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Fox News gets okay to misinform public

Mor Paul

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http://www.ceasespin.org/ceasespin_blog/ceasespin_blogger_files/fox_news_gets_okay_to_misinform_public.html


The attorneys for Fox, owned by media baron Rupert Murdock, successfully argued the First Amendment gives broadcasters the right to lie or deliberately distort news reports on the public airwaves. We are pushing for a consumer protection solution that labels news content according to its adherence to ethical journalism standards that have been codified by the Society of Professional Journalists (Ethics: spj.org).
A News Quality Rating System and Content Labeling approach, follows a tradition of consumer protection product labeling, that is very familiar to Americans. The ratings are anti-censorship and can benefit consumers.

Appellate Court Rules Media Can Legally Lie.
By Mike Gaddy. Published Feb. 28, 2003
On February 14, a Florida Appeals court ruled there is absolutely nothing illegal about lying, concealing or distorting information by a major press organization. The court reversed the $425,000 jury verdict in favor of journalist Jane Akre who charged she was pressured by Fox Television management and lawyers to air what she knew and documented to be false information. The ruling basically declares it is technically not against any law, rule, or regulation to deliberately lie or distort the news on a television broadcast.

On August 18, 2000, a six-person jury was unanimous in its conclusion that Akre was indeed fired for threatening to report the station's pressure to broadcast what jurors decided was "a false, distorted, or slanted" story about the widespread use of growth hormone in dairy cows.

The court did not dispute the heart of Akre's claim, that Fox pressured her to broadcast a false story to protect the broadcaster from having to defend the truth in court, as well as suffer the ire of irate advertisers. Fox argued from the first, and failed on three separate occasions, in front of three different judges, to have the case tossed out on the grounds there is no hard, fast, and written rule against deliberate distortion of the news.

The attorneys for Fox, owned by media baron Rupert Murdock, argued the First Amendment gives broadcasters the right to lie or deliberately distort news reports on the public airwaves.

In its six-page written decision, the Court of Appeals held that the Federal Communications Commission position against news distortion is only a "policy," not a promulgated law, rule, or regulation. Fox aired a report after the ruling saying it was "totally vindicated" by the verdict.
 
hahahahaha all i can say, fox would. they're not the brightest.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oW0vhNRMFVQ

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A68wDsWF5Qg
 
Because we all know a liberal member of the media wouldn't lie or distort the truth or forge documents pertaining to a sitting President.  That would never happen. Not ever.  Oh wait....  And while we're on it, they were fighting a suit that cost them money.  They'd argue the other way if that's what was hitting their pocket book.  Please don't pretend like they were on some crusade to lie or that CNN wouldn't do the exact same thing.

And so as to keep the politics contained that we supposedly aren't allowed to talk about... how about the House passing that travesty of a bill today?  What a joke that thing is.  Here's hoping the Senate has more sense than to push that moronic thing through. 
 
I don't know how this stuff works in the States... you guys have replublican and democratic NEWS NETWORKS?  seriously?!?!

Basically all we have up here is CTV, CBC, GLOBAL and CityTV ( Showcase and Chum aren't very politically minded / oriented ) And all of them rail on whomever is in parliament regardless of their party.

EDIT: I"m not trolling, or trying to change the subject.  I just didn't realize there was a political tug-of-war with cnn and fox.  seems a little.... silly to me.
 
If you're comparing this Fox stuff to the Dan Rather scandal, there are some differences - people got fired at CBS over that, including the producer, it wasn't policy, nor was it standard operating procedure. Fox has been conclusively documented as being a Republican talking points mouthpiece with orders from on high to keep it that way. See "outfoxed" the documentary. I don't think it's a fair comparison, but at the same time our US news media in general is awful and getting worse. My favorite 'straight' news source these days is usually the BBC online even for American news.
 
Volitions Advocate said:
I don't know how this stuff works in the States... you guys have replublican and democratic NEWS NETWORKS?  seriously?!?!

Basically all we have up here is CTV, CBC, GLOBAL and CityTV ( Showcase and Chum aren't very politically minded / oriented ) And all of them rail on whomever is in parliament regardless of their party.

EDIT: I"m not trolling, or trying to change the subject.  I just didn't realize there was a political tug-of-war with cnn and fox.  seems a little.... silly to me.

Yep  - being on the outside of the US looking in it all looks a bit, er, silly.

Oh - and in ontario we also have TVO (which is not into politics either). 
 
Oh, volitions, you have no idea how bad our news is. A fast developing trend in the US is for even the largest news sources to 'cater to' more specific and shrinking audiences - because people have so many choices, and they tend to prefer to get news from a source which generally agrees with them. Fox really started this trend in the early 90s and their success has really negatively influenced the other networks. MSNBC sadly is becoming the left-leaning version of Fox. CNN is pure bandwagon - conservatives hate them now, but at the start of gulf war 2 they were Bush's biggest cheerleaders and the left hated them.
 
