Only Truth can give
true reputation: only reality can be of real profit. One deceit needs many
others, and so the whole house is built in the air and must soon come to the
ground. Unfounded things never reach old age. They promise too much to be much
trusted, just as that cannot be true which proves too much.
Baltasar Gracian - The Art of Worldly Wisdom (1647)
Following on from the previous post, it is worth pointing
out that a media and entertainment organisation such as the BBC cannot possibly
be impartial. Impartiality is not and cannot be a major aspect of mainstream
media businesses. It is an ideal rather than some attainable state and in any
event the audience for impartiality seems to be far too small. For mainstream
media everything must be framed in a familiar way. The framing has to appeal to
both stakeholders and to an audience - it cannot be impartial.
To take a very simple example - in reporting the activities
of Greta Thunberg an impartial BBC would recognise that she exemplifies an
appeal to false authority. She is not an authority on climate change and her lack
of authority would have to frame all BBC reports about her activities. The
puppet’s strings would have to be visible.
A related problem affects enormous swathes of BBC reporting.
In general celebrities are not authorities on areas of life beyond their professional
expertise. This is not to say that outside opinions have no value, but celebrity
status rarely adds to that value. In world of mainstream media it obviously adds
value, but in an impartial world it would not.
In a similar vein, whenever a minister or shadow minister
makes some kind of claim, an impartial BBC would have to provide background
sources to the claim - no misleading omissions. It would have to find out who
advised the minister and on what basis that advice is deemed to be valid. Yet
this is probably not what BBC viewers actually want. They want the cut and
thrust of politics not the dull grind of impartial reporting. This is what the
BBC clearly wants too.
Another problem would arise from politically influential
people. An easy but powerful example has been provided by Jeremy Corbyn with
his long history of sharing platforms with political extremists and fanatics
who engage in or seek to justify political violence. Skating around Mr Corbyn’s
inglorious political history is not impartial.
The BBC generally claims to have an even-handed approach to
political debates, but even-handed is not the same as impartial. Mr Corbyn’s political
history would be a major factor in any impartial approach to many political
debates in the UK. It need not be an issue in the even-handed approach favoured
by the BBC. Even-handed can be and often is far less than impartial.
There is no particular need to labour these points because
the BBC quite obviously has a corporate culture and like all cultures it cannot
be impartial, otherwise it would not be a culture. This is the problem which has
to be tackled politically because the failings of the BBC are essentially
political. It purports to be more than it ever can be. As Baltasar Gracian
wrote over three and a half centuries ago They
promise too much to be much trusted, just as that cannot be true which proves
too much.
In which case the BBC has to evolve into a commercial
business because only this would allow it to be tolerably open about its
allegiances. As a media business it must project allegiances because it must
appeal to an audience with similar allegiances, an audience which is not and
never will be impartial.
3 comments:
I'm not sure if the BBC is attempting to appeal to people with similar ideologies, or whether they are also attempting to move the Overton Window in a variety of subtle ways. The more we hear about (say) trannies, the more they are portrayed as normal everyday people, the more the British Public will accept them.
That's the theory, anyway.
The same applies to brave resourceful refugees, "talented" young black musicians, moderate and patriotic Muslims, and that fat girl in Wales who is living with two blokes with wispy beards.
Can’t see them being evenhanded in the least. Evenhanded would have them with the same number of Leavers and Remoaners on a panel.
Sam - I'm sure you are right, the BBC is attempting to move the Overton Window. Success is probably mixed though.
James - in some cases the BBC probably knows it isn't evenhanded but thinks it is evenhanded in some kind of weird moral sense where skewing the debate is legitimate.
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