Media Trading Places: Whose Side Are You On?
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Those expecting that a few adults might remain in the press gallery to keep Team Skippy focused received a jolt this week when CTV anchor Evan Solomon said, “Fuggit” and decamped for a job in NYC with something called @gzeromedia and @EurasiaGroup. Bad look for a friend who has tried to appear in the middle. But if you live too long in Ottawa this is what eventually happens. Liberal values become your values.
Trudeau Svengali Gerry Butts, who recruited Solomon, said he’s “beyond excited” to hang Solomon’s scalp on the wall with all the other gormless journos the Liberals have compromised with their slush funds and intimidation. Green zealot Mark Carney was also wetting himself at the prospect of having Solomon guide his daffy dream for WEF dominance. “The intersection of geopolitics and economics is affecting everyone and (sic) one can interpret it better than Evan.”
Just to show that it’s no hard feelings/who gives a damn Solomon will somehow stay on as a “special correspondent” for CTV News. Because nothing says integrity like the head of a policy management group ladling out perspective to the cable-news suckers. Good luck, Evan.
Yes, just another banner day for the Trudeau regime as it seeks to neuter the press. How much better can it get? A lot more, apparently. Pesky objectivity is now out. Reporters baring their souls is in. La Presse is reporting that journalist unions are promoting that reporters be “allowed to express themselves, without consequences, in ways conducive to ‘dismantling the structural racism of the society’.
To “publicly defend their humanity or that of others” – CBC would let reporters express their public support for movements representing racial or ethnic minorities, such as Black Lives Matter, or Canada’s indigenous populations. (CBC is dismissing the report— which can only mean it’s just around the corner.)
Sure, what could go wrong with Rosie Barton going AOC? Besides, the stuff that worked for centuries is passé, says UBC journalism sessionist/ award-winning scribbler Steve Woodward: “I think objective journalism is almost an old-school term. With social media, people trust people. People don't like other people because they're objective.
They like them because they're truthful, they're honest, they're human. People are looking for that out of their news. They're looking for sources that are authentic and that's different from objective. It certainly is. So if you play for the right team you can now bloviate on whatever is tormenting your safe space, and people will like it. Because it’s YOU. You might win a Pulitzer. Thanks, Steve.
So when a federal cabinet minister backdates a controversial government document to the fictional April 31, 2022, in an apparent bid to mislead a federal judge reporters must consult their feelings on fraud before ever pronouncing it. Or check a calendar.
No wonder independent journalist Matt Taibbi— who worked alongside Chrystia Freeland in 1990s Russia— notes, “… At least in the seventies and eighties after My Lai and All the President’s Men, a lot of people thought reporters were cool. Now almost everyone thinks we’re massive douchebags.” Hey, that’s Mr. Douchebag to you, Micro-aggression Man.
But there's more on the docket for consumers trying to get the straight goods. What with re-ordering genders, codifying The Science and declaring Canada as a genocidal state, you’d think that the current federal government has its hands full already. How much can one dashingly handsome PM accomplish between surfing and bungee jumps?
A lot. The honourable member for Papineau/ Dazed&Confused is hellbent on replacing equal opportunity with equal outcome. To do so he’s unravelling centuries of editorial independence with Bill C-11, a potage that will give the government “equity” czars control of the news cycle. Now, government will decide the winners and losers based on their ESG scores. (Sounds like a Kamala Harris brainwave.)
For instance, says The Countersigned, “search engines, like Google, will be required to boost news organizations that promote ‘racialized communities, cultural and linguistic minorities, LGBTQ2+ communities, and persons with disabilities.’ Consequently, non-compliant news publishers not focusing on such progressive topics will be punished by receiving lower rankings in searches.”
The Bill also wants the CRTC to put its finger on the scale of independent sources, too. Especially those critical of the Perfect One. As the indefatigable lawyer/ journalist Michael Geist has pointed out, Liberal assurances to the public on the bill are just so much lining for the poubelle. “Yesterday, Liberal MPs: assured the House that digital first creators were outside Bill C-11/ effectively admitted they were in but claimed would be excluded by a still-secret policy direction/ dismissed creator concerns as “Youtube talking points”.
The Bill made it past the NDP rubber stamp in the Commons (what doesn’t?), but miraculously, the Senate is actually holding up Skippy’s handiwork with some persnickety questions— something the Liberals avoided in the House. To wit, WTF Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguez?
Naturally, this delay on a Liberal pet issue has produced the usual Grit backlash: serious charges of witness intimidation and bullying by government MPs, most notably Canadian Heritage Parliamentary Secretary Chris Bittle. A charge that only looks worse the more Liberals defend it. Geist describes their hissy fit as “cartoonishly misleading”
They do have the support of loyal media associations like CMA: “We are proud to stand alongside the many organizations, representing hundreds of thousands of Canadians who work in media production, broadcasting, and music, calling on the government to #PassBillC11" The Libs would much prefer to keep their business in-house, says former CRTC vice chair Peter Menzies. “Once this gets to the CRTC they know they can control it through overwhelming the hearing process or politically.”
Which is par for the course, says Menzies. “The one thing this process has made abundantly clear is that the interests of anyone outside their club are irrelevant to all inside it.” And come to think of it, isn’t that really all Skippy wants? A club? With costumes? And dances? And decoder rings for his pals? Why can’t people see that?
Bruce Dowbiggin @dowbboy is the editor of Not The Public Broadcaster (http://www.notthepublicbroadcaster.com). A two-time winner of the Gemini Award as Canada's top television sports broadcaster, he’s a regular contributor to Sirius XM Canada Talks Ch. 167. Inexact Science: The Six Most Compelling Draft YearsIn NHL History, , his new book with his son Evan, was voted the eighth best professional hockey book of by bookauthority.org . His 2004 book Money Players was voted seventh best, and is available via http://brucedowbigginbooks.ca/book-personalaccount.aspx