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From BBC
Worldwide magazine, June 1994:
BOOK
REVIEW: MORTIFYING THE MEDIA
Who Stole The News?
by Mort Rosenblum
(John Wiley & Sons Ltd hardback, £16.95)
(Click
here for PRINTER FRIENDLY VERSION)

MORT ROSENBLUM
IS A Special Correspondent for the Associated Press in Paris. He
is also very, very angry. At times, reading his book is like standing
in front of a blast furnace fuelled by the trash of journalism and
the broken promises of politicians.
The preface sets
the tone: 'This book is the result of 25 years with nobody listening.
I'm a foreign correspondent. Being ignored never used to be a problem.
Now it is a problem. The world is going to hell out there and still
no one is listening.'
Few sections of
the media - perhaps with the exception of BBC World Service and
America's
National Public Radio - escape Rosenblum's verbal Exocets.
It is difficult
not to agree with his broad view that the media, particularly US
television, has let society down in not alerting it to global crises
before they become unmanageable. The civil war in the former Yugoslavia
is one example. The civil war in Somalia another.
He is also right
to attack those journalists who not only allowed the military to
manipulate the coverage of the Gulf war but who, in some instances,
betrayed those colleagues who tried to break out of the military
straitjacket to get to the truth.
Rosenblum accuses
television editors and politicians of underestimating the willingness
of their audiences to be informed about faraway places; he condemns
the 'soundbite culture' in which assumptions are made that any topic
that takes longer than one minute to explain is bad, unwatchable
television.
He believes that
if the editors in the USA would face up to their journalistic responsibilities,
many of the world's ills could be minimised with relatively little
effort, and unprincipled and self serving politicians could be exposed
for what they are.
But the book is
not entirely one of unrelenting fury. About halfway through, Rosenblum's
anger abates sufficiently to recount some amusing tales from the
lighter, if not bizarre, side of a foreign correspondent's lot.
I particularly enjoyed the story about the over wrought correspondent
who, having used every trick in the book to get a ticket on an overbooked
plane, abandoned himself to a nervous habit of tearing up paper
into little pieces and eating them - with the result that when he
came to get on the plane, he discovered he had devoured his boarding
ticket.
Rosenblum's book
is well-written and an important, compelling contribution to the
international debate about journalism and its relationship with
politicians and the public. If I have any complaint, it is that
he falls into the trap of seeing journalism almost exclusively from
an American viewpoint. And it is a shame that the book is so unrelentingly
pessimistic. After all, journal ism, even American journalism, is
far from being all bad.
He accepts this
point, in part, by paying generous tributes to the news coverage
of BBC World Service and America's NPR. But I think the book would
benefit from more space being devoted to positive aspects, giving
hope to foreign correspondents of the future and, indeed, to everyone
who cares about the great wide world beyond their neighbourhood.
Ian Richardson
News Development Editor, BBC World Service News
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