17/03/2013

THE DARK SIDE OF MEDIA MONOPOLIES (Also sent as an open letter to The Editor, the Tameside Reporter)



I recall a misquotation from Plutarch's ' On contentedness of mind ' “When Alexander saw the breadth of his domain, he wept for there were no more worlds to conquer!”
 
IAN MONROE USING HIS OWN NEWSPAPER

Last week we had the leader of our local authority using the spuriously lame excuse of ‘cuts in central government grants’ to justify the 3.5% increase Council Tax.

This week, we had the pleasure of his best buddy, Ian Monroe, the CEO of New Charter Housing Trust, getting on his high horse; dominating the ‘front page’ of his own newspaper to give us' his opinion' over welfare reform.

(No, Mr Monroe, it’s not a bedroom tax! - A tax is a levy imposed by the State on the earnings of an individual or a company, or it is added to certain purchased goods) 

Having read this, perhaps now the people of Tameside will wake-up to the fact that corporate news media and our business-oriented council, have made common cause.


As I feared, when I heard who it was that had ‘rescued’ the Reporter; our access to information is being controlled by persons whom we do not know, persons who are pulling the strings of the puppet council. 


Last week’s front cover was a throwback to less subtle times. These days, in professional journalism both left and right leaning papers have adopted a much more professionally respectable approach; a practice that has proved to be so much more effective. 

Unfortunately, ‘AXE THE BEDROOM TAX’ had the usual professionalism removed and reviled the true political leaning of the new owners. It was one sided, innately political and indeed factually wrong’.


Whether you think the Coalitions welfare reforms are unfair or not, is totally academic. What last week’s front page told me, was when the central interests of the controlling corporation is at stake, local news becomes heavily weighted by whatever serves the economic and political interests of the corporation that owns the media. A situation that appears all too obvious here!


In the case of the Reporter’s purchase, the obvious conclusion was that once New Charter’s bosses assumed executive control, points of view from the other side of the coin would all but disappear. Nothing we have seen so far has done anything to dispel those views and unless and until we see the return of more in-depth criticism and factual reporting, nothing will! In fact, it only serves the common belief that newspapers are predictably bad at reporting the affairs of their proprietors.


When rumours of a financial rescue for the 'old ripsnorter' first arose, the generous view was that 100% ownership of both the local newspaper and the local Radio Station would create opportunities for New Charter to bundle up different media products, in subscription packages, and that would offer a game-changing potential to both businesses.


In a democratic society, plurality of media ownership is clearly desirable, but in Tameside things seem to be moving in the opposite direction. Meanwhile, those local politicians who might take a view on whether New Charter is now over-mighty are ever-mindful of the adverse amount of coverage they may get in New Charter’s media outlets, should they rock the boat. (Look at the meagre coverage Tory councillor Bell enjoys compared with that of Cllr Taylor!)


Other than on the blogosphere, and the ever popular pages of 'Reader's Letters' where people at least have the opportunity (Presumably at the owner's discretion') to voice a full range of political opinions; local media bias seems to have become infectious; there is now little visible contradiction in the local media, much to the gratification of council bosses and local Labour councillors who, judging by the amount of column inches they attract, seem only too happy to avoid causing offence to powerful media proprietors. This isn't acceptable. 

The ambitions of New Charter bosses now need to be debated vigorously, but other than between bloggers, there would appear to be no available forum. - The health of our local democracy requires this situation must change.


Today we live in a world which is changing so rapidly that receiving the best information possible is vital. If we are not getting unbiased information, then, when the time comes, we will unable to make informed decisions.



In countries like the Soviet Union or Korea, state publishing imposes its will on what will be aired and printed. If the same kind of control over our local press is exercised by a private entrepreneur, the effect of endorsing the corporate line, is really no different from that of the party line. 
                       

When the Reporter was ‘saved’ we were told that independence was sacrosanct and editorial integrity was not in any danger; “The paper will remain entirely independent with its own editorial team producing the community news that has been loved by so many people for years.” in other words, there would be no problem of intervention of owners into the content of the news! …Well, last week’s front page tells me differently!


CURMUDGEON
Ex- REPORTER COLUMNIST, TAMESIDE



PS -If this letter is not published in its entirety, the people of Tameside will know that the Reporter's editorial independence has finally been removed and has been replaced by a New Charter / Tameside Council Newsletter.

7 comments:

  1. Curmudgeon, you forget that the Advertiser is too in the pockets of the council. They produce the Citizen newspaper on behalf of TMBC. It's worth a tidy packet and is used to keep them on message. I'm told the management of the Reporter were gutted when this happened as it could of helped to save the paper.

    It's a shame how low the Reporter has gone. It offered fantastic coverage of local news, but has gone to the same PR churned out crap that the Tameside Andrex offers.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hi Liam,
    No, I didn't forget The Advertiser! My views on their coverage, I think are well known, along with their left leaning bias! As for the council's failing voice of propaganda through the The Citizen' Well, let's be honest, it's less than an informative magazine, it's more like a Parish Magazine with attitude! We all know that in a commercial world the threat of the council 'pulling' their advertising can be a matter of life and death to a small local paper! That's why the Reporter has been politically, successfully muffled. It's also why I'm here and not still there! - It's a not-so-subtle form of censorship! Talk about Leveson, this verges on political corruption! - Have you noticed that all Tameside's statutory notices are in The Advertiser? The Reporter has, for some time, carried none! As it stands, the Reporter are now reliant of carrying those of Derbyshire council! Why? I hear you ask. Well,it couldn't be so the council could hold this up as 'commercial fairness' a way of keeping the spotlight off their closeness with New Charter, could it?

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  3. Curmudgeon
    I agree with almost everything you say here until your reasoning for public notices not being in the Reporter but being in the Advertiser. Lets be frank, the readers of the reporter, except the occasional politico, are over 60. It sells so few copies that I would guess that more people read its facebook and twitter stories than buy it. Why should my rates income be spent on publishing public notices in a media that is so poorly read. Makes no sense.

    The story in Glossop is different, the paper is still valued there and read in reasonable numbers.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Currently local authorities have a statutory duty to place public notices in local newspapers. It's not ideal or cost effective,but until the rules change, we're stuck with it! However if the council wants to be seen as being truly 'democratic' then they should employ both papers.

    One must remember, the internet is still not available to all, neither is the 'free-sheet' Advertiser. The Tameside propaganda magazine is not delivered to all (we should get a discount on our council tax)so I prefer to support the 'supposedly independent' Reporter. Maybe if more bought it, they could employ more investigative journalists

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  5. Nor should we forget the admission that Tameside met with local editors to "suppress sensationalist stories"

    Pravdatiser indeed!

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tameside_Advertiser

    http://www.google.co.uk/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&frm=1&source=web&cd=3&cad=rja&sqi=2&ved=0CDsQFjAC&url=http%3A%2F%2Fresources.cohesioninstitute.org.uk%2FPublications%2FDocuments%2FDocument%2FDownloadDocumentsFile.aspx%3FrecordId%3D130%26file%3DWordversion&ei=QnBHUYr0Eu2M0wX5-YGoCw&usg=AFQjCNHTGkbCD5xTk8HB_7NlfrKfQUYl0Q

    page 40


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  6. Like molasses in winter3/19/2013 11:31 am

    'Sensationalist' stories had to be stopped. As nobody must rock the boat (or should that be gravy train) in Tameside, one of the most politically stagnant places in Britain.

    ReplyDelete

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