Crikey editorial 17.03.09

We’ve learned quite a bit about what you can get away with in the mainstream Australian media in the past few days. Let’s just recap: 24 hours after News Limited chief John Hartigan commandeers space in The Australian to continue his campaign that media self-regulation trumps privacy legislation, the main News Limited papers pass the hat round (between staff cuts and redundancy offers) to raise $15,000 for 30-year-old, near-nude photos of someone said to be a teenage Pauline Hanson.

If we are to take Ms Hanson’s word for it, the pictures were not of her. If we are to take to word of the man who sold them, he doesn’t know. If we are to take the word of the Daily Telegraph’s editor they definitely were Pauline Hanson because they hadn’t been digitally retouched and he looked. If we are to take the word of the Daily Telegraph’s deputy editor none of this matters because people went and bought the newspapers and that after all is an ultimate test of the public interest.

Which is of course the thing. We might have developed myriad new means of communication meantime, but nothing has changed in the corporate culture of News Limited since Rupert Murdoch traded daddy’s interest in the Adelaide News, picked up the Daily Mirror and refined the art of tabloid journalism as we know it. In short, you can never underestimate the intelligence of you readership, nor its appetite for prurience and sensation. It seems that now (and this too is hardly new) it doesn’t even matter whether what you publish has any basis in fact, even (especially?) if it applies to public figures engaged in the democratic process. They must, one assumes, be asking for it.

Is it any wonder that people view the media with a mixture of distrust and contempt? To act this way in a time of booming sales and an eager captive audience might be good business. To do so in a time of multiple credible alternatives to the manipulated drivel that passes for the Daily Telegraph and its like, would seem to be inviting legislative sanction at the very least.

4 Comments

  1. Catherine Bannister
    Posted March 17, 2009 at 8:28 pm | Permalink

    Get away with maybe, but not for free. Presume it’s going to cost newsltd at least $277K. Plus I might sue for damaged sensibilities and lost lunch.

  2. ross
    Posted March 20, 2009 at 3:23 pm | Permalink

    In my experience dealing with News Limited journalists and crikey.com.au is much the same, namely, an unwillingness to examine the issues professionally and honestly.

  3. ross
    Posted March 20, 2009 at 3:51 pm | Permalink

    For example, the above comment was censored. Every assertion I make is true but if the truth were reported then the CMC Chairman and Mr Beattie would both need to be investigated by the Police Commissioner and they will be in due course.

    Ciao Don Ross

  4. Venise Alstergren
    Posted March 23, 2009 at 1:29 pm | Permalink

    Did anyone read the rumour that Hanson herself may have been the perp. Apparently knowing that the HS to be the rag it is. She set it up so she could sue them witless. Any truth to that?

    PS: What are you feeding the pony?

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