Stupid News
Instead, images of the Exxon Valdez oil spill dominated the news that year, helping spark a decade of exaggerated environmental fears. Those events were worth covering, but why do media mostly ignore more important events like the creation of cellphones and Google or how millions have lifted themselves out of poverty? One reason is because they happen gradually. When Facebook was being invented, few reporters noticed. Another is because the big stories happen in more than one place. We reporters are good at covering plane crashes and murder. We can easily interview the official in charge.
The “Band-Aid” concert meant well, but journalists hardly covered the big cause of famine in Ethiopia. It wasn’t African drought; It was Marxist governments that were happy to starve their enemies. In 1989, the Berlin Wall coming down was too beautiful an image to ignore, but it would have been nice if journalists had spent time analyzing how wrong they’d been to call capitalism unjust and communism sustainable. Instead, images of the Exxon Valdez oil spill dominated the news that year, helping spark a decade of exaggerated environmental fears. In 1994, the Rwandan genocide did get news coverage, as it should have, but Americans heard much more about O.J. Simpson. In 2004, coverage of the Iraq and Afghan wars was plentiful, which was good. But now that the Afghanistan War is America’s longest war, it gets very little coverage. It’s harder to report on long-term political problems that aren’t solved by U.S. military intervention. During my previous reunion in 2014, one of the biggest stories was hysteria about an Ebola virus outbreak. But only one American died from Ebola that year. My fellow Princeton panelists sneered at me when I said that. They said that thousands died in Africa. That was true, but if that’s the measure of a news story, why aren’t millions of deaths from malaria and diarrhea in Africa front-page news? Because “Ebola!” scares reporters and makes for better clickbait headlines. The news is stupid and shallow. © Creators Syndicate, Inc.
But the biggest news, like changing attitudes about gender, happens all over the place. When I graduated, 60% of the world’s population lived in extreme poverty. Now, fewer than 9% do. Globally, that’s probably the most life-changing event over the past 50 years – a great victory, made possible by freer markets. But most reporters don’t like free markets, and politicians rarely talk about change they don’t control.
John Stossel is an award-winning contrarian journalist and most recently the author of No They Can't! Why Government Fails – But Individuals Succeed.
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September 2019
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