Watching the news is fine…just like watching Seinfeld or the Simpsons is fine.

Sometimes people mention watching “The News” as if it’s what intelligent people use TV for…

I’m not sure.

Consider this from WCCO:

gas mask bra

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Category: Miscellanea

20 Responses

  1. 1
    Adam says:

    What nasty, unscrupulous distinction-unmaking.

    The parry, of course: CSPAN is where ‘it’s really at’, the uppish might say.

  2. 2
    Lee Shelton says:

    A two-person gas mask? Ingenious!

  3. 3
    Kevin Ring says:

    I don’t know. Top story on CNN.com today was about Lady Gaga meeting the Queen of England. The analysis of Lady Gaga’s outfit choice was pretty academic.

  4. 4
    John says:

    In “Amusing Ourselves to Death,” Neil Postman argues that watching the news is worse than watching pure entertainment like sitcoms. When you watch Seinfeld, you know it has no educational value. But when you watch the news, you *think* you’re learning something when you’re not.

    • Crystal says:

      I agree. The news has a much more detrimental effect on my mental state. You get a warped view of how the world is, but since it’s given as fact, you can find yourself getting confused. But when I sit to watch a cooking show or a cartoon with the kids, my world view doesn’t come into question, nor does life appear darker than it actually is.

  5. 5

    Sometimes I will read “World Magazine” articles but I generally do not watch the news on television/internet (nor read the newspaper/internet for that matter) for many reasons…one being I do not like the way they “edit” news stories.

  6. 6

    I like what John had to say. As a former NBC news producer, I say with authority: You speak truth. Most news is little more than entertainment today. We don’t show you what you need to know; we show you what you want to watch.

    And the bigger hypocrite is the news media, since it’s pretending to give you information. At least “Scrubs” doesn’t put on that face. It’s why I got out of the business, frankly.

  7. 7
    paul merrill says:

    NPR is intelligent – and listening is better than watching.

    Yes, they are admittedly liberal in their slant, but at least a good portion of the material is interesting and informative.

    • carissa says:

      i just started listening to NPR a couple months ago and i kind of really love it. but i hate admitting that, because every hipster-yuppie i know loves it too.

      • Drew Pearce says:

        NPR is great. I listen every morning and evening (yay for commuting in Atlanta). While it is leftward leaning, it doesn’t lean nearly as far as any of the cable news channels (in either direction). Honestly, NPR is the closest thing you’re going to get to an unbiased news story in the US.

  8. 8

    I’m a youth pastor in a Baptist church in Northern Manitoba. Our youth group is made up of youth from both our church and the local Mennonite Brethren church. These Mennonites are certainly not the type that shun any type of modern conveniences or technology. Not at all. But they still have hang ups about television. I take that back. They have very serious pride issues at the fact that many of them do not have cable.

    I’ve noticed that if you ask any of them if they’ve ever seen such and such a tv show or if they caught the game or something, their response is NEVER a simple, “No.” Its always a, “I don’t have cable,” or “I don’t watch much TV,” and, almost always, laced with a tone filled with pride and disdain that says, “I am way more spiritual than you because I spend my time doing other things than watching TV.”

  9. 9
    Chris Booth says:

    I’ll be the party pooper:

    http://www.recombinantrecords.net/docs/2009-05-Amusing-Ourselves-to-Death.html

    Interesting that the cartoonist used the (short-form and ‘entertaining’) medium of cartoon to make his point though.

    Oh, and I do have a tv and only *self-righteously* basic cable

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