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Originally posted by DarthVeda
I'd rather get it from FOX but our university cable doesn't carry it... only CNN... yuch
Then you donot belong in a university at all. FOX NEW is than Anti-Islam anti- human right and anti-civil right orginateion. Untril MR O"Relliey say he is sorry for all the nasy thing he said about Islam FOX NEW isnot unbiase NEW
at all.
By the year 2100 AD over half of the world population will be follower of Islam.
Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able? Then he is not omnipotent. Is he able, but not willing? Then he is malevolent. Is he both able and willing? Then whence cometh evil? Is he neither able nor willing?
Then why call him God? - Epicurus
Because I don't know the names of major channels in every country And I guess most people listen to their national media (ok, maybe not on 'Poly)
"I have been reading up on the universe and have come to the conclusion that the universe is a good thing." -- Dissident "I never had the need to have a boner." -- Dissident "I have never cut off my penis when I was upset over a girl." -- Dis
We have our local stations, and cable also carries CNN and BBC World.
(\__/) 07/07/1937 - Never forget
(='.'=) "Claims demand evidence; extraordinary claims demand extraordinary evidence." -- Carl Sagan
(")_(") "Starting the fire from within."
Christ on a crutch, have you actually been watching both networks?!
CNN: "We cautiously, soberly, and mostly unquestioningly support the President and this war"
FOX: "We openly, rabidly, hysterically and of course unquestioningly support the President and this war"
Two extremes. Riiiiiiight.
edit: To answer the question, I'll be relying on BBC World for information, but occasionally tuning in to CNN and FOX out of a kind of sociological curiosity.
The problem with BBC is that their U.S. coverage is horrible. It's biased, and in a stupid way that shows that it is nearly impossible for a journalist raised in the UK to have the slightest understanding of the U.S. Add to that the typical differences in style (BBC broadcasts typically add a headline like bit of opinion that is tagged on to the front end of most stories and is almost certainly going to be belied by the very few facts presented in the story proper. I guess the point is to make it sound more controversial, but it make me feel as though I'm watching tabloid television.), like the journalist arguing with the person they are interviewing both about the facts and their opinions. This is rarely productive in the least, and in many cases they may have just as well stopped rolling the cameras. The proper solution to a guest who you think is making fast and loose with the facts is to have another guest who contradicts him, not to have the supposed moderator rolling in the mud trying to get their personal opinion into the mix. I don't care about their personal opinion, I want to see experts, not television personalities. Anyway, the BBC pales in comparison to the Newshour, though I do watch it to see how the Brits are being spun.
He's got the Midas touch.
But he touched it too much!
Hey Goldmember, Hey Goldmember!
NPR has become my favorite source of news. It seems to be one of the few that puts very little, if any spin on their news. And because they are an objective source, they seems very liberal when compared to other news' sources. Fox is a rag... tune in if you want to hear what Rupert Murdoch thinks. CNN has potential, but they are just a combo of bias. Their entire broadcasts basically follow the format of CNN - Crossfire where morons from both sides spin the news. I stopped watching MSNBC when I learned they canned Donahue for his political views. I wasn't a big Donahue fan, but that sounds a lot like McCarthyism and blacklisting to me.
The problem with BBC is that their U.S. coverage is horrible. It's biased, and in a stupid way that shows that it is nearly impossible for a journalist raised in the UK to have the slightest understanding of the U.S. Add to that the typical differences in style (BBC broadcasts typically add a headline like bit of opinion that is tagged on to the front end of most stories and is almost certainly going to be belied by the very few facts presented in the story proper. I guess the point is to make it sound more controversial, but it make me feel as though I'm watching tabloid television.), like the journalist arguing with the person they are interviewing both about the facts and their opinions. This is rarely productive in the least, and in many cases they may have just as well stopped rolling the cameras. The proper solution to a guest who you think is making fast and loose with the facts is to have another guest who contradicts him, not to have the supposed moderator rolling in the mud trying to get their personal opinion into the mix. I don't care about their personal opinion, I want to see experts, not television personalities. Anyway, the BBC pales in comparison to the Newshour, though I do watch it to see how the Brits are being spun.
I certainly wouldn't rely on the BBC for US domestic news, but they're far supreior on international news, if only because they treat it as international, rather than as US-News-That-Also-Involves-Foreigners (the Fox/CNN model). And I actually like the way that they interrogate interviewees; BBC correspondents seem (and, if I remember my media professional statistics, actually are) much, much better educated and more knowledgeable that the talking haircuts that populate US television. The fact that they press their experts seems to me far more informative that the US quote-and-move-on school of journalism.
"I have as much authority as the pope. I just don't have as many people who believe it." — George Carlin
I would agree that the Newshour w/ Jim Leher is a far superior news show to BBC World. However, I'd easily take BBC World over Fox, CNN, MSNBC, etc. anyday.
"Beware of the man who works hard to learn something, learns it, and finds himself no wiser than before. He is full of murderous resentment of people who are ignorant without having come by their ignorance the hard way. "
-Bokonon
I certainly wouldn't rely on the BBC for US domestic news, but they're far supreior on international news, if only because they treat it as international, rather than as US-News-That-Also-Involves-Foreigners (the Fox/CNN model). And I actually like the way that they interrogate interviewees; BBC correspondents seem (and, if I remember my media professional statistics, actually are) much, much better educated and more knowledgeable that the talking haircuts that populate US television. The fact that they press their experts seems to me far more informative that the US quote-and-move-on school of journalism.
I like BBC for the news that we don't get, number one being coverage of Africa. But the bit about their anchors is really annoying. They simply don't have the time to carry out a proper interview, and I don't care for the argument between the anchor and the guest, it's too much like talk radio. Of course the anchor is going to get the last word, but I have yet to see this technique produce anything of value information wise. Of course if you agree politically with the anchor you may be amused, but again this is a feature of talk radio, and not a means of acquiring useful information.
Compare it to the panel discussion system used by the Newshour. You have a moderator, two to four guests with various viewpoints and enough time to make it worthwhile. The moderator maintains control in part because they maintain their impartiality, it is the guests who have to make their case on an even keel with those who have an opposing viewpoint. It plain works better.
Put the BBC anchors against the moderators from the Newshour, and I guarantee that the Newshour people will at least hold their own. They are the cream of the crop as far as serious television news goes, and not a looker in the whole bunch. (Well Margaret Warner is kind of cute, but still not your typical news bimbo.)
He's got the Midas touch.
But he touched it too much!
Hey Goldmember, Hey Goldmember!
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