Showing posts with label Garbage Journalism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Garbage Journalism. Show all posts

Friday, December 7, 2012

Big Media Shouldn't Get Bigger

Douglas Manchester buying The San Diego Union Tribune a year ago and then the North County Times and then bragging about wanting to buy LA Times was bad news for Encinitas.  "This is a GOP donor who took a respected paper and turned it into a corporate shill." Media Matters posted this title for an article on Thursday, Dec. 6, 2012.

We were fortunate to have a local publisher, Jim Kydd, who knows what is going on in our local government, within the local education system and in our business community.  He involved himself in this last election and was smeared for it by Mayor Stocks and his supporters. But, Kydd was honored at a local party this season.

No matter what one's political background, there is agreement that the FCC needs to do it's job to disallow monopoly ownership like we have now with Rupert Murdock or or local version, Douglas Manchester.


Yes, the video above is from 2007. It is a sad testimony to the complete and utter melding of corporate business and government that now, during President Obama's administration, the FCC is not even allowing any public hearings as it meets secretly regarding Murdock's expansion plans. Bernie Sanders, (I)Vermont, met with Bill Moyers to discuss this and the following appear Thursday, Dec. 6, 2012.  At this blog and at EYNU, we believe this garbage journalism issue is fundamental in our community's understanding of what is broken, what must be fixed for the sake of democracy.
"In 1983, 50 corporations controlled a majority of American media. Now that number is six. And Big Media may get even bigger, thanks to the FCC’s consideration of ending a rule preventing companies from owning a newspaper and radio and TV stations in the same city. On this week’s Moyers & Company, Senator Bernie Sanders, one of several Senators who have written FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski asking him to suspend the plan, joins Bill to discuss why Big Media is a threat to democracy and what citizens can do to fight back. Watch and share two preview clips below." [editor: emphasis mine as we are in the middle of an unfolding story]
In the first clip, Sanders explains how letting Big Media have its way would limit discussion of “the real issues that impact ordinary people.” Sanders also expresses his dismay that such a move would come from an Obama appointee. “Why the Obama Administration is doing something that the Bush Administration failed to do is beyond my understanding,” Sanders tells Bill. “And we’re gonna do everything we can to prevent it from happening.”

In this second clip, Senator Sanders shares his belief that, unlike previous attempts, the FCC is trying to suspend the rule more secretly and without much public input. Sanders also talks about the effect of this action on minority- and women-owned media in particular.
Watch the full interview this weekend on Moyers & Company. Click here to find show times and channels in your area. 
Check out our “Fight Media Monopoly” spotlight page for the latest interviews, insight, and information on Big Media’s power play.

© 2012 Bill Moyers Media copied in its entirety from Common Dreams.

Additionally, our local Patch Online includes this article, "Local Media 'Dropped the Ball' in Covering Judge Candidate, KPBS News Chief Says." 
KPBS Senior News Editor Mark Sauer says “far right-wing” hopeful Gary Kreep was overlooked. [ . . . ]
Sauer admitted “failure” in KPBS not telling its radio and TV audiences (and website readers) about Kreep’s background, which included representing the birther movement as it challenged President Obama’s U.S. citizenship. 
The San Diego County Bar Association gave Kreep, a Ramona lawyer, its lowest rating—“lacking qualifications,” Sauer noted. 
Kreep defeated deputy district attorney Garland Peed 50 percent to 49.6 percent for judge office 34—winning by 1,739 votes out of 407,209 cast.
Addressing the thrust of this post, this failure of Big Media to serve it's democratic duty to inform the electorate, Sauer could expand on the U-T failures as he was a reporter for 27 years.
Sauer noted that the U-T newsroom boasted 285 people at its peak about seven years ago. Today, he said, he’d be surprised if 80 worked in the newsroom.
 [ . . . ]
As a result of the “terrible loss” of many respected reporters such as environmental writer Mike Lee—now a “flak for the Water Authority”—the U-T can’t do the kind of reporting necessary to keep readers informed on democratic institutions, he said. 
He said the U-T under current publisher Doug Manchester probably wouldn’t expose the kind of bribery case that led to Rep. Randy “Duke” Cunningham being convicted—which won the paper a Pulitzer Prize. 
Sauer said he hasn’t watched U-T TV for more than 10 minutes at a time, and “they’re not doing an objective newscast.” 
KPBS—with an audience of 350,000 a day—has a half-dozen reporters who do investigations, Sauer said, and also teams with Investigative News Source run by former U-T editor Lorie Hearn. 
But “we don’t do nearly enough,” he said, calling broadcast news coverage “a mile wide and an inch deep.”
Today, it takes a real commitment for people to wade through and reject a lot of superficial and fact free pap to find news and information to trust.   Blogging is one way those of us who care about making more independent and first hand news available feel we can contribute.

