Oddly enough, 60 Minutes gets a bit of the blame. They were the first newscast that ever made a profit. After the stations saw that it was possible, fairness and actual news went out the window.
But it’s good to see that 60 Minutes is still one of the more reliable newscasts.
That was, and is, the myth. While the Fairness Doctrine required equal time for opinion segments, it did not apply to news programs. Reporters and news readers curated the statements and events they chose to broadcast, and did so with assumptions about which were important and what they meant. Suppressing some stories and creating others is nothing new.
I have a suggestion (which I actually sent to an MP). As terribly biased and loaded with misinformation legacy media has become and how Big tech is actively censoring topics on their platforms, I am strictly opposed to government intervention in either arena. It is obvious from thousands of years of history that no government can be trusted to set itself up as the arbiter of truth, like the Liberals are poised to do in Canada, calling for censorship of the internet.
Here’s my suggestion how to handle the situation: pass a law requiring all news outlets, whether TV, radio, newspaper or on-line, to prominently post a disclaimer along this line:
“While this media outlet strives to produce unbiased and factual news reporting, despite our best efforts it is human nature that error or bias may creep in. It is therefore incumbent- and encouraged- that the reader/viewer/listener seek out alternative sources of information in order to gain an accurate understanding of newsworthy events.”
There were days long ago when reporters had a fairly high degree of integrity and ethics. Those were high standards. Those were the days when most people seeking the news looked for those standards. Now? Now they’ll settle for whatever turds of “wisdom” they’re told to feed upon unless they actually work at it to fact check and examine the biases in the news they’re being fed.
The “Fairness Doctrine” meant that only the D side of the story ever got told. They claimed that their spin was “news”, while the R side was opinion. And opinions had to be given equal time, so they simply didn’t give the R side any time at all. (Except on the Sunday morning talk shows, which were less popular than televised church.) Pepperidge Farms remembers.
They were not required to be honest. People were less stupid, more in contact with reality. These days you can survive on subsidies or cozy useless government “jobs” with your nose stuck to the screen of your phone. That’s the kind of gullible people that can be manipulated by the media and the government and live in a fantasy world where your poor choices have no consequences. Forget about unemployment numbers. Even with full employment, with less than half of the working population doing real production, the economy will keep going down
They got rid of the Fairness Doctrine, got rid of Media Monopoly rules, and fast-tracked Rupert Murdoch to citizenship (so he could own an American TV station) at around the same time. Thank Newt Gingrich and the Republican Congress for that.
I used to see the British Tabloids and think "My God – this is a newspaper? I’m so glad American newspapers don’t do this. Then they took the guy who did that and let him buy the New York Post and a television station.
The Fairness Doctrine only required networks be “balanced” not honest. So if they had a MAGA on they also would have to give a Never Trump the opportunity to be on. And that was only if the MAGA editorialized.
The Fairness Doctrine was a censorship measure that required that, wherever the conservative point of view was presented, the liberal point of view also had to be presented. It was used as a political weapon against conservatives, and its repeal was a good thing.
Spreading lies and conspiracy theories should be against all principals of the media…..but when you are a privately owned news outlet, anything goes! Just have to rely on one’s own instincts to decipher what’s true and what’s a lie!
Unfortunately some have pea brains who can’t recognize truth from fiction.
I tried for balance. I subscribed to both the Washington Post and the National Review; one far left and one far right. But it didn’t work. Literally every headline story on each website was a politically-slanted view of some issue or event. Impartiality in the news no longer exists. So I cancelled both subscriptions and just read The Onion every day. Life has been better since. Ignorance is bliss!
Among other things the Fairness Doctrine required any station presenting opinionated content also provide opposing viewpoints. It would have required any channel broadcasting Rush Limbaugh to also give 3 hours of air time to Leftist (aka Communists). In effect, it would have silenced Rush which was the Left’s purpose in pushing it in the first place.
In fact, Pastis, In keeping with the Fairness Doctrine, I demand you turn over your comic strip to me for several years to write opposing content. That’s “fair”, isn’t it?
Key word “Broadcast” As we know from our First Amendment the government cannot tell anyone what they can and cannot say.However, the broadcast frequencies were considered a public resource and in order to gain commercial access to them broadcasters had to follow certain rules, including the Fairness Doctrine, which was a policy that required the holders of broadcast licenses both to present controversial issues of public importance and to do so in a manner that fairly reflected differing viewpoints.By 1987 it had lost most of its effectiveness. Cable stations such as FOX would never have been subject to it. So, it becomes just another pointless lamentation on the internet.
