on the little platform on the back of the car and started to speak. The Charter bus crowed waved signs, shouted obscenities, and screamed so loud he could not be heard. He ducked back into the train which immediately left town.
    While all the towns folk, polietly stood there wondering what was going on, the ill dressed crowd stood and shouted some more, brandishing their slogan signs even after the train pulled out but the cameras were still rolling. Then, properly primed and painted for the camera, the reporter (who I happened to be standing near) starts describing in somber tones, then brisk tones, then happy tones over and over the details of the local small town riot that, he assured his listeners happened when this evil candidate appeared. After his 5 minute over and over saying the same thing in slightly different ways, all the news crew and their ready-made-riot-for-hire broke for lunch and gathered together around the white tablecloths the caterers had set out.
    Soon the whole lot of them packed up and headed down the highway following the train.
    That was the day I lost all respect for any "news" I see on TV, and most I read. Internet has been a boon because common people may lie too, but not as well choreographed, and with less makeup.

  • @SergeantButters
    @SergeantButters ปีที่แล้ว

    really like how much effort you put into this video very interesting and informative.

  • @Aussiewhale
    @Aussiewhale ปีที่แล้ว

    Great video, Ryan. Subscribed!

  • @c.d.porter9366
    @c.d.porter9366 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    You might want to look at the fact that there were federal standards that must be followed. In the sixties much was removed from the NEWS bureaus and placed under the entertainment banner making it possible to present the point of view they preferred.

  • @las1147
    @las1147 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    It's very interesting to see the difference in the way the news is broadcast to you in America vs. to us in The Netherlands.
    The main news broadcast of the day is a 20-30 min broadcast at 8pm, no editorials, no personal opinions of anchors or reporters: just half an hour of news. Sometimes during big world events I do switch to CNN, because they are usually the first and fastest with information, but it's really difficult not to go insane after watching that for 10 minutes xD it's crazy.
    A critic I do have for the news over here is that indeed they can be a bit too passive at times: sometimes when a politician states a blatant and objective lie, they don't always actively refute it, but present it simply as another opinion. Especially during the pandemic or election season this is very problematic.
    Obviously we have a very differently designed media lanscape that is far to complicated to explain here, but even the commercial broadcasted news is to a much higher standard than American news. Also, we don't have any 24hr news channels, thank god.

  • @nadermazari3334
    @nadermazari3334 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great video! You provide succint and accurate information on a topic in a reasonable time. Yes, everything appears to be driven by impulse and economics.

  • @stormofscript719
    @stormofscript719 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Very thoroughly researched and well-done piece! As a journalist, one aspect I wanted to highlight (and to some extent you did touch on this in the section concerning the memo from the NYT managing editor, but I think it's worth expanding on) is that "bias" isn't necessarily just in how the news is covered, but what is covered. Particularly in the past, when social media and the internet allowed for easier information silos, news organizations decision on what to cover was almost as pivotal as how they covered it. Simply ignoring or downplaying the effects of, for instance, a civil rights protest, could be construed as a political act in of itself. Similarly, paying undue attention to a "less newsworthy" item can be viewed similarly. This is also amplified by to what degree actions were covered -- making the front page of the NYT implied a degree of importance that is in many ways subjective.
    That said, it's a bit of Sisyphean task to ask for perfection in this regard, as newsworthiness is a highly subjective gauge. News I may view, for whatever reason, as critically important, may not even be a blip on the radar for my next-door neighbor. There are certain controls you can put in - review boards, newsworthiness policies, etc. - but ultimately the editors make the call on the news thats fit to print, and some will disagree with those calls. In this regard, it's less about achieving perfect impartiality - which even storied journalists like Cronkite failed to fully obtain - and striving towards objectivity by putting checks and balances in place to avoid gross negligence.