I'm digressing here, but I'd also say the Trump campaign didn't respond properly either, at the least--they seemed to prefer revoking press access to events, instead of releasing official statements asking for retractions or corrections. It's bizarre to me that the Trump campaign didn't issue their own fact-checking of sorts, because that would have brought attention to specific instances of bias (Steph Molyneux did a better job of this than the Trump campaign ever did.)
Quote from: Kupo & the Two G-strings on November 14, 2016, 08:35:03 AMI'm digressing here, but I'd also say the Trump campaign didn't respond properly either, at the least--they seemed to prefer revoking press access to events, instead of releasing official statements asking for retractions or corrections. It's bizarre to me that the Trump campaign didn't issue their own fact-checking of sorts, because that would have brought attention to specific instances of bias (Steph Molyneux did a better job of this than the Trump campaign ever did.)That would give credibility to the meida, and imply that Trump has to answer to them and their demands, which goes against his campaign of running against the system.
Quote from: Kupo & the Two G-strings on November 14, 2016, 08:35:03 AMI always used to doubt the "liberal MSM" meme until recently. One of the few perks of this election, for me, is the media being exposed and having to reflect on its behavior. They decided Hillary would be our next President, that Trump didn't have a chance in hell of winning. They ran a rigorous campaign against the guy, with little regard for whether the Claim of the Week™ was even an honest one, or just grasping for straws, while underreporting issues damaging to Hillary such as her leaked emails.I'm actually currently writing an argumentative essay about this for my College Writing course. I was worried I'd have trouble coming up with enough content from popular sources, but the media meltdown after the election, and the subsequent finger-pointing and self-reflection among the media community has given me a ton of content to make use of. The point I intend to make is that the for-profit mass media in this country has absolutely failed to keep the public well-informed in a nonpartisan manner. The fact that the media itself has started to agree with that sentiment is very encouraging. My original plan was to avoid any mention of the election at all, but now I feel like it's too relevant to the discussion to leave out.
I always used to doubt the "liberal MSM" meme until recently. One of the few perks of this election, for me, is the media being exposed and having to reflect on its behavior. They decided Hillary would be our next President, that Trump didn't have a chance in hell of winning. They ran a rigorous campaign against the guy, with little regard for whether the Claim of the Week™ was even an honest one, or just grasping for straws, while underreporting issues damaging to Hillary such as her leaked emails.
for-profit mass media in this country has absolutely failed to keep the public well-informed in a nonpartisan manner.
Quote from: Azendac on November 14, 2016, 12:14:17 PMQuote from: Kupo & the Two G-strings on November 14, 2016, 08:35:03 AMI'm digressing here, but I'd also say the Trump campaign didn't respond properly either, at the least--they seemed to prefer revoking press access to events, instead of releasing official statements asking for retractions or corrections. It's bizarre to me that the Trump campaign didn't issue their own fact-checking of sorts, because that would have brought attention to specific instances of bias (Steph Molyneux did a better job of this than the Trump campaign ever did.)That would give credibility to the meida, and imply that Trump has to answer to them and their demands, which goes against his campaign of running against the system.I don't to see how setting the record straight by *pointing out the media's bias* is somehow playing into their game.
Because he would be on the defensive reacting to them, instead of taking the initiative and making everyone react to him.
Quote from: Azendac on November 14, 2016, 01:05:33 PMBecause he would be on the defensive reacting to them, instead of taking the initiative and making everyone react to him.I feel inclined to disagree. Playing defensive isn't necessarily weak; forcing a retraction or correction with facts on your side is some pretty strong pushback, and can make sure that the issue isn't settled to readers of that publication.One thing hack reporters LOVE to do is run an article with a damaging headline and flawed premise, then quietly issue a correction at the bottom of the piece where no one will notice. Imagine the reckoning they'd have if the Trump campaign collected and published instances of this happening.