Paul Carr escribía hace poco:
Thanks to the Internet, the traditional news cycle has become a cyclone; a churning, chewing machine that sucks in every fact or rumour that flits past its peripheral vision, before spitting it out –often undigested– in the form of minute-by-minute, second-by-second BREAKING NEWS headlines. Compared to today’s digital news output, 24 hour cable news seems almost narcoleptically relaxed.Y citaba a Adam Penenberg, el tipo que, hace doce años, desenmascaró a Stephen Glass, el de The New Republic –película: "El precio de la verdad" (Shattered Glass)– y reventó, hace un mes, a tuitazos, el caso de los Ford Explorer defectuosos, un historión que había pasado desapercibido:
“What’s discouraging,” he says, “is the he-said-she-said… this so-called objective journalism”. […]Y añade Carr sobre el caso de los Explorer:
Another problem with the state of journalism today –both online and off– he says “is this obsession with being first –wanting to beat your rival to the story by two minutes. Is it really that important to be first?”
See how many reporters just rehashed the lede –the size of the damages– and Ford’s response, without asking a single new question, or presenting so much as half a new fact. But then again, how would they? That would have involved a single fucking phone call.Usted dirá: nada nuevo. Bueno, sí. Es que estamos hablando de Time. ¡Time! Con todo su ejército de implacables fact-checkers. Si Luce levantara la cabeza...
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