Passage Three Good news
is bad news and bad news is good news, newsmen often say to one another. And
when you look at the media it’s only too easy to see what they mean. A
dictionary definition of the media is mass communications, e.g. the press,
television, radio. The media sees its main purpose as giving the public news.
Naturally to provide the public with news it has first to gather it. The whole
function and purpose of the media, then seem to depend on the word "news", but
more important, on how the word is interpreted. The media, like
any big business venture today, is an extremely competitive world of its own. In
providing material for its public it has constantly to make sure it serves the
right diet. No public will waste time on your paper or your TV channel
otherwise. The sad truth is that there seems only one way to catch an
audience—hit them right between the eyes. What started as a mild tap has now
become a sledgehammer blow that goes by the name of sensationalism.
A reporter chooses—has to choose—a news story because of its sensation
value. The young inexperienced cub reporter rings his news editor about a car
crash. He starts to explain the details to him but the experienced editor asks
the cub one question: "Anyone killed" and to himself he thinks, why do we offer
jobs to children One may accuse newsman of cynicism but they
will quickly remind you of the hard facts of survival in the world of the media.
The favorite words the newspaper place cards in the streets bombard the public
with are, "Surprise, Sensation, Drama, Shock". You wonder, put an end to
sensation long ago. As a regular newspaper reader you also thank Heavens for the
light relief of the comic strips. Turn finally from them to what is referred to
laughingly as "steam radio", in order to show its relative antiquity. This for
many millions of people is the only live contact they have with the outside
world that rightly or wrongly they have been led to believe they should have
contact with. It’s extremely hard of course to see why, when for the most part
its news services bring them tragedy, disaster, heartbreak, other people’s
misfortunes—in a word, trouble. What again becomes quickly apparent is that a
man’s job depends on sensationalism, and we are asked to excuse him for
this. Perhaps the media hasn’t quite grown up and we should
congratulate it on getting this far. The year 2000 may see great changes in the
way news is presented to us. Again, who knows, it might even get worse—if such a
thing is possible. Perish the thought! According to the passage which is most important
A. The media’s purpose.
B. The news itself.
C. What is thought of as news.
D. The gathering of news.