The non-coverage of Ron Paul, and now the coverage of Ron Paul, give
me an example of how badly the press reports on candidates. Here is my
recipe for a fair, interesting, informative way to cover a candidate
- Do your homework first--know the candidate's policy positions, their
strengths and weaknesses.
- Let the candidate present their positions and their strengths. Give
them a fair chance to do this without interrupting with gotcha
questions.
- Follow-up on the policy weaknesses and professional/leadership
weaknesses. Revealing these weaknesses is an important task for the
press because the candidate isn't going to do it himself, and opponents
will tend to exaggerate.
So what was wrong with the coverage on Paul?
- First no coverage.
- Then coverage only as a no-hoper.
- Then coverage only of the newsletter scandal.
- No reporting on his policy
proposals.
- No critique of his policy weaknesses.
The first and the last are the biggest failures of the press. On
second thought, they are all failures, and I'm not sure which is the
worst, especially considering that the press could easily do a better
job. If only they would divert some of their resources away from
repetition, celebrity reporting, and media frenzy, they would have
many more half-decent stories on this at-least-moderately-important presidential race.
The only guaranteed airtime for Paul
I critique Paul's general policy approach
here and "sound money" ideas
here.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please keep comments short and free of personal insults. Insults such as libtard, Obummer, Repug, wingnut, and moonbat are not welcome and will be edited or deleted. Cliches we've all heard before will be deleted, so make sure there is substance to your remarks. Links to data are very welcome so we can all learn and interpret for ourselves.
Anonymous comments are welcome, but it's better if you click on "Name/URL" and enter any screen name. Thank you.