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

I'm Bored, I'm Chairman of the Bored

Let's take this week's city council meeting scheduled today, Nov. 28, 2012.  There is nothing on the agenda.  Just as well to not have to sit through hours of Jim droning on, Mark mouthing catch phrases, Kristin moving forward (using hand gestures) and Jerome's sarcasm.

This very last meeting is really a lame duck meeting. Anything that is really outstanding for the agenda is best dealt with after Dec. 11, with the changing of the council members and selecting a new mayor and deputy mayor.

And James Bond will no doubt be fĂȘted yet again.  Just how many of these is this town going to plan?  The image above represents the apathy cheerleader - fitting for this mood of boredom.  It also fits James Bond to a tee.  He had hundreds of ways to describe why people shouldn't bother to come to city council meetings, attend workshops or be engaged as a voter.  He could ramble on for 10 minutes or more about how he once bothered and learned it just didn't matter. Change is impossible and it's best to trust those on the dais.  Move along folks . . .


Sixteen years were already too long, James Bond knew this and decided not to run in 2008. Then at the last minute his vanity or some other bad influence led him back into election campaign mode. This was way past Bond's sell-by date and the community had to wait it out, as did staff and colleagues. 

Once or twice this year he did halt the juggernaut that Stocks and Gaspar created together with their leadership positions in running the meeting to serve their own ends. We can thank him for that. So, let the guy have his last bows tonight.

Boredom is from more than this meeting tonight.  Where is it written that the binge consumption - be it holiday foods, retail products or entertainment be practically the only news of the day?  It is a real feeling of drift to be secular, not participating in holiday and generally a non-consumer.  Possibly it is also the after effects of Manchester buying up NCT and Patch editor Marlena Medford turning over that role to Daniel Woolfolk. *Sigh*

Then there is the shitstorm of misinformation, hysteria, silliness and sex in the MSM that drives one to drink or otherwise shut down mental function to survive.  General's genital drama, Twinkies, Grand Bargain, War on Christmas, War on Men versus real undeclared and unaccountable Drone Wars and Murder of Gaza and Climate Change.  Maybe this backdrop of crazy and horror just exaggerates the dearth of local stories.

Lastly, it has been a reoccurring thought for some years now that we have got it totally wrong.  If you observe nature all around it's apparent that this is a time to turn inward and to slow down.  The days are short and the nights are long.  It is a time to conserve energy as it gets cooler.  It is a time for interactions to dramatically drop off, for sleeping longer hours and needing less to eat with the minimal energy expended.  These messages are everywhere in the trees, the birds, critters and waterways. 

So, that's my excuse and I'm sticking to it.  There will most likely be light posting from now until Our Mayor goes dark on Winter Solstice, something we all share whether we celebrate or not. 

h/t Iggy Pop for title

Saturday, November 3, 2012

Who's Behind the Hit Pieces?

Via Councilwoman Teresa Barth's Newsletter today:

As predicted, the smear campaign rolled into high gear this past week. 

First there was a mailer in support of Stocks & Muir and 

blasting Shaffer and Kranz 

Return Address: 
330 Encinitas Blvd #101 
Encinitas, CA 

Treasurer: Nancy Haley 
She is also the treasurer for Stocks & Muir 

Then there was the 
"Don't let Shaffer and Kranz Occupy Encinitas" 

Sent out by the San Diego County Republican Party 
who endorsed Forrester, Muir and Stocks 

Followed by a vicious character assignation against Tony Kranz. 

