Showing posts with label Media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Media. Show all posts

Friday, September 12, 2025

Rochester area NPR and PBS dealing with congressional cuts to their budget of $1.9 Million


Congress has eliminated all public media funding — including the $1.9 million that WXXI was scheduled to receive this October.

Incredible community support has gone a long way toward making up that shortfall — but a $700,000 gap remains that must be filled by October 1.

One of the strategies to take over  a society by an autocrat is to control the media and to eliminate the sources of accurate information that undermine the autocrat's lies. We are seeing this happen in the US as the Republican administration attempts to intimidate and eliminate what they consider unfavorable sources of accurate reporting.

Here on MarkhamsSlowNews we have committed ourselves to the Truth pledge which means we fact check and provide only the truth as best we are able.

Here in Rochester, NY area, MarkhamsSlowNews utilized the reporting of NPR and supports there journalism.

Sunday, September 7, 2025

What are Americans so afraid of?

 


Many Americans don’t feel safe. They are manipulated constantly by politicians who tell them they should be very afraid and that only the politician if elected can safe them.


This is a cruel game used to manipulate voters. Only when we feel safe can we turn our attention from the described threats and work together to create a better world.


People when they are scared are often not accurate in assessing real threats. What we are told to be scared of distracts our attention from what really matters.


This political game of “Be afraid and only I only I can save you” is very effective in manipulating groups of people and “spooking the herd.” This game is played not only by politicians but also constantly by the media.


“They’re eating the dogs! They’re eating the cats!” got Trump and Vance elected. Americans have been played as chumps.


It’s time for Americans to grow up and stop reacting to the imaginary monsters politicians have told them are under their beds. How does the American voter grow up and develop a more adult understanding of the world? It takes two things: correct information and emotional support.


Who can Americans trust? What is accurate and true? Who is honest and competent at threat assessment, and threat management preparedness? Who can you believe?


In future articles, MarkhamsSlowNews is dedicated to sharing the truth and referring the reader to accurate sources of information and ideas about how to obtain emotional support based on equity, justice, and compassion.


Tuesday, February 1, 2022

Unethical Fox leads people to death

 "Fox News" should not longer be called "Fox News," A better term is Fox Entertainment. The reason for this change is that Fox does not adhere to ethical journalistic standards. It distributes not only misinformation but harmful information which contributes to multiple harms including death.

While the deliberate provision of false information is not illegal, it is unethical, and as unethical behavior subject to public censure including boycott of its advertisers which make the engagement in this unethical behavior and provision of this harmful misinformation possible.



Educate your children and grandchildren, other family members, and neighbors about this unethical activity. Stop buying goods and services from Fox sponsors and let them know that you are doing so as long as they enable this unethical behavior.

Thursday, January 20, 2022

Lawsuits silence first amendment rights of independent journalists

 Article Notes - The Legal War Against Mother Jones by Monika Bauerlin, Mother Jones, Jan/Feb, 2022, p.4

Using money to silence the exercise of first amendment rights.


We learned a big lesson from that case. Not “don’t publish hard-hitting articles because you don’t want to get sued.” But “lawsuits aren’t necessarily about winning. Some are just about inflicting as much pain as possible.”


It’s not about right and wrong, justice. It’s not even about the plaintiff wanting to win its case against the defendant. It’s about making the defendant pay exorbitant legal costs so that they avoid getting sued in the future by forgoing any thoughts or actions objectionable to the plaintiff. In other words, lawsuits become a mechanism used by those with money to silence those without it.


Support for independent journalism includes legal defense of first amendment rights.


In total, our legal costs over the past two and a half years have approached $400,000, not including the cost of insurance. The Covington case alone has cost $150,000.


It is very important for citizens to support independent journalism. This support includes not only the cost of producing the journalistic product, but the legal costs of defending their right to publish it when powerful interests object to it and attempt to silence it by suing.


Lawsuits for trivial reasons can do a lot of damage to independent journalism.


We’re dealing with a broader movement that is going after facts and truth wherever they manifest themselves—in science, public health, journalism. And one of that movement’s tools is litigation, because they know that, win or lose, litigation is a way to inflict pain. (Donald Trump has always known this: He used to say he was glad he sued reporter Tim O’Brien, even though Trump lost.) If you can force news organizations—especially independent ones—to constantly run up legal bills for comparatively trivial reasons, you can do a lot of damage.


Sunday, January 2, 2022

The media, “Who is doing what to whom for what purpose?