Whatever gets sales gets printed. No one wants to read a story that says, “Local man waits outside for daffodils to bloom”. However, “Nuclear apocalypse! World ending!” is much more enticing.
The Fairness Doctrine prevented the discussion of almost any issue because you could rarely get both sides in the same room to hold a discussion. When you did it was more like a Jerry Springer show than a real resolution of ideas and during a political campaign you couldn’t even have the incumbent’s regular report to constituents aired because everyone running against them demanded equivalent time – think the last 3 Democrat Presidential races?
I remember Jack Paar reading the NYT to us one night. On 18 September 1961, a DC-6 passenger aircraft of Transair Sweden, operating for the United Nations, crashed near Ndola, Northern Rhodesia (present-day Zambia). The crash resulted in the deaths of all people onboard including Dag Hammarskjöld, the second Secretary-General of the United Nations, and 15 others. Hammarskjöld had been en route to cease-fire negotiations with Moise Tshombe during the Congo Crisis. The Times article included how they were greeted after they arrived and what they had for lunch.
That didn’t mean they were always trusted by every person. Often whether they were believed was in the eye of the beholder. It didn’t hurt that the overall news media consisted of far fewer outlets in total. This is another example of trading quality for quantity, not to mention anything that confirms our biases. But the people who attack the donkey are still idiots, no matter how mass or limited the media is.
Unsurprising that it ended under Reagan. It enabled people like Rush Limbaugh to spread their right wing rhetoric and brainwash people who were susceptible to it. Mostly White men of a certain age. All this directly lead to the election of Trump and the severe divisions we have in the US
Conservative claims “the media is liberal” but it’s actually conservative. And you know that because it’s CONSERVATIVES who oppose news stations airing other viewpoints.
You were allowed to say whatever you want, but under the Fairness Doctrine if you knowingly lied on the air you had to provide equal air time for the opposing view. Basically, it upheld free speech but made dishonesty unprofitable.
The Fairness Doctrine didn’t mean that issues were presented in a manner that was honest and balanced. It meant that if you voiced your own opinion, you also had to parrot the establishment line, too.
A New Cry for the outraged sweeps the land! NO TOES FOR FOES! Of course, it signifies nothing remotely corresponding to reality. but that doesn’t matter nowadays….
This isn’t entirely true. The fairness doctrine just meant that say a radio station running three hours of Rush Limbaugh would then have to air three hours of … well I don’t even know of any left wing hosts to name here. It prevented stations from delivering a product people wanted to hear. After the landscape of talk changed, you had both right and left talk stations, and a few who mixed it up, but the left were never as successful – in part because you already had that on the TV networks and in part because nobody wanted to listen to it.
The real problem is in 2010 a law preventing the media from running straight up propaganda was removed. The bias was bad in TV news before but now it’s absurd how terrible it is. Even weather reports are usually exaggerated beyond belief. And there are guilty parties on both sides of the aisle. I’ve come to realize the only difference between some right and left leaning people is the things they hate, won’t discuss rationally and want to ban.
I agree. I know here in Detroit the Free Press was a little more Labor & People friendly while the Detroit News was much more business friendly in their coverages.
When the Fairness Doctrine was in place the default assumption was that news broadcasts on the major networks were fair. Newsflash: they weren’t.
It should also be noted that the Fairness Doctrine only applied to broadcast media, which the government could regulate only because they use the public airwaves. Cable and internet media sources wouldn’t be covered even if it still existed.
BE THIS GUY over 2 years ago
But newspapers were able to print whatever they wanted. Often, you could tell by their name what political party they supported.
Bilan over 2 years ago
Oddly enough, 60 Minutes gets a bit of the blame. They were the first newscast that ever made a profit. After the stations saw that it was possible, fairness and actual news went out the window.
But it’s good to see that 60 Minutes is still one of the more reliable newscasts.
BasilBruce over 2 years ago
So who are the real asses here?
ronaldspence over 2 years ago
nothing scares a dumb ass like a wise one…
David_the_CAD over 2 years ago
I think it all started in the 80’s with the development of “Infotainment”.
Sadly it has become anger as entertainment.
lavender headgear over 2 years ago
When Stephan says “media doesn’t have to be honest,” you know he’s pointing fingers at the ones who are honest (at least sometimes).
smartty cat over 2 years ago
well, if Stephan relies on his wise ass to be the source of his toons we be in deep doo-doo.
pschearer Premium Member over 2 years ago
The Fairness Doctrine was a blatant violation of free speech. It deserved to die.
