In the era of Trump, journalists more apt to blend opinion with facts - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:01 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
WorldTHE INVESTIGATORS

In the era of Trump, journalists more apt to blend opinion with facts

Journalists in the era of Trump are more apt to inject opinion into their news programs than in the past and CNN's Brian Stelter says that's a good thing.

'We're seeing more analysis, we're seeing more context provided in the coverage,' says CNN's Brian Stelter

Since the election of Donald Trump, many journalists have done away with the long-standing convention of keeping their opinions strictly to themselves. (Jonathan Ernst/Reuters)

U.S. cable networks have never shied away from polarizing opinions or blustery bombast.Some would argue it's their bread and butter.But traditionally those opinions came largely from guests or program hosts who identify themselves as commentators, not journalists.Think Fox TV's Sean Hannity, for example.

But something seems to have changed since the election of U.S. President Donald Trump.Now, even those who describe themselves as objective journalists are frequently injecting opinioninto their news programs.

I think unusual times call for unusual approaches.- Brian Stelter, CNN media correspondent

"I think unusual times call for unusual approaches, and we see journalists trying many different approaches covering this president,"says Brian Stelter, CNN's media correspondent.

Stelter doesn'tsee the injection of opinion as problematic, casting it as an important way to help viewers understand what's really happening.

"You might say opinion;I'd say we're seeing more analysis, we're seeing more context provided in the coverage," Stelter said in an interview this week in Toronto for The Investigators.

  • Watch the full interview with Brian StelteronThe Investigators, Saturday at 9:30 p.m.ET and Sunday at 5:30 p.m. ET onCBCNews Network.

Context is indisputably useful in helping an audience understand why a particular document or comment can have a pivotal effect on a story, given the complexity of issues like tax reform or immigration.

Butrecently, some cable news anchors are going much further than that.

Ashleigh Banfield, on air on CNN's headline news network HLN, didn't hold back what she thought of the woman who levelled sexual assault accusations against actor Aziz Ansari. (CNN Money)

Ashleigh Banfield, who works on CNN's headline news network HLN, recently spokedirectly into the camera and aimed an angry lecture at the woman who levelled sexual assault accusations against actor Aziz Ansari.

"What you have done, in my opinion, is appalling," she told the woman, clearly framing her words as something more than context.

Coverage 'more adversarial'

And in this new environment of pointed opinions, mosthave been directed at Trump.

Such as those expressed by CNN evening news anchor Don Lemon, who's frequently taken to starting his nightly program with critical, sometimes personal appeals to the president to change his behaviour.

"The president is ignorant of history. He does not know context. He should be ashamed of himself," Lemon argued at the start of his August 16 news program before turning to his guests to discussTrump's comments about a white nationalistrally in Charlottesville, Virginia.

Stelter suggests thekind of aggressive, personalized commentarywe're now seeing comes from "the daily dishonesty from the president and his aides."

CNN media correspondent Brian Stelter say journalists are 'trying many different approaches covering this president.' (brianstelter.com)

"That's a big part of the reason why there has been this more adversarial approach in the coverage in the past year," he said.

But Stelter also says he believes the tone is a reflection of personal style, not a directive from media bosses. He points to how various anchors at CNN recently handled the president's use of the words "shithole countries" in describing some African nations.

"I think the day the s-hole comments were published by the Washington Post you saw different anchors take different approaches. For example, Wolf Blitzer didn't say the word; other anchors did. Some anchors said it was a racist remark. Don Lemon went further and said the president is racist. I think there is room in cable news, in television news, for a variety of approaches."

Evenat a time when journalists everywhere are trying to win back the trust of audiences who've become increasingly sceptical about truth in journalism, Stelter says he doesn't think the blend of opinion and fact makes thattask more difficult.

"We need to educate our audience why we do what we do, and how we do what we do every day, in order to gain their trust," he said, adding, "If I'm on the air and I'm saying that President Trump is wrong or any other politician,for that matter, is wrong about something I need to back it up and I need to show it.

"Sometimes we [in the news media]have done a bad job at telling the audience how we do our jobs."

CNN's Brian Stelter on anchors sharing opinions on cable news (The Investigators with Diana Swain)

7 years ago
Duration 5:56
CNN's Brian Stelter has made a name as a media watchdog. What does he think about the slide to subjectivity in cable news? And how should the news media handle Donald Trump's attacks and 'fake news' smear? Watch The Investigators Saturdays at 9:30 pm ET and Sundays at 5:30 pm ET on CBC News Network.

Also this week on The Investigators, Toronto freelance journalist Justin Ling tells Diana Swain why he suspected a serial killer was at work in the city long before police did.AndThe Fifth Estate's Bob McKeown and Harvey Cashore talk about the challenges of covering the murder investigation into the deaths of billionaires Barry and Honey Sherman.