Ever since the few began to control the many, disinformation, fabrications, and distractions have been used to shape consent, impose submission, and maintain domination. Whether by the invoked authority of God, the divine right of kings, the dictatorial embodiment of a fatherland, the “dictatorship of the proletariat,” or the tyranny of commercially managed marketplaces, the casualty of such control has always been the ability of ordinary people to give voice to their own realities, needs, demands, and grievances. Given the inherent pragmatism of the human mind, the oppressed have often found it safer to believe rather than think, to obey rather than dissent. Today, such a path is reinforced by a plutocratic political economy that allows corporations to dominate mass media, education, and the production of knowledge and memory. Human history, however, has not been


Huff, Mickey; Higdon, Nolan. United States of Distraction (City Lights Open Media) (p. 15). City Lights Publishers. Kindle Edition. 


This quote is from Ralph Nader’s foreword to the book, United States of Distraction. It describes the  imbalance of those in power to control the narrative.


Beliefs lead to actions. Beliefs are formed by what people are told. People are told what the people in power want them to believe so that those in power can benefit. These ideas are fundamental to the questions “What is the media for?” “Who controls the media?” What do those who control the media expect to gain by controlling the content?” “How to the targets of the media respond?”


This month on Markhams’ Slow News we will be discussing the news behind the news. Who is doing what to whom for what purpose?


Sunday, December 26, 2021

With the decline in literacy will The American Scholar still be publishing in its 100th year?


In the editor's note in the Winter 2022 issue of the American Scholar, it is written that The American Scholar is 90 years old. Will there be a centennial anniversary for the journal? At the 75th anniversary in 2007 Ted Widmer stated that there might not be a 100th anniversary because “Sound bites are shrinking, attention spans narrowing, and pubic language is degraded 24/7, from the vapid ad slogan to the lying speech to the vowelless text message” p.2


Thursday, May 13, 2021

Donald Trump's social media followers decreasing.

Four months after former President Donald Trump was banished from most mainstream social media platforms, he returned to the web last Tuesday with “From the Desk of Donald J. Trump,” essentially a blog for his musings.

A week since the unveiling, social media data suggests things are not going well. 

The ex-president’s blog has drawn a considerably smaller audience than his once-powerful social media accounts, according to engagement data compiled with BuzzSumo, a social media analytics company.

---------------------------
 CNBC analysis of Trump’s tweets in January found his most-liked tweets spread disinformation. But the conspiracy theories and name-calling that the former president has spread via his blog don’t seem to move the way they did when Trump benefited from the dual platforms of the White House and traditional social media. 

For more click here.

Editor's note:
I have added the bolding.
Is it a good thing that Americans no longer find lies and bullying entertaining. In bullying prevention programs, researchers find that the biggest antidote to bullying and lying is to deprive the bullier and liar and audience. Without an audience to play to these dysfunctional behaviors no longer are rewarded.

Here on MarkhamsSlowNews we track the use and abuse of the media as it functions in shedding light on the truth.


Sunday, November 29, 2020

Seeing the forest instead of just the trees. Stop watching cable news and read a book.




The same is true of social media. What starts as a couple of bullies spewing hate speech at a distance gets pushed by algorithms to the top of our Facebook and Twitter feeds. It’s by tapping into our negativity bias that these digital platforms make their money, turning higher profits the worse people behave. Because bad behaviour grabs our attention, it’s what generates the most clicks, and where we click the advertising dollars follow.17 This has turned social media into systems that amplify our worst qualities.

 

Bregman, Rutger. Humankind (p. 392). Little, Brown and Company. Kindle Edition. 

 

My rule of thumb? I have several: steer clear of television news and push notifications and instead read a more nuanced Sunday paper and in-depth feature writing, whether online or off. Disengage from your screen and meet real people in the flesh. Think as carefully about what information you feed your mind as you do about the food you feed your body.

 

Bregman, Rutger. Humankind (p. 392). Little, Brown and Company. Kindle Edition. 

 

The old journalistic slogan is “If it bleeds. It leads.” Johnny Winter’s great song, “Bad news travels like wildfire. Good news travels slow.” We are like the audiences at WWE wrestling evens or the crowds in the gladiator shows in the Roman Colosseum. Who doesn’t rubber neck at the scene of a crash?

 

The amygdala gets fired up at the first whiff of a threat and it's as if we can’t help ourselves. The prefrontal cortex, reason, was a later development in brain functioning. It takes training to make it master instead of the amygdala. What runs your life: your amygdala or your prefrontal cortex?