Cornelius Noodleman over 2 years ago
My eyes pop out too when I hear the word pizza.
GeorgeInAZ over 2 years ago
That was, and is, the myth. While the Fairness Doctrine required equal time for opinion segments, it did not apply to news programs. Reporters and news readers curated the statements and events they chose to broadcast, and did so with assumptions about which were important and what they meant. Suppressing some stories and creating others is nothing new.
Imagine over 2 years ago
Follow the money.
blunebottle over 2 years ago
I have a suggestion (which I actually sent to an MP). As terribly biased and loaded with misinformation legacy media has become and how Big tech is actively censoring topics on their platforms, I am strictly opposed to government intervention in either arena. It is obvious from thousands of years of history that no government can be trusted to set itself up as the arbiter of truth, like the Liberals are poised to do in Canada, calling for censorship of the internet.
Here’s my suggestion how to handle the situation: pass a law requiring all news outlets, whether TV, radio, newspaper or on-line, to prominently post a disclaimer along this line:
“While this media outlet strives to produce unbiased and factual news reporting, despite our best efforts it is human nature that error or bias may creep in. It is therefore incumbent- and encouraged- that the reader/viewer/listener seek out alternative sources of information in order to gain an accurate understanding of newsworthy events.”
rshive over 2 years ago
But surely loving pizza should count for something ….
jimchronister2016 over 2 years ago
And then theirs the republican trump doctrine “its OK, everybody lies so its OK to lie”
Ermine Notyours over 2 years ago
The Fairness Doctrine would not have applied to cable and the internet anyway. Sinclair aside, what impact does broadcast have any more?
Display over 2 years ago
There were days long ago when reporters had a fairly high degree of integrity and ethics. Those were high standards. Those were the days when most people seeking the news looked for those standards. Now? Now they’ll settle for whatever turds of “wisdom” they’re told to feed upon unless they actually work at it to fact check and examine the biases in the news they’re being fed.
Charles over 2 years ago
The “Fairness Doctrine” meant that only the D side of the story ever got told. They claimed that their spin was “news”, while the R side was opinion. And opinions had to be given equal time, so they simply didn’t give the R side any time at all. (Except on the Sunday morning talk shows, which were less popular than televised church.) Pepperidge Farms remembers.
MayCauseBurns over 2 years ago
The US government also modified the Smith-Mundt Act so it could propagandize its own citizens.
willispate over 2 years ago
Pizza to Microchip our Toes?! laughs hysterically
Denver Reader Premium Member over 2 years ago
The fairness doctrine was anything but.
franki_g over 2 years ago
Toe microchips, for people who vote with their feet.
jbmlaw01 over 2 years ago
The fairness doctrine never produced integrity. There was simply no opposing voice to challenge the lie.
Cameron1988 Premium Member over 2 years ago
Poor Wise ass on the hill
James Wolfenstein over 2 years ago
They were not required to be honest. People were less stupid, more in contact with reality. These days you can survive on subsidies or cozy useless government “jobs” with your nose stuck to the screen of your phone. That’s the kind of gullible people that can be manipulated by the media and the government and live in a fantasy world where your poor choices have no consequences. Forget about unemployment numbers. Even with full employment, with less than half of the working population doing real production, the economy will keep going down
Ellis97 over 2 years ago
I think I’ll read the paper.
nitromicro over 2 years ago
Ah yes, communist donkeys using pizza to microchip our toes. Such a simple, diabolical plan. Those Illuminati sure are smart.
Ignatz Premium Member over 2 years ago
They got rid of the Fairness Doctrine, got rid of Media Monopoly rules, and fast-tracked Rupert Murdoch to citizenship (so he could own an American TV station) at around the same time. Thank Newt Gingrich and the Republican Congress for that.
I used to see the British Tabloids and think "My God – this is a newspaper? I’m so glad American newspapers don’t do this. Then they took the guy who did that and let him buy the New York Post and a television station.
BadCreaturesBecomeDems over 2 years ago
Psdonkey!
Yes “donkeys” are communists.
Gen.Flashman over 2 years ago
The Fairness Doctrine only required networks be “balanced” not honest. So if they had a MAGA on they also would have to give a Never Trump the opportunity to be on. And that was only if the MAGA editorialized.