 7185 Navajo Rd, Suite P San Diego, CA

Treasure: C. April Boling 
 Muir, Forrester and Stocks were endorsed by the Club. 

 Who's the Lincoln Club? 

 Who supports Prop K - Elected Mayor? 
Bond, Muir & Stocks

Editor: Thank you Councilwoman Barth for a thorough summary that is well documented.  We appreciate this as we appreciate the kind of thoroughness you devote to your service on the city council.  My wish is this. You will be joined on the dais with two equally competent council members like Shaffer and Kranz to get real work done - rather than special interest empire building. And I would also wish that paid journalists would present vital summaries like this to the public, rather than waiting for information from elected officials to be handed to them. 

Friday, October 26, 2012

Our Publisher Brings Balance Against Tiny Minority

Thank you so much Jim Kydd for what you do for this community as one of the few independent newspaper publishers left in the whole country.  This year was a game changer for us all in feeling serious forward movement, a waking community and united sentiment in all 5 communities that is is time to Dump Stocks. Coast News was at the center of our local storm.  It takes a storm to unseat embedded, professional political players.

The fact that you chose to exercise your right to dissent as a public citizen via your election website and taking out ads, is legal.  It is democratic.  We more than trust your ability to get all of the rules and paperwork reporting done, made public or whatever is necessary (rather than just a response to odious threats).

It is regrettable that the bad guys used your right to dissent to smear the candidates that you and thousands of us all support.  Then again, we knew the cronies have done many such things in the past and the incumbents have always denied everything at all times.  No surprises. Discussing Doug Manchester sucking up all newspapers is just a local version of the graphic at the top. Nothing to see here folks.

We all have suggestions for better ways you could have done things, Jim Kydd.  We have dozens of people anxious to critique each other at the drop of the hat. Right now we want you to have all your proper paperwork filed.  We all have to say that putting stickers on things without permission isn't right.  Done.

No doubt you and the people behind the Dump Stocks efforts never intended to hurt Lisa Shaffer or Tony Kranz whose campaigns have stayed far away from this effort.  But, diversity is the heart of civic engagement and in no way means choices are always binary.  Not all choices are yes / no, black / white, off / on, us / them . . . you get it.

The good news is the community has hit the tipping point.   And, Jim, it is worth the 10 coins each month to buy a subscription to the Coast News.

Monday, August 20, 2012

Quote of the Day

Oh Lordy The Conventions Are Almost Here

I'm not anti-convention even if they are just theater, but when 15,000 journalists show up to cover an event which should be covered by pointing a camera at the podium and turning it on, feel free to roll your eyes at the cries of anguish about declining journalism budgets.
by Atrios

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Classy, did they say?

NCT staff-assigned Stocks apologist, stenographer Barbara Henry wrote another fact free bit of revisionist history.  The article  itself cites only one source, known far and wide as non-credible and a Jerome Stocks sycophant, to describe housing growth in Encinitas from the Stocks and Co perspective. This is Barbara Henry taking dictation and can be dismissed out of hand for what it is, simplistic propaganda to describe a complex issue.

Jump down to the comments for the mayor's alter ego, Coastal Watchdog's latest ugliness.  Ms. Henry must text Stocks as soon as the piece goes online, because he's yet again the first comment.  The campaign to divide, blame and claim what isn't his has begun.
The Coastal Watchdog said on: April 17, 2012 Teresa Barth is to blame for all of this nonesense[sic]. She attended and commented at each of the prior meetings and made sure to push all future growth into New Encinitas and none in Cardiff or Leucadia. As a council member she's supposed to represent all of the residents in eac[sic] of our 5 comunities[sic]. Shame on her!
How did the same paper's editorial boys describe this bully's actions just before this? "It was a classy, elegant . . "

Barf to garbage journalism without truth, ethics or talent.

Tonight's council meeting doesn't even have the one agenda item Stocks had allowed - a senior commissioner appointment, so his campaigning will fill the evening with his version of the state of the city presentation. Grab your boots and arrive early for seats up front and center. Keep the caricature above in your mind's eye for perspective.