Little Red Wagon Repairman
MFOMBSoPGA
I can't. I'm either too stupid, unaware, or there ain't one.
here we're facing a problem : what should be done when a majority of people think in a way and a small minority think the othert way. Should both opinions be granted the same airtime or should the opinion that is most shared be granted more airtime than the one who's less shared ?Most of the old school are: Chicago Sun-Times, Washington Post, LA Times, NY Times, San Jose Mercury News, Etc.
CBS, ABC, NBC, CNN, MSNBC. The problem is they tend to report things in a binary terms, (Yes, no, left, right, good, bad) when life is really shades & levels of grey. Politics can't be accurately reduced to a one dimensional line. Science deals in proven facts and should not be balanced against ignorant deniers, as if each were equal.
I don't think there is 100% objective news sources.
Given the right set of circumstances, I believe it's possible...just not likely.I don't think humans can be 100% objective.
I don't think humans can be 100% objective. Imperfect beings always lean one way or the other even if it's slight. You can think you call it down the middle or tell it like it is but you are wired to filter information many times the way you want to receive it.
We are in philosophic territory. I find this very enlightening, and one of the most important topics to begin with for this subforum.
I'd say for EVERY single thread, we would need to go to a "meta-leveö", which means: Don't take sources and discuss their input. If so, you already made a mistake. As you guys already said:
The whole chain of gathering, processing and forwarding information is based on the humans involved, and by the time you read an article, at least two or three people have filtered it and all with the mindset that they have to keep in line of the media owners ground rules. These days, there is the possibility of Internet Bloggers, who do not have such overhead, but they often lack professionalism or are in it for sensationalism.
If you consider what the agenda of the storyteller is, you are as close to objective as you can get.
The closest I found was PBS NewsHour.
No not really. It seems they took McNeil-Lerner hour and expanded it with a few more reporters. I think everything changed when news was put in the same Nielsen rating as entertainment. Once that happened the news had to compete with talk shows, reruns, and entertainment news.This. They also were far more in depth, though I haven't watched it in years, so don't know if they have changed.
NPR? You can't be serious.
Yes.
"All Things Considered" has had guess politicians on from both sides of the aisle.