Jeffin Premium Member over 2 years ago
Kiss your @$$ goodbye.
mail2jbl over 2 years ago
The Fairness Doctrine was a censorship measure that required that, wherever the conservative point of view was presented, the liberal point of view also had to be presented. It was used as a political weapon against conservatives, and its repeal was a good thing.
Steve Dallas over 2 years ago
That isn’t what the fairness doctrine said. Not even remotely.
Snolep over 2 years ago
Pizza to microchip? That’s just crazy. They use Jewish space lasers!
ChristineMurphy over 2 years ago
Need a sad button today.
Zebrastripes over 2 years ago
Spreading lies and conspiracy theories should be against all principals of the media…..but when you are a privately owned news outlet, anything goes! Just have to rely on one’s own instincts to decipher what’s true and what’s a lie!
Unfortunately some have pea brains who can’t recognize truth from fiction.
mr_bill_10 over 2 years ago
I tried for balance. I subscribed to both the Washington Post and the National Review; one far left and one far right. But it didn’t work. Literally every headline story on each website was a politically-slanted view of some issue or event. Impartiality in the news no longer exists. So I cancelled both subscriptions and just read The Onion every day. Life has been better since. Ignorance is bliss!
Tom over 2 years ago
Among other things the Fairness Doctrine required any station presenting opinionated content also provide opposing viewpoints. It would have required any channel broadcasting Rush Limbaugh to also give 3 hours of air time to Leftist (aka Communists). In effect, it would have silenced Rush which was the Left’s purpose in pushing it in the first place.
Tom over 2 years ago
In fact, Pastis, In keeping with the Fairness Doctrine, I demand you turn over your comic strip to me for several years to write opposing content. That’s “fair”, isn’t it?
IshkaBibel1 over 2 years ago
Key word “Broadcast” As we know from our First Amendment the government cannot tell anyone what they can and cannot say.However, the broadcast frequencies were considered a public resource and in order to gain commercial access to them broadcasters had to follow certain rules, including the Fairness Doctrine, which was a policy that required the holders of broadcast licenses both to present controversial issues of public importance and to do so in a manner that fairly reflected differing viewpoints.By 1987 it had lost most of its effectiveness. Cable stations such as FOX would never have been subject to it. So, it becomes just another pointless lamentation on the internet.
deojaideep aka Courage over 2 years ago
WTF???
Barbara Chicco over 2 years ago
not one mention that it was ronald reagan who did it?
Goat from PBS over 2 years ago
Whatever gets sales gets printed. No one wants to read a story that says, “Local man waits outside for daffodils to bloom”. However, “Nuclear apocalypse! World ending!” is much more enticing.
Roy Lamberton over 2 years ago
The Fairness Doctrine prevented the discussion of almost any issue because you could rarely get both sides in the same room to hold a discussion. When you did it was more like a Jerry Springer show than a real resolution of ideas and during a political campaign you couldn’t even have the incumbent’s regular report to constituents aired because everyone running against them demanded equivalent time – think the last 3 Democrat Presidential races?
devilman1972 over 2 years ago
The problem is that people think that their news source of choice is never biased.
rorie over 2 years ago
I remember Jack Paar reading the NYT to us one night. On 18 September 1961, a DC-6 passenger aircraft of Transair Sweden, operating for the United Nations, crashed near Ndola, Northern Rhodesia (present-day Zambia). The crash resulted in the deaths of all people onboard including Dag Hammarskjöld, the second Secretary-General of the United Nations, and 15 others. Hammarskjöld had been en route to cease-fire negotiations with Moise Tshombe during the Congo Crisis. The Times article included how they were greeted after they arrived and what they had for lunch.
Otis Rufus Driftwood over 2 years ago
That didn’t mean they were always trusted by every person. Often whether they were believed was in the eye of the beholder. It didn’t hurt that the overall news media consisted of far fewer outlets in total. This is another example of trading quality for quantity, not to mention anything that confirms our biases. But the people who attack the donkey are still idiots, no matter how mass or limited the media is.
SusieB over 2 years ago
Unsurprising that it ended under Reagan. It enabled people like Rush Limbaugh to spread their right wing rhetoric and brainwash people who were susceptible to it. Mostly White men of a certain age. All this directly lead to the election of Trump and the severe divisions we have in the US
diskus Premium Member over 2 years ago
Dont think of it as news any longer, rather entertainment. Sort of like professional wrestling. I totally ignore it.
Keno21 over 2 years ago
There IS no news. Only propaganda.
