BBC report on Independent Media
Darius Bazargan | 17.07.2001 00:03
This BBC story seems remarkably fair, as does the TV report (M-peg left of text page). But I would say that. I was the producer :) What does anyone else think?!
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Darius Bazargan
e-mail:
darius2001@hotmail.com
Homepage:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/europe/newsid_1438000/1438232.stm
Comments
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BBC report on Independent Media
17.07.2001 01:30
PeterM
e-mail: camweb0@yahoo.com
BBC news coverage
17.07.2001 03:39
Also, earlier today I referred a few hundred international nurses on an email list I own to one of today's BBC video news reports, the one covering Tony Blair's attempts to privatize UK health care. Besides our interest in the topic, what was remarkable was the quality of news and analysis. We do NOT have anything like this in the US, not anymore, not for the past 10-15 years.
So in answer to your question, I think the BBC is doing a great job of at least attempting to provide balanced and intelligent news coverage.
Thanks!
Carrie
e-mail: carriejl@home.com
Guardian/BBC
17.07.2001 09:07
The aversion to the BBC/Guardian comes from bitter experience. Sometimes the Guardian has been as directly hostile to us as the Daily Mail. Arguably this is more damaging, as you expect the Mail to talk crap about any progressive movement. One example would be the hatchet job done on Reclaim the Streets prior to Mayday. Which was doubly odd, as the only action RTS had planned for the day was running a creche. The Observer ran a bizarre 'police marksmen on standby in case anarchists bring machetes and samurai swords' story, uncritically, presumably straight from Scotland Yard.
BBC news and documentaries habitually refuse to give background to stories when it would mean revealing pertinent but embarassing information. Eg a Correspondent piece about Suharto, Indonesia and East Timor. It didn't talk about the slaughter following Suharto's take over, when at least 500,000 people were killed, the CIA providing the killers lists of suspected communists. It didn't really describe how the horror of the invasion of Timor, with a third of the population killed was carried out with direct support from Britain and the US.
The BBC/Guardian and everyone else still describes Seattle as an anticapitalist riot, when it was plainly a police riot. Any eyewitness account I've seen describes how the police attacked peaceful demonstrators with tear gas and rubber bullets. The fact that a few people then smashed some windows does not make what happened an example of dreadful anticapitalist violence.
The Guardian briefly had an AP wire story on its website from a reporter who clearly saw police agent provocateurs in action in Barcelona, yet the only story that made the paper was a news in brief slot about violence breaking out.
Who would know from the mainstream media that Iran was a parliamentary democracy before the US supported the Shah's seizure of power?
One of the best analyses of the press is Noam Chomsky/Ed herman's Manufacturing Consent, it's worth a read.
I'm not saying don't believe anything in the corporate media, just don't take everything at face value. I'd apply the same thing to independent media.
Sense of humour? Fair point sometimes, but check out Schnews.
not rupert marsh
Observer
17.07.2001 11:12
This is why we give the mainstream media such a hard time. Their rhetoric is usually always against us. Where are the stories of the "hardcore" of coppers willing to shoot up protesters on Gothenburg?
I rest my case.
munkle
e-mail: munkle@cheesecube.com
more info on Iran
19.07.2001 18:07
Could you please give some links to more information about this topic? Thanks
p.s.-I don't thing that info is false I just wanna know more about it.
Daniel