(inspired by CS Clark’s comment on previous post)
A proclamation to journalists: If you find yourself using any of the following phrases and reporting techniques, you are guilty of degrading the public discourse and will pay the price, come the revolution.*
1. “Will say later today” : If someone is going to say something, wait until they’ve said it. If they haven’t said it yet, cover something that someone has said. Do otherwise and we allow people to replace “Things that have happened” with “things we want you to know will happen”. We all try to do this, and you shouldn’t let us. Gimps.
2.”according to a new report” : You know what reports are? They’re somebody writing down what they think about stuff. What someone thinks about stuff isn’t news. It’s just what someone thinks.
Usually, the people who think these things have an agenda, otherwise they wouldn’t go to the length of writing a report. Clue: If there’s a fact in the report, then it’s the fact that’s interesting, and it should stand on its own merits. If you have to qualify it by saying “ooh not me guv, these blokes say it” – it’s junk. If you don’t know whether the fact stands up – you’re not doing your job.
3. “A poll of our viewers….” : Look. Your viewers are a tiny proportion of the populace. The segment who phone into polls are an even tinier proportion of that. Nobody cares what they think becuase they’re not representative. People who phone into news shows do not represent a sample of anything. Even you don’t care what they think. Because let’s face it, you hate the sort of people who phone into meaningless polls. You harbour a secret contempt for them. I can read it in your eyes. So stop. Now.
4. Columnists: Any anecdote about your personal life that you believe has wider significance. It really doesn’t.
Also, you’re bound to sound like a right twunt. Whether it’s problems in finding au pairs, your latest diet, what driving a 4×4 says about you or how much you like the football, your tastes and preferences are shared by a tiny proportion of the population .The rest will think you’re a berk.
If you’re lucky, the tiny segment will worship you like a god. But then you’re not telling people things, you’re channeling impotent rage through your word processor. Which is a great job, but not news.
Feel free to add your own hates.
*This particular revolution is very finely planned. It involves merely the establishment of one H. Sen as arbiter of all things, and in charge of everything. This awesome power is safe in my hands, as I really can’t be bothered to be proper totalitarian. All that administering prison camps sounds like a lot of hard work. Just keep me in reasonable luxury, give me broadband and a palace, and let me jail the odd minor celebrity for being annoying, and I’ll be happy. Just don’t ask me to go round opening things.