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WaPo: journalists should create "movie trailers" to support impeachment

Wall-to-wall impeachment coverage is not changing any minds....
Adulterous Slippery Hunting Ground Masturbator
  12/05/19
...
Mildly Autistic Pea-brained Corner Nowag
  12/05/19
“ Wall-to-wall impeachment coverage is not changing an...
rough-skinned chad
  12/05/19
**typical Dem voters nodding in agreement when they hear &l...
Rebellious Pistol
  12/05/19
meanwhile, a shitlib at Vanity Fair, Ken Stern, manages to l...
Adulterous Slippery Hunting Ground Masturbator
  12/05/19
"here's how" can these ppl figure out how to no...
fragrant whorehouse haunted graveyard
  12/05/19
*loud roar sound* *aerial view of Capitol* *images of ...
judgmental ape station
  12/05/19
...
bull headed gay rehab coldplay fan
  12/05/19
...
Glassy dysfunction fanboi
  12/05/19
...
Adulterous Slippery Hunting Ground Masturbator
  12/05/19
...
Out-of-control aromatic library nibblets
  12/05/19
...
Rebellious Pistol
  12/05/19
...
maniacal menage old irish cottage
  12/05/19
...
Embarrassed To The Bone Big Turdskin Field
  12/05/19
...
rough-skinned chad
  12/05/19
...
supple kitchen
  12/06/19
...
Hilarious Crackhouse
  12/06/19
...
Mildly Autistic Pea-brained Corner Nowag
  12/06/19
https://www.wsj.com/articles/when-i-faced-adam-schiff-115730...
Flesh Native
  12/05/19
Good poast moniker synergy
Mildly Autistic Pea-brained Corner Nowag
  12/06/19


Poast new message in this thread



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Date: December 5th, 2019 1:50 PM
Author: Adulterous Slippery Hunting Ground Masturbator

Wall-to-wall impeachment coverage is not changing any minds. Here’s how journalists can reach the undecided.

By

Margaret Sullivan

Media columnist

Dec. 5, 2019 at 6:54 a.m. PST

The diplomats have been inspiring, the legal scholars knowledgeable, the politicians predictable.

After endless on-air analysis and written reporting, pundit panels and emergency podcasts, not much has changed.

If anything, weeks into the House of Representatives’ public impeachment hearings, Americans’ positions seem to have hardened on whether President Trump should be impeached and removed from office.

So, is the media coverage pointless? Are journalists merely shouting into the void?

Columnist Michelle Goldberg of the New York Times offered a name Wednesday for one aspect of what’s happening before our eyes.

Responding to the absurd statement of Rep. Douglas A. Collins (R-Ga.) — “there are no set facts here” — she said it summed up the long-term Republican strategy: “epistemological nihilism.”

In other words, there can be no knowledge and no meaning, so don’t even bother.

It brings to mind Trump adviser Kellyanne Conway’s coinage of the infamous term “alternative facts” early in the administration. Or Trump surrogate Scottie Nell Hughes’s on-air comment in 2016: “There is no such thing, unfortunately, anymore of facts.”

That strategy runs in direct opposition to what journalism is supposed to be all about: establishing facts and knowledge so that citizens can make decisions, armed with what Watergate reporter Carl Bernstein calls “the best obtainable version of the truth.”

How should journalists respond to the stalemate, other than to keep doing exactly what they’ve been doing?

The hint of a possible solution appears in the tracking of public opinion on impeachment at Nate Silver’s fivethirtyeight.com, under the headline, “Plenty Of People Are Persuadable On Impeachment.”

A paradox arises herein, and a weird one, at that. There’s a group the trackers call “less-certain Republicans” — about 12 percent of the sample, not huge but given the even split in support for impeachment, mighty important.

Here’s the rub: This group is persuadable, but not particularly interested:

“There’s one big hurdle for anyone looking to persuade this group . . . they’re not following developments in the impeachment inquiry very closely,” the site reported. “Only 34 percent of people who aren’t as certain about their stance on impeachment are following the process somewhat or very closely, compared with 66 percent of respondents who are more certain.”

That much larger group, though, seems to be following the hearings and absorbing the media coverage, largely to deepen their own confirmation bias.

Rather than providing a catering service for the echo chambers, how might journalism address this important group?

(Never doubt that public opinion matters right now: In many ways, it’s what the hearings are all about, as Richard Nixon and Bill Clinton both could have told you.)

Columbia University journalism professor Bill Grueskin suggests the movie-trailer approach.

In a message, he explains: “Studios spend a $1 million or more on a trailer, because they know it’s essential to boil down the essentials of the film — explaining but not giving away the plot, providing a quick but intense insight into the characters, setting the scene with vivid imagery — to entice people to come back to the theatre a month later for the full movie.”

Similarly, most people (especially the less convinced or more persuadable) will never watch seven hours in a row of congressional testimony, but, as he notes, “many of them would be open to a targeted, well-informed ‘trailer’ approach that is cogently told.”

In some ways, that’s what the nightly newscasts on the three major broadcast networks attempt to do: boil the complex down to a few minutes.

But that audience, although still substantial — more than 20 million people on average per night — certainly doesn’t include everyone. And far too often, those broadcasts fall prey to false equivalency: This side said this, and this side said that, and we don’t want to make anyone mad, so we’ve got to cut to a commercial now.

