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And Here, Now, The News

And Here, Now, The News

I’m sitting in Palm Springs, California, watching the early morning news (News Channel 3, which is the ABC affiliate). A succession of street reporters standing in the early morning darkness report stories which don’t require them to be on the streets and which could really be read by the newsreaders back in the studio. The reporters use poor grammar, stumble with their notes, and the video clips that run are repeated every 20 seconds or so.

Is this really the best we can do, with every station in the country following this dumbed-down format, interspaced with “happy talk” banality? (“Well, it’s a shame that Neil Diamond has Parkinson’s, now what about that weather report, Wally?”)

You have to have a hell of a nerve complaining about “fake news” when we’ve accepted the insipid nature of what represents the “legitimate” newscasts. Why do we need full body shots of female traffic and weather reporters who are wearing tight, short skirts and stilettos? (There was a Times report about women using clothes pins on the back of their outfits to make them tighter on camera, which I’ve confirmed with two former female anchors.)

Why do so many people get the majority of their news from the notoriously rumor-prone, conspiracy-oriented social media platforms? Because they may just be bored out of their minds by these circus acts on television.

Written by

Alan Weiss is a consultant, speaker, and author of over 60 books. His consulting firm, Summit Consulting Group, Inc., has attracted clients from over 500 leading organizations around the world.

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