To engage the prefrontal cortex, the person must back off, stand down, get the situation into perspective by taking emotional distance. This is what Slow News attempts to do - pull back from the immediate to see the forest instead of just the trees.


Sunday, October 4, 2020

The Pernicious Contagion Of Misinformation

 


False statements — about Covid-19 and so much else — spread like a virus online. Scientists should study them like one.

10.2.2020

You’ve heard the claims. Hydroxychloroquine is a miracle cure for the Covid-19 virus. Wearing a mask is bad for you. Vaccines cause autism. Left-wing arsonists are responsible for the fires in California.

The Internet is full of misinformation — that is, inaccurate statements — including the sinister, intentionally misleading subset known as disinformation. Both are spreading, a contagion that imperils society just as surely as the coronavirus itself. Those who spread it run the gamut of society; a new study by Cornell University researchers concludes that President Trump has been the leading source of Covid-19 misinformation reported by news media, who often repeat the information “without question or correction.”

Scientists can approach the social disease of misinformation the same way they address real, biological diseases, say experimental psychologist Briony Swire-Thompson and political scientist David Lazer of Northeastern University. Writing in the 2020 Annual Review of Public Health, they explore questions of exposure, susceptibility and transmission of health-related misinformation.

Swire-Thompson spoke with Knowable Magazine about what we can learn from taking an epidemiological approach to misinformation. This conversation has been edited for length and clarity.

What do you mean by an epidemiological approach to misinformation?

The epidemiological approach is really just looking at how and why information spreads between people in a network. That’s very different from the individual approach that I’m used to in the experimental world, where you manipulate various conditions and see what the outcome is. Ideally, you need both.

Where does most online misinformation spread?

Much of this research is yet to be done. At the moment, a lot of the academic research on misinformation and disinformation is done using Twitter. It’s easier, because there’s more data-sharing between Twitter and the academic community than for other platforms like Facebook or Instagram. It’s also easier because of issues around privacy. When you tweet, you put it out there in public. But social media like Facebook and WhatsApp are private, so access is more complicated, as it should be with privacy concerns. It means that less research has been done on a lot of these platforms.

What do you know so far about who spreads misinformation?

One study by other researchers found that older adults — people over the age of 65 — are seven times more likely to share fake news as people 18 to 29. So older adults could potentially be spreading misinformation more often. We found the same trend in our own studies of fake news during the 2016 US election. We did see, too, that people who are very politically engaged are more likely to view and share political fake news.

But it’s a big problem that a lot of these studies have been done exclusively with political misinformation. We don’t know if that generalizes to other subjects like health. Health misinformation is very understudied.

The really surprising finding with our study, though, was the concentration. We had a sample of 16,000 people, and found that there were 16 individuals sharing 80 percent of the fake news, which is extraordinary. They’re superspreaders, just like with Covid-19. They were tweeting 71 times per day as compared to the median person, who tweeted 0.1 times per day. We assume they had automation tools that helped them retweet or reshare content.

That suggests those people are very important in the misinformation ecosystem. What do we know about them?

Very little. Twelve of them were females, but that is something I don’t believe will replicate in a larger sample. This is the big problem: You can’t really say much from only 16 individuals. We’re hopefully going to look at this with a much larger sample, and then we can make some generalizations about basic demographics like their age and political orientation.

What about bots? Are they doing most of the spreading, or is it coming from real people?

In our study, we linked voter registration data to Twitter handles to be sure they are real people. But even if bots are tweeting some of the misinformation, the question is, what influence are they having on real people? It’s unlikely that they have as much impact on people’s beliefs as some think, because they’re not as embedded in human social networks. Also, the trustworthiness of the source is really important, and we’re more likely to believe information from friends and family than from unknown accounts. However, the true impact of bots is still under debate.

What does this tell us about the virality of misinformation?

We often think of virality as one person shares information to another who shares it to another, and so forth. That’s compared to a broadcast where one person or a media outlet with lots of followers shares the information, and it gets very, very popular due to just one broadcast. It still gets seen by many people, but how that happens is different.

One recent paper found it was more likely that information was being broadcast than spread through true virality. That’s an interesting study, because it shows that people who have large numbers of followers probably have more responsibility to be sure that what they share is accurate. But that study was done with information in general, not misinformation.

A different paper found that false information spread faster, further and deeper than true information — but this was observational, not experimental, so we still don’t know why. The authors proposed that it was due to the information being novel and inspiring fear, disgust, and surprise. It had this emotional component, they proposed, that was behind the higher spread.

But these are still early days. Surprisingly early days, in this field.

On the other side of the contagion, who is most likely to receive online misinformation?