With that in mind, I would also very much like to see one other major change: a moratorium on the reflexive use of the word “partisan.”

Mainstream journalists love that word, because it lets them off the hook: We aren’t taking sides, not us! The country is divided, and we can’t help it.

Just uttering the word “partisan” is media Prozac: It soothes journalists’ angst about not being perceived as inoffensively neutral.

It’s too easy, and too often an easy coverup for, yes, epistemological nihilism: The notion that there are no facts, so let’s not bother to try establishing them.

But here’s the thing: There are facts. There is truth. We do live in a country that abides by laws and a Constitution, and nobody ought to be above them.

Despite the hardened positions, some members of the public are still uncertain. Some are persuadable, and yes, it matters.

Maybe, just maybe, it’s the job of American journalism in this moment to get serious about trying to reach these citizens.

For more by Margaret Sullivan visit wapo.st/sullivan

https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/wall-to-wall-impeachment-coverage-is-not-changing-any-minds-heres-how-journalists-can-reach-the-undecided/2019/12/05/a04aa658-16c3-11ea-a659-7d69641c6ff7_story.html

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4395416&forum_id=2#39219380)



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Date: December 5th, 2019 1:51 PM
Author: Mildly Autistic Pea-brained Corner Nowag



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4395416&forum_id=2#39219388)



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Date: December 5th, 2019 2:05 PM
Author: rough-skinned chad

“ Wall-to-wall impeachment coverage is not changing any minds.“

Stopped there

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4395416&forum_id=2#39219514)



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Date: December 5th, 2019 2:55 PM
Author: Rebellious Pistol

**typical Dem voters nodding in agreement when they hear “epistemological nihilism.”**

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4395416&forum_id=2#39219756)



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Date: December 5th, 2019 4:27 PM
Author: Adulterous Slippery Hunting Ground Masturbator

meanwhile, a shitlib at Vanity Fair, Ken Stern, manages to look at the relevant facts:

"The second factor is the view among Independents that impeachment reflects the agenda of the political establishment and the media. Regardless of what they think about Trump’s behavior, Independents see impeachment as a continuation of the partisan bickering and media excess that began even before his inauguration. By massive margins, Independents say that the impeachment issue is “more important to politicians than it is to me” (62% to 22%) and “more important to the media than it is to me” (61% to 23%). It is hard to read this as anything but a warning to the Democratic leadership and candidates: Stop talking about issues that matter to you, not to me. Impeachment proceedings are viewed as bread and circuses for the anti-Trump crowd in Washington and the media—or, as Stanford political science professor Morris Fiorina described it to me, “entertainment and confirmation.” That’s a dangerous perception as Democrats approach one of the most consequential and fraught elections of our times."



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4395416&forum_id=2#39220279)



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Date: December 5th, 2019 4:28 PM
Author: fragrant whorehouse haunted graveyard

"here's how"

can these ppl figure out how to not write like clickbait birdbrains?

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4395416&forum_id=2#39220285)



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Date: December 5th, 2019 4:29 PM
Author: judgmental ape station

*loud roar sound*

*aerial view of Capitol*

*images of Trump*

*millennial with hipster glasses*

"Uh, no...just no."

Impeachment

A Nancy Pelosi production

*blaring sound*

Coming 2020

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4395416&forum_id=2#39220294)



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Date: December 5th, 2019 4:35 PM
Author: bull headed gay rehab coldplay fan



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4395416&forum_id=2#39220314)



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Date: December 5th, 2019 4:38 PM
Author: Glassy dysfunction fanboi



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4395416&forum_id=2#39220323)



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Date: December 5th, 2019 4:41 PM
Author: Adulterous Slippery Hunting Ground Masturbator



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4395416&forum_id=2#39220336)



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Date: December 5th, 2019 4:42 PM
Author: Out-of-control aromatic library nibblets



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4395416&forum_id=2#39220337)



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Date: December 5th, 2019 4:42 PM
Author: Rebellious Pistol



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4395416&forum_id=2#39220340)



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Date: December 5th, 2019 6:04 PM
Author: maniacal menage old irish cottage



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4395416&forum_id=2#39220680)



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Date: December 5th, 2019 6:05 PM
Author: Embarrassed To The Bone Big Turdskin Field



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4395416&forum_id=2#39220689)



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Date: December 5th, 2019 6:22 PM
Author: rough-skinned chad



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4395416&forum_id=2#39220761)



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Date: December 6th, 2019 12:27 AM
Author: supple kitchen



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4395416&forum_id=2#39222553)



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Date: December 6th, 2019 12:33 AM
Author: Hilarious Crackhouse



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4395416&forum_id=2#39222579)



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Date: December 6th, 2019 12:54 AM
Author: Mildly Autistic Pea-brained Corner Nowag



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4395416&forum_id=2#39222674)



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Date: December 5th, 2019 4:49 PM
Author: Flesh Native

https://www.wsj.com/articles/when-i-faced-adam-schiff-11573084620

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4395416&forum_id=2#39220364)



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Date: December 6th, 2019 12:54 AM
Author: Mildly Autistic Pea-brained Corner Nowag

Good poast moniker synergy

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=4395416&forum_id=2#39222676)