Arathain Kelvar wrote:
I agree, with the caveat that the organized press is extended special privileges. Access to people, places, and events that ordinary people with the same "rights" are not afforded. With those privileges, in my view (and indeed in the view held by most of the industry), comes certain responsibilities that include providing that "public service" you refer to.
While this is true, unfortunately, there is no way to make sure that they do, in fact, exercise those responsibilities without infringing on (or at least appearing to infringe on) their freedom in the first place.
There's nothing about the first amendment that grants rights to access, or information, or actually gives the organized press any privileges at all. Like all other rights in the Constitution - except the Right to Counsel, and that exception is specifically stated - the protection of freedom of the press is a right
not to be interfered with. There is no right to do anything any other citizen isn't allowed to do.
It's the responsibility of the public to enforce these responsibilities on the press through social pressure and market forces, but the public doesn't do so. The public wants to be
entertained with sensationalism and outrage, and it considers this "being informed" - like someone who mows the lawn once a week and considers that "keeping in shape".
The press and the public continually reinforce each other's negativity through a feedback loop - the more the press reports on sensationalistic outrage, the more the public piously shakes its collective head, decries the state of things, and tunes in for more outrage. Thus rewarded, the press serves up the next helping.
If people want "fair and balanced" reporting, they're going to have to resign themselves to listening to a lot of boring but important details on many matters, turning off the TV when the talking heads start screaming at each other, and most importantly, listening to more than a 4-5 minute spot or a 1-page article on a subject prior to forming an opinion. As long as the public keeps rewarding the behavior of the press, it will continue to behave that way.