We found there was a very similar pattern as for sharing. Again, it was older adults. I think that on both the sharing and the exposure end, they could be a group we want to check in on to see if they’re believing this information. They might be fine. People might be, like, “I know that’s false. It’s just funny.” So we should check.

People on the political right both share and view more. While conservatives and liberals share the same proportion of misinformation that they view, conservatives are sharing more because they are exposed to more misinformation in their social media ecosystem.

What can we do to reduce the spread of misinformation?

There is a lot that we all can do to reduce the spread of misinformation online. Simple measures like correcting misinformation if we see our friends and family sharing it can go a long way. Also, taking a bit more time to read an article and to consider whether it is true prior to sharing, and being more conscious about who we friend or follow online, can be considered good practice.

Does it help or hurt to correct misinformation?

Scientists used to be concerned about a phenomenon called the backfire effect, where you try and correct the information and it has the opposite effect: People increase their belief instead of reducing it. I think many people became quite afraid of correcting, and they preferred to just let the misinformation sit out there.

People thought the backfire effect was due to two things: One, if the information was connected to people’s sense of identity, when the correction occurred they were more likely to dig in their heels. Two, the effect of information repetition: I have to repeat the misinformation to correct it, and this familiarity makes people think the information is more true.

I’ve done research on both, and we have found there’s very little evidence for either. We haven’t been able to replicate the findings that showed these things, even using the exact same items. And it isn’t just my work. We came to the conclusion that the backfire effect is not widespread. I think it’s now safe to say corrections work.

Even for Covid-19-related misinformation?

It is a bit of a perfect storm these days in the pandemic. In the correction world, the best response we have is to tell people what the true information is. But for Covid-19 we can’t say what is true yet, in many areas, because it takes such a long time for science to establish the facts. It’s like we’re fighting with our hands tied behind our back.

Are there differences in how people respond when misinformation is corrected?

I’ve done only one study on this, looking at whether people in different cultures process information differently. And we found a big difference between people in the USA and Australia. We were looking at when misinformation from people’s favored politicians was corrected. In both the US and Australia, people did a great job of decreasing their belief in the misinformation. That was really positive, an encouraging finding.

But while people in the US reduced their belief in the misinformation itself, it didn’t change the way they were going to vote, on the left or the right. In Australia, we found that the correction greatly impacted people’s feelings and their voting intentions toward these political figures. That could be because Australia is less polarized. But the fact that we found a difference in something like that highlights the importance of doing misinformation studies in different locations and on different topics, because I don’t think we know where findings are going to be replicable and where they’re not.

What do we still have to learn?

A lot of these questions — who’s susceptible to misinformation, who’s spreading it and for what reasons, who’s predisposed — have very unsatisfying answers right now. My partner does vision science. I’m always super-jealous, because how people see has been studied for at least a hundred years. For misinformation, we’re still trying to establish the basics, in terms of who and when. But I think these are the exact kind of things we need to know to be able to build this model of epidemiology.

This article originally appeared in Knowable Magazine, an independent journalistic endeavor from Annual Reviews. Sign up for the newsletter.

Knowable Magazine | Annual Reviews

Thursday, June 11, 2020

Does media collude with law enforcement to glorify police violence?

What's the Big Deal?: Dirty Harry (1971) - MTV

University of Oregon professor Carol Stabile writes in her article, "During Floyd protests, media industry reakons with long history or collaboration with law enforcement" on June 11. 2020 on The Conversation.

Periodically, Americans have been made aware of the one-sidedness of these media depictions of police conduct. In 1968, for example, the Kerner Commission explored the causes of uprisings in black communities. Its report noted that, within these communities, there was longstanding awareness that “the press has too long basked in a white world looking out of it, if at all, with white men’s eyes and white perspective.”
Changing that perspective requires more than recognizing the role police dramas have played as propaganda for law enforcement. It means reckoning with the legacy of stories that gloss over police misconduct and violence, which disproportionately affect people of color.
The TV shows "Cops" and "Live PD" have been canceled due to their glorification of police violence.

Saturday, December 28, 2019

How the legalization of Cannabis is being rigged for the 1%



Describes how Sinclair Broadcasting has taken over local TV stations even with different affiliates and then mandates the insertion of prescribed content into their local programming. The article then goes on to describe how the 1% is taking over the legalized cannabis business with all sorts of legislative regulations to favor their ownership. This left me to think that even with the legalization of production, processing, and marketing of cannabis there will still be a viable and vibrant black market.
Tags: Cannabis, How the System Works, Media