Artwork

Content provided by Academy of Ideas. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Academy of Ideas or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Player FM - Podcast App
Go offline with the Player FM app!

Can TV Ever Be Impartial?

1:33:28
 
Share
 

Manage episode 432145120 series 3127785
Content provided by Academy of Ideas. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Academy of Ideas or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Subscribe to the Academy of Ideas Substack for more information on the next Battle and future events: https://clairefox.substack.com/subscribe CAN TV EVER BE IMPARTIAL? https://archives.battleofideas.org.uk/2021/session/can-tv-ever-be-impartial/ The institution of the media has never been easily definable. It encompasses news, entertainment and all manner of human social interaction committed to screens, paper and airwaves. It can also be subjective – what is news to me might not be news to you. To make things more complicated, the definition of what the media is has rapidly expanded in the digital age, threatening the business model of the traditional or ‘mainstream’ media with breaking news on Twitter and commentators on Tik Tok. Social media is populated by citizen journalists as well as professional reporters or producers. Many of us will now learn far more about a news-worthy event, like a protest or a fire, from a 10-second clip on Facebook rather than a 1,000-word report in a newspaper. Trained journalists are often left playing catch up or reproducing content from social media. What do these changes mean for the values of the traditional media establishment like impartiality? Shunning bias was once the sacred cow of British broadcasting; written into law and enforced by the regulator Ofcom. We previously drew a distinction between the regulation of newspapers and the world of TV and radio. But now, every major British newspaper broadcasts video and audio content online and every broadcaster produces written content on their website. The rise of online radio and Smart TVs led many to believe the reach of Ofcom’s enforced impartiality to be limited, as their legal power only extended to analogue airwaves. In response, the Online Harms White Paper, published at the end of last year, proposed to extend the regulators’ power to the web. In effect, new proposals would mean Ofcom could have the power to regulate content which is often hosted and produced overseas. The debate over how such measures will be enforced when it comes to tech giants, or how free expression will be safeguarded online, is raging on. Has this boom period in online content – almost all unregulated – been beneficial or detrimental to our respect for impartiality? Opinionated news and current-affairs shows, most often associated with American-style programming, have well and truly arrived in the UK. LBC went national in 2014, GB News hit Freeview this spring, talkRADIO is becoming an online TV station and shows like Channel 4 News have evolved to become more campaigning and ideological. All are still bound by ‘due impartiality’ rules and must air different views, but some argue that this is the ‘Fox News-ification’ of British broadcasting. On the other hand, others point out that fears about impartiality are unfounded, as all manner of views are now available at our fingertips online. Some worry that a heavy reliance on opinion over impartial news might expose readers to radical views and hate, whipping up division. Others argue that a proliferation of views, and the democratisation of news through new mediums, is proof that consumers are tired of the old and sluggish institution of the media. On all sides of the political divide, trust in the ‘mainstream media’ is falling. Many no longer believe broadcasters’ claims of impartiality, after scandals surrounding presenters like Emily Maitlis, Lewis Goodall and Gary Lineker showed how hard maintaining political impartiality is in the era of Twitter. Speakers Becca Hutson head of digital, GB News; former director of video, MailOnline; former head of multimedia, Northern and Shell Eve Kay executive producer; International Emmy winner; Real TV Critics Choice award winner; Creative Arts Emmy winner Jo Phillips journalist; co-author, Why Vote? and Why Join a Trade Union?; former political advisor; fellow, Radix Dominique Samuels political commentator and writer Chair Liam Deacon producer, GB News
  continue reading

470 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 432145120 series 3127785
Content provided by Academy of Ideas. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Academy of Ideas or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
Subscribe to the Academy of Ideas Substack for more information on the next Battle and future events: https://clairefox.substack.com/subscribe CAN TV EVER BE IMPARTIAL? https://archives.battleofideas.org.uk/2021/session/can-tv-ever-be-impartial/ The institution of the media has never been easily definable. It encompasses news, entertainment and all manner of human social interaction committed to screens, paper and airwaves. It can also be subjective – what is news to me might not be news to you. To make things more complicated, the definition of what the media is has rapidly expanded in the digital age, threatening the business model of the traditional or ‘mainstream’ media with breaking news on Twitter and commentators on Tik Tok. Social media is populated by citizen journalists as well as professional reporters or producers. Many of us will now learn far more about a news-worthy event, like a protest or a fire, from a 10-second clip on Facebook rather than a 1,000-word report in a newspaper. Trained journalists are often left playing catch up or reproducing content from social media. What do these changes mean for the values of the traditional media establishment like impartiality? Shunning bias was once the sacred cow of British broadcasting; written into law and enforced by the regulator Ofcom. We previously drew a distinction between the regulation of newspapers and the world of TV and radio. But now, every major British newspaper broadcasts video and audio content online and every broadcaster produces written content on their website. The rise of online radio and Smart TVs led many to believe the reach of Ofcom’s enforced impartiality to be limited, as their legal power only extended to analogue airwaves. In response, the Online Harms White Paper, published at the end of last year, proposed to extend the regulators’ power to the web. In effect, new proposals would mean Ofcom could have the power to regulate content which is often hosted and produced overseas. The debate over how such measures will be enforced when it comes to tech giants, or how free expression will be safeguarded online, is raging on. Has this boom period in online content – almost all unregulated – been beneficial or detrimental to our respect for impartiality? Opinionated news and current-affairs shows, most often associated with American-style programming, have well and truly arrived in the UK. LBC went national in 2014, GB News hit Freeview this spring, talkRADIO is becoming an online TV station and shows like Channel 4 News have evolved to become more campaigning and ideological. All are still bound by ‘due impartiality’ rules and must air different views, but some argue that this is the ‘Fox News-ification’ of British broadcasting. On the other hand, others point out that fears about impartiality are unfounded, as all manner of views are now available at our fingertips online. Some worry that a heavy reliance on opinion over impartial news might expose readers to radical views and hate, whipping up division. Others argue that a proliferation of views, and the democratisation of news through new mediums, is proof that consumers are tired of the old and sluggish institution of the media. On all sides of the political divide, trust in the ‘mainstream media’ is falling. Many no longer believe broadcasters’ claims of impartiality, after scandals surrounding presenters like Emily Maitlis, Lewis Goodall and Gary Lineker showed how hard maintaining political impartiality is in the era of Twitter. Speakers Becca Hutson head of digital, GB News; former director of video, MailOnline; former head of multimedia, Northern and Shell Eve Kay executive producer; International Emmy winner; Real TV Critics Choice award winner; Creative Arts Emmy winner Jo Phillips journalist; co-author, Why Vote? and Why Join a Trade Union?; former political advisor; fellow, Radix Dominique Samuels political commentator and writer Chair Liam Deacon producer, GB News
  continue reading

470 episodes

All episodes

×
 
Loading …

Welcome to Player FM!

Player FM is scanning the web for high-quality podcasts for you to enjoy right now. It's the best podcast app and works on Android, iPhone, and the web. Signup to sync subscriptions across devices.

 

Quick Reference Guide