How NPR lost America's trust
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I still listen to it at times, but agree with all the above comments,
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I listened to him on Bari's White's podcast. He seems to feel there was a day when there was more objectivity. If anything, I don't think I can recall those days. Back in the 80s, it felt like there was wall-to-wall coverage of Nicaragua to the point of absurdity. Similarly, the bias was much heavier handed toward Israel - an Israeli child who was injured would be covered more thoroughly than a kidnapping or murder in the US. Times change and perhaps the biases, but it is still pretty prevalent. I do listen when trapped in the car - This American Life, Wait Wait - Don't Tell Me, Science Friday, and occasionally Fresh Air if the guest is right can engage. Oh yeah, Kai Ryssdal's MarketPlace is worth a listen.
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I stopped listening to radio when my iPhone became permanently attached to my ears when driving. Since then, there's been no Wait Wait Don't Tell Me, and no Terri Gross, but that's not because they don't still have a place in my heart. I associate my last NPR days with my commute to my office job 15 years ago, and missing the rest of the show after I arrive.
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The other thing I got really sick of was the interminable breaks where they spent 5 minutes telling us how awesome they are and how their journalism was so groundbreakingly wonderful and commercial free (in the middle of what is clearly a commercial for themselves).
If they were that great, they wouldn't need to go on about it so much.
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800K is only a lot when it's somebody I don't like earning it.
I dislike Max Verstappen a lot more (basically because he's quite aggravating, foreign, and very talented), and he earns over 50 million a year.
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She looks like she should be the college intern.
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@LuFins-Dad said in How NPR lost America's trust:
She looks like she should be the college intern.
Taibbi: https://www.racket.news/p/new-npr-chief-katherine-mahers-guide?utm_source=profile&utm_medium=reader2
Maher’s timeline reads so much like the Titania McGrath site spoofing overeducated nonsense-babbling white ladies that it’s difficult to believe she’s real — she even looks like the fictional McGrath, if Titania had more money to spend on personal upkeep.
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@LuFins-Dad said in How NPR lost America's trust:
She looks like she should be the college intern.
They all look like that. And sound like it.
For all the talk of "diversity", pretty much everybody's young and female. Admittedly, they're a pretty diverse group of young women.
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@Axtremus said in How NPR lost America's trust:
I don't listen to radio much to begin with, and I listen to radio even less as I spend less time in the car. Still, of all the radio stations out there, I continue to prefer NPR for when I do listen to radio.
I do too, unless I want music. Sometimes the wokeness gets to me, but most of the time I don't mind hearing a different viewpoint. Every now and then they achieve something close to balance. Not often, but sometimes.
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Of course they did:
https://www.npr.org/2024/04/16/1244962042/npr-editor-uri-berliner-suspended-essay
NPR has formally punished Uri Berliner, the senior editor who publicly argued a week ago that the network had "lost America's trust" by approaching news stories with a rigidly progressive mindset.
Berliner's five-day suspension without pay, which began last Friday, has not been previously reported.
Yet the public radio network is grappling in other ways with the fallout from Berliner's essay for the online news site The Free Press. It angered many of his colleagues, led NPR leaders to announce monthly internal reviews of the network's coverage, and gave fresh ammunition to conservative and partisan Republican critics of NPR, including former President Donald Trump.
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@George-K said in How NPR lost America's trust:
Of course they did:
https://www.npr.org/2024/04/16/1244962042/npr-editor-uri-berliner-suspended-essay
NPR has formally punished Uri Berliner, the senior editor who publicly argued a week ago that the network had "lost America's trust" by approaching news stories with a rigidly progressive mindset.
Berliner's five-day suspension without pay, which began last Friday, has not been previously reported.
Yet the public radio network is grappling in other ways with the fallout from Berliner's essay for the online news site The Free Press. It angered many of his colleagues, led NPR leaders to announce monthly internal reviews of the network's coverage, and gave fresh ammunition to conservative and partisan Republican critics of NPR, including former President Donald Trump.
If I publicly criticised the company I work for I'd get a lot worse than that.
Just saying.