On Sat, Jul 21, 2012 at 12:46 AM, RSG <[email protected]> wrote:
>> I frankly don't expect much out of Denver -- not exactly a proving
>> ground for TV journalism.
>
> That's a bit of coastal we-do-it-better elitism that really isn't
> fair, or relevant to the issue. All things being equal, I will always
> trust local media to get a local story [more] correct than some
> seagull journalist who flies in from somewhere else, preens & struts &
> squawks & craps all over the place, then flies out. Yes, I've seen
> Denver TV media do the same when they travel to the hinterlands to
> cover a story, but when it's in their backyard, they get it mostly
> right.

No, no... LA media sucks, but LA reporters have more experience at
sucking than someone from Denver or Boston or Seattle. It isn't about
me being a coastal elite... Denver is a smaller market station and the
level of talent you'll get coincides with that. I would trust local
media to get the names of streets right, but beyond that everybody
works off of the same playbook. I've been watching the 9News feed off
and on throughout the day and they have been as reckless as the big
boys, mostly at the start when any windbag with a cell phone called
them claiming to have been in the theater, then running with the
unconfirmed reports (i.e.-was it a terrorist attack, were there
additional gunmen) as though they were fact. Eventually the police
chief set the record straight on some of the basics. I did laugh that
they were proud that the station refused to show the body bags being
removed from the crime scene. They have no problem shoving cameras
into the faces of teenagers who have just watched children shot to
death, but showing a body bag would be crossing a line. And at the
end-of-day press conference, not one reporter questioned the police
chief when he said they were allowing the booby traps in the apartment
to stay in place until tomorrow. Personally, I think the Pepsi bottles
with wires connected to them are just -- well -- filled with Pepsi,
but if I'm wrong (and I easily could be), to allow potential
explosives, gases, chemicals that may or may not have timed releases
or rates of decay to sit there is negligence... but nobody called the
chief out on that because he teared up when asked how his officers
were coping. Sorry if that sounds cold of me, but an actual journalist
would have pressed the chief on that issue, for the sake of those in
the neighborhood who continue to be denied access to their homes and
possessions. My heart goes out to the police officers who undoubtedly
had a tough day, but it is their job to cope.

-- 
Kevin M. (RPCV)

-- 
TV or Not TV .... The Smartest (TV) People!
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