Ignatz Premium Member over 2 years ago
Conservative claims “the media is liberal” but it’s actually conservative. And you know that because it’s CONSERVATIVES who oppose news stations airing other viewpoints.
eric_harris_76 over 2 years ago
There are people who think newspapers and other media companies don’t have political leanings.
Dan Rather is either an idiot or a liar. He said he thought the New York Times was middle of the road.
Well, they did admit, far too late to do J.R. Biden any Election Day harm, that there was something important about the Hunter Biden laptop.
Talk about denialists. At least the ignorant Holocaust deniers actually believe the not-true things they say.
The NYT could not possibly have been stupid enough to think there was nothing to the Hunter Biden story. Among other things.
No doubt Fox News has its own shameful reporting. And no doubt the whataboutists will provide examples shortly.
Spiny Norman Premium Member over 2 years ago
I have to say this comment section hasn’t gone nearly as badly as I thought it would. I’m proud of you all.
KEA over 2 years ago
money ruins everything
zeexenon over 2 years ago
During the ’50s and ’60s, William T. Evjue, Madison, WI Newspapers Honcho, decided if we could run ads which underpriced Sears, etc.
raybarb44 over 2 years ago
Should have left well enough alone…..
_lounger_ over 2 years ago
dang, I liked the wise ass on the hill…
amaryllis2 Premium Member over 2 years ago
You were allowed to say whatever you want, but under the Fairness Doctrine if you knowingly lied on the air you had to provide equal air time for the opposing view. Basically, it upheld free speech but made dishonesty unprofitable.
sisterea over 2 years ago
Yep that is pretty much what happened, especially when you threw facebook and twitter into the mix.
schaefer jim over 2 years ago
Wow this toon broke my heart and soul with the slogan no toes for foes. Got to have a garage sale for my ten toes!
thedogesl Premium Member over 2 years ago
Asked and answered.
Spiffy over 2 years ago
The Fairness Doctrine didn’t mean that issues were presented in a manner that was honest and balanced. It meant that if you voiced your own opinion, you also had to parrot the establishment line, too.
Tentoes over 2 years ago
Fairness doctrine was so easily subverted: You just found some idiot to make a mess of the opposing view.
Sisyphos over 2 years ago
A New Cry for the outraged sweeps the land! NO TOES FOR FOES! Of course, it signifies nothing remotely corresponding to reality. but that doesn’t matter nowadays….
DaBump Premium Member over 2 years ago
Reliable information? Perhaps not. But now we get to choose our own bias, rather than be stuck with the so-called “honest” side.
DaBump Premium Member over 2 years ago
Oh, and (sigh) nobody ever uses “whom” where it is appropriate anymore.
TSRaman over 2 years ago
Are you suggesting no communist is a donkey? That’s nonsense.
pontiac59 over 2 years ago
This isn’t entirely true. The fairness doctrine just meant that say a radio station running three hours of Rush Limbaugh would then have to air three hours of … well I don’t even know of any left wing hosts to name here. It prevented stations from delivering a product people wanted to hear. After the landscape of talk changed, you had both right and left talk stations, and a few who mixed it up, but the left were never as successful – in part because you already had that on the TV networks and in part because nobody wanted to listen to it.
The real problem is in 2010 a law preventing the media from running straight up propaganda was removed. The bias was bad in TV news before but now it’s absurd how terrible it is. Even weather reports are usually exaggerated beyond belief. And there are guilty parties on both sides of the aisle. I’ve come to realize the only difference between some right and left leaning people is the things they hate, won’t discuss rationally and want to ban.
strahd9 Premium Member over 2 years ago
I agree. I know here in Detroit the Free Press was a little more Labor & People friendly while the Detroit News was much more business friendly in their coverages.
scpandich over 2 years ago
When the Fairness Doctrine was in place the default assumption was that news broadcasts on the major networks were fair. Newsflash: they weren’t.
It should also be noted that the Fairness Doctrine only applied to broadcast media, which the government could regulate only because they use the public airwaves. Cable and internet media sources wouldn’t be covered even if it still existed.
198.23.5.11 over 2 years ago
Real life interferes with Paradise.Sad.
Swirls Before Pine over 2 years ago
The interlopers in panel five have to be right-wing ultra-conservative Trump supporters. No liberal would ever make those statements.
DonnaSimmons over 2 years ago
It’s weird that the punchline is in the second panel.
alantain 9 months ago
Does anyone else think that the people in the 5th panel should be confined to a room with padded walls?