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Edited on Sun Aug-01-10 03:26 PM by MineralMan
There seems to be some confusion, in general, about what news is. News is an account of things that happened. It tells you what the events were, who the participants in those events were, when the events occurred, and perhaps why the events occurred, if that information is available.
News does not comment on the events and try to tell you how to think about those events. That is commentary.
MSNBC is not news. It does not pretend to be. Fox News is not news, except occasionally during one of their straight news segments. Huffington Post is not news. Almost no blogs are news. Unless an outlet is describing events without comment, that outlet is giving you commentary, not news.
So, where do you get the news? Well, you get it in the same places you always have. On the main pages of major newspapers around the world. Not on the editorial pages. The main pages. When you want major US or international news, you can find it in major newspapers. You can find an abbreviated version of the news on major network newscasts, as well. You can find local news in sources near where event occurred, from newspapers to local television news sources.
You can use the internet to read every legitimate news source on the planet. All you have to do is look for factual accounts of events. That's news.
For example, a story about a murder that took place in Cleveland will first appear in the Cleveland newspapers or television stations. It will tell you who was murdered, when the murder took place, where the murder occurred, and who committed that murder, if that information is available. It will not tell you why, because nobody will know why. That's news. If, later, stories start to appear about the sorry life the murderer led or what a tragedy the murder is for the family, that's not news. That's commentary.
If BP blows up a well and spills oil into the gulf, that's news. Stories discussing how evil BP is and how horrible the spill will be in the future is commentary. Stories that speculate about the extent of the spill without measuring that extent are not news. They are commentary and speculation.
It's all so simple, really. News is only an account of events. It does not judge the events. It does not pontificate about events. It simply tells you what happened, when, where, and how. Sometimes the why is known, and that is part of the news. What the news means is not news. It is commentary.
Decrying the state of the news industry is only useful if there are no accounts of an event. Decrying commentary while conflating it with the news is a serious mistake. Commentary is not news. It is commentary.
So, if you want the news, it's available in all the usual places. If you want commentary, you can find that too, very easily. Confusing which one is which is a mistake. Nothing Chris Matthews says is news. Everything he says is commentary, based on the news he read or saw somewhere else. Everything on Huffington Post that is not a direct quote from a news source is commentary, not news. Almost everything on DU is commentary, except for the odd OP that simply presents a news story, unchanged from its source.
News is simply information about an event. Commentary is everything else. Commentary is always biased by the beliefs of the commentator. News is simple. It says "This happened at this time in this place and the following people or places were involved. If the reason it happened is known, as with a natural gas explosion that destroyed a building, that is also news. Nothing else. Not the supposed negligence of the gas company or anything else, unless that is known for a certainty.
News is simply news. Everything else is commentary about the news. This OP is pure commentary. There is no news content here.
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