
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Guardian (10/20/22)
This week on CounterSpin: This midterm is a big-picture election. It’s not just about the laws and policies and priorities governing our lives, not merely about whether we can control our own bodies or the environment has a future, the possibility of racial justice, or whether you can make rent with a full-time job. It’s about all of that, plus how we’re positioned to fight for the system that’s supposed to give each of us a say in those decisions.
OK, but here are the elite media headlines:
What’s happening here? What’s not happening here? FAIR always says that news media work in election season should be judged not by how reporters “treat” Democrats or Republicans, but about how they inform and engage the public—including vast numbers of people who don’t even vote, because they can’t, or because they don’t see the connection between pulling that lever and their day-to-day life. Is it too much to say it’s journalism’s job to make those connections, and to err on the side of reflecting public needs to politicians, rather than presenting politicians as celebrities for people to muse about from a distance?
CounterSpin talks about midterm election coverage with FAIR editor Jim Naureckas and FAIR managing editor Julie Hollar.
Transcript: “‘It’s Extra Problematic When the Implications Are the End of Democracy'”
Plus Janine Jackson takes a quick look at recent press coverage of Haiti.
By Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting4.8
502502 ratings
Guardian (10/20/22)
This week on CounterSpin: This midterm is a big-picture election. It’s not just about the laws and policies and priorities governing our lives, not merely about whether we can control our own bodies or the environment has a future, the possibility of racial justice, or whether you can make rent with a full-time job. It’s about all of that, plus how we’re positioned to fight for the system that’s supposed to give each of us a say in those decisions.
OK, but here are the elite media headlines:
What’s happening here? What’s not happening here? FAIR always says that news media work in election season should be judged not by how reporters “treat” Democrats or Republicans, but about how they inform and engage the public—including vast numbers of people who don’t even vote, because they can’t, or because they don’t see the connection between pulling that lever and their day-to-day life. Is it too much to say it’s journalism’s job to make those connections, and to err on the side of reflecting public needs to politicians, rather than presenting politicians as celebrities for people to muse about from a distance?
CounterSpin talks about midterm election coverage with FAIR editor Jim Naureckas and FAIR managing editor Julie Hollar.
Transcript: “‘It’s Extra Problematic When the Implications Are the End of Democracy'”
Plus Janine Jackson takes a quick look at recent press coverage of Haiti.

5,778 Listeners

1,985 Listeners

514 Listeners

1,460 Listeners

435 Listeners

1,205 Listeners

1,509 Listeners

1,591 Listeners

6,107 Listeners

3,904 Listeners

1,011 Listeners

558 Listeners

567 Listeners

354 Listeners

463 Listeners