One thing I have noticed from all of the news is sometimes the lack of news from international stories. For example, have you heard much about the coup in Honduras? Probably not.
I have a couple of theories as to why there hasn't been much covered with this story.
- The 3 Deaths (they always come in three's).
- Ed McMahon
- Farrah Fawcett
- Michael Jackson
- The coup in Honduras story also occurred over a weekend. Have you seen network tv/ 24/7 "news" networks on the weekends? It is all re-runs and talking heads. Very little new "news" is being shown. I am sure this is primarily due to the economy. It is expensive to keep producers, reporters, photographers, anchors, production technicians, and engineers working over the weekend. Especially when they can just throw on a re-run of the life of prisoners in "Lockup".
- I think the biggest reason for the lack of news is the cut-back by the US news networks of the international bureaus. For over a decade the networks have been taking people out of their foreign offices. Some even closing them. Now you might have one producer, a reporter, and a photographer covering an entire continent. That makes it hard to jump on stories when they happen.
Do I see this changing? Not anytime soon. Networks are in the business of making money. Staffing foreign offices with 10-15 people and paying for the office space is not cheap.
I would enjoy hearing your thoughts. Do you want to see international news? Do you think it is important?
3 comments:
well John I get no news now except for what I search for online, due to no channel 12 whatsoever anymore, and yes I tried EVERY SINGLE TIP and I can't afford a new antenna since my husband is laid off. I am very glad you guys put the weather updates on kfvs12.com though. melzie
That is why I have a Google News page. The celebrity death stories showed up at the top of my personalized page for about a day, but then they were moved to the "U.S." section of my page after I had not clicked on them. The Honduras coup story took its place. I still like to watch one of the 24/7 news channels, especially their morning and prime time programs, for smart political discussion. I always get my actual political news through WaPo's "The Fix" and The Politico.
John, thanks for taking channel 12 into the 21st century. I'm beginning to wonder if the US HAS an international news agency. As an avid news reader, I get most of my news via rss feeds, and social sites such as; Twitter and FriendFeed. ( I just 'followed' you on Twitter http://twitter.com/johndissauer ). I push much of what I read through FriendFeed/News-channel ( http://friendfeed.com/news-channel ), as many folks are beginning to do.
I'm looking forward to reading more from you@!
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