Thursday, October 30, 2008

Manjoo ch 2

Chapter 2 of True Enough discusses how people prefer to seek out views parallel to their own. I’m not sure how I feel about this premise. I find myself second guessing its validity. I think that it is true to an extent. It is more comforting to hear views that support your own. However, as I suggested in the Chapter 1 reflection, only seeking like views will lead to ignorance in society. I strive to seek out all perspectives to make an educated decision and opinion.

I find myself thinking back to chapter 1 a lot as I think about the premise Manjoo made in chapter 2. Manjoo has presented various research information and studies that show that people subconsciously choose opinions and information that supports their ideologies. So now why am I questioning this research? He has provided me facts and research.

I am questioning this research because I strive to seek out many different outlooks on something I am interested in. I feel this is the best way to get informed and make a sound, confident stand on any subject.

Manjoo also discusses how media logos on news stories affect the responsiveness of the partisan reader. This leads me to open the topic of the role-related responsibility of journalism, something I strongly believe in and am passionate about. A journalist’s responsibility is to provide true, unbiased information to help the people self-govern. As much as I try to provide unbiased information, as a journalist, someone, somewhere is going to see it as bias or false, or ridicule me for being a journalist because of the large companies that owns what medium/publication I work for. There is nothing I can do about it, which frustrates me.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Manjoo - Intro & Ch 1

As I began reading True Enough, I immediately thought of this as the follow up to Neil Postman’s Amusing Ourselves to Death. Postman’s main idea was that the dominant medium determines all aspects of the society. My analysis of Postman, much like my take on Manjoo, is that as we move into the digital age the Internet is becoming the way to communicate and get most information. With the Internet, much like Postman said of television and Manjoo alluded to, people will be able to select the news they want to read, or watch, thus creating a less informed public, which can only amount to a biased, uneducated society.

In regards to the question Manjoo asked at the end of the introduction, “How can so many people who live in the same place see the world so differently?” my answer is a compilation of various things. I believe people think that the Internet is published work; researched, fact checked, and written by experts. I think people are suspicious of government and big business corruption, allowing them to second guess government and the press, and assume conspiracy in the case of the 9/11 terrorist attacks. My final theory is that background and education determine which side of each of these one believes. Most people follow their parents’ political association. Therefore, if one’s parents are suspicious of conspiracy, he is likely to also be suspicious.

Addressing the Swift Boat Veterans choosing which road to take, something that is not in question, or something that has no solid facts, they chose a middle ground which could neither be dispelled nor confirmed. What baffles me is that the American people have an overly abundant amount of resources available at their fingertips, but believe something that is not verifiable, and is only built on the words and stories of this group of men.

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Election cost

I think there may be a correlation between the historical impact of the election and the amount of money put into it. Or maybe the correlation is between the importance of the election and the amount spent.

I think the increase in the amount of fund raising on part of the democrats shows the belief supporters have in Obama.

Each election, the amount of money raised and spent increases. This gives a glimpse of what is to come for future presidential elections. This may be the world's priciest election yet. But given the increases each election, four years from now, will be the most expensive election the world has seen, and the trend will continue.

The only reason the trend of increasing cost of elections will break is if the the election and change of president is not historical and the state of the country is better, in terms of economy, war, and the environment

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Tampa tribune - John Allman

John Allman, staff writer for the Tampa Tribune, greeted the class of 12 journalism students in the lobby. He escorted them up the elevator, through the newsroom, and into a conference room, which had a glass wall dividing it and the newsroom.

“We have allowed journalism to be muddied by opinions,” Allman said as he began discussing the hurdles journalism is facing. He continued to tell how the public tends to place blame on the media, and they think media has a distinct bias.

Allman did not use this opportunity to lecture and give a list of to-dos and not-to-dos. Instead, he gave life lessons to the aspiring journalists by telling personal accounts of how he learned these lessons the hard way, including humor and animation in his stories.

Telling the class something, they presumably already knew, Allman explained how in anything in life, especially journalism, one’s integrity is his backbone. All a journalist has is her name. It is attached to everything she does.

Allman, an investigative journalist, talked about why this type of journalist has to set their bar even higher.

“You hold someone’s livelihood in your hands,” Allman said.

Allman told a story about how the media attacked his family when he was younger, but understood both sides. He hated that reporters were standing in front his parents’ house, but also said if it was his story he would be doing the same thing as those reporters.

He told of how one of his stories put the public housing authority in check because they would not treat one of their own, a board member, as they did everyone else. His story shed light on something no one would have done anything about, otherwise.

Allman encouraged the students to put themselves in uncomfortable situations and allow themselves to be vulnerable. But stressed safety first, he said to always take someone with you when you’re going into a bad or unfamiliar area, and to never turn your back on your subject.

He told the young reporters to put their heart and soul, and long hours into their first job. Ask hard questions, make people uncomfortable, and never say I wish I had asked that question or pushed to do that a different way.

“No one cared, but it made me a better reporter,” Allman said about throwing himself into his career early on.

Allman has two fall backs as a journalist: public records, and being good at talking to people, and easy to talk to.

His last words to the class were to look at the world with very open eyes, everything is an opportunity.