I didn't mean any political things with my post, just thought it was interesting that news can be distorted and presented as fact with no regulation on it.
 
Max, mentioning Fox news is a political act in itself. You're young, you didn't know any better.
 
Max said:
I didn't mean any political things with my post, just thought it was interesting that news can be distorted and presented as fact with no regulation on it.

yeah i just figured that you were pointing out that Fox was a joke of a channel. no matter who you vote for.
 
JaySwear said:
Max said:
I didn't mean any political things with my post, just thought it was interesting that news can be distorted and presented as fact with no regulation on it.

yeah i just figured that you were pointing out that Fox was a joke of a channel. no matter who you vote for.

It wasn't even that as much as the court ruling.
 
It is scary that a mainstream news source is actually fighting for the legal right to lie. And as much as FOX likes to say that they aren't mainstream, they have too many viewers to not be mainstream.

On the flipside, i think this could help to prevent a not-always-honest govt from shutting down a network that is telling ugly or inconvenient truths.

I am NOT endorsing FOX. I hate them. And it this is a scary episode.

It is also a bit scary to me to count on our gov't to be THE dispenser of truth.
 
Reminds me of an old blog post from the lead singer of the Kidney Thieves.

http://www.kidneythieves.com/journal.html?bg=j

The news. I never get into it because it's so manipulative. I like to be informed, not controlled. After seeing Bowling for Columbine, I became even more sensitive to it.

I turned on the tv tonite and Newschic said:

"The snipers' connection to Southern California, news at 11."

[translation: Even though the sniper was not close to California he could still come to your neighborhood and shoot you. Be afraid.]

"Possible water contamination in your neighborhood, news at 11." "There's someone standing outside your window watching you; we'll tell you at 11, if you're still alive." The American media is an open sore. And every catch phrase or buzzword of the week (War on Terror-Enron-Abduction-Sniper - and let's not forget the "Evildoers") is the salt poured into it to keep it fresh and attended to. It kills me (funny ha-ha way) to see how these words are four times the size of Bobble-Head Teleprompter Reader in ALL CAPS font, stylized like a Die-Hard or Steven Segal movie. Let's not forget the flames for impact!
 
Since when has the law kept the likes of Fox (News Limited) from telling the story the way they want to tell it? Even stricter libel and slander laws here in Australia, won't stop our newspapers run by that 'mob' telling exaggerated stories and half truths. :dontknow:

Such is their bias I steadfastly refuse to buy this State's News Limited run newspaper (Daily Telegraph) and have refused to sign on to the Foxtel pay TV network for same reason. The Telegraph is nicknamed the Terrorgraph due to their sensationalist style of reporting and editorialising.

I am reluctant to sign on for Foxtel despite the Football I follow is only on their network (The Hyundai A-League), and having them invested heavily into Football since it's resurgence in 2005. I will give them credit for that, but at the same time, their sister newspaper, the Terrorgraph, is heavily biased against Football and recently ran a junk story about one of our stars in Australia, Tim Cahill. The main holding company of the whole organisation (News Limited) basically lets the subsidiaries run their own way and sometimes they clash with each other. Crazy ideology to have but there you go... :icon_scratch:
 
Ha, I need to see Bowling for Columbine sometime. Maybe I'll borrow it from my old journalism teacher...
 
You'll get no argument from me that the news is slanted, sensationalistic, and 90% pure crap.  It's just not something limited to Fox.  They got sued, so they went to court.  CNN, MSNBC, and pretty much every other news source would likely have done the exact same thing.  I don't know near enough about the case at hand to speak intelligently on whether or not Fox is in the wrong.  We are in a world where a sportscaster and an actress can suggest that people with different view points have a mental defect on a serious news channel and where O'Reilly and Hannity are taken seriously.  Michael Savage is even worse.  The news people saw what Howard Stern was doing and copied.  The problem is, people watch.  As such, they're not likely to change.  There's just not any sense of journalistic integrity anymore.  It was nice that Dan Rather apologized, but that falls into one of those acts where I am convinced he was only sorry he got caught.  
 
Actually I basically agree with that ^ 100%. As John Stewart has said, we are getting the news we deserve - if people watched serious intelligent programming there would be more of it, and if they turned off the idiots, there would be fewer idiots on TV. Our level of political discourse is a direct reflection of our intelligence/education as a country and that's pretty sad to say.
 
I take no issue with Jon Stewart, but it is sad that there is a measurable percentage of the population that lists him as their primary news source. I think he'd agree.
 
Max said:
Ha, I need to see Bowling for Columbine sometime. Maybe I'll borrow it from my old journalism teacher...

great movie! i think. not a michael moore fan, but it'll make you think

 
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