It wasn't hilarious but I still enjoyed it.
How TV Ruined Your Life Page 3
Quote: Leevil @ January 26 2011, 3:04 PM GMTIt wasn't hilarious but I still enjoyed it.
This.
I imagine as he moves from subject to subject each week there will be fresher targets and clips shown, too.
Quote: Nil Putters @ January 26 2011, 9:19 AM GMTHave you left zooo for Mark?! You heard it here first folks!
That bloody Mark!
I suppose he can't help being so sexy.
Quote: ggggg hhhhh @ January 26 2011, 2:02 PM GMTYeah, because climate scientists are really qualified to know about the media. Where does it give "credence to the views of sceptics"? The only time I can ever think of them putting climate change sceptics on TV is when they're being belittled by scientists of the opposing view point.
By belittling do you mean demonstrating why they are wrong? As for the media, you apparently missed the whole reporting of Climategate. Anyway I suggest you watch the Horizon doc which covers precisely this issue.
Quote: Timbo @ January 26 2011, 3:37 PM GMTBy belittling do you mean demonstrating why they are wrong? As for the media, you apparently missed the whole reporting of Climategate. Anyway I suggest you watch the Horizon doc which covers precisely this issue.
They don't just demonstrate they're wrong, they demonstrate they're wrong in the most "oh if only you deluded fools lived in the real world like us" patronising way possible.
I'm in the process of watch Horizon: Science Under Attack right now and in the first 10 minutes 2 contradictory things have jumped out at me. The first is Nobel Prize winner Sir Paul Nurse (as the iPlayer information section refers to him) saying that "a third of British people think that scientists have exaggerated climate change" (not that it's not happening that it's been exaggerated), and then Nobel Prize winner Sir Paul Nurse proceeds to debate with scientists who think man made climate change doesn't exist (and I use the term "debate" generously, what he's actually doing is giving them 10 seconds of screen time to explain the bare minimum of their theory before quickly moving on to his own dumbed down assessment of how it's wrong), rather than quelling fears that's it's been exaggerated.
P.S. I think it has been exaggerated but by the press not scientists.
Your posts are hard work GH. You're not doing your argument any favours.
The one really funny bit on last night's show was when he was talking about PIFs, particularly the recent one about the drunk driver who keeps seeing the body of the kid he killed, especially the draught excluder line.
I was just looking for the "Panicking Murderer" spoof magazine cover Brooker did in about 1999 when I noticed that TV Go Home seems to be dead.
That's a damned shame. It was probably one of the funniest things on the web back in the day (and would still be if it was alive).
Quote: Kevin Murphy @ January 26 2011, 6:02 PM GMTYour posts are hard work GH. You're not doing your argument any favours.
How so
Quote: Kevin Murphy @ January 26 2011, 1:10 PM GMTI can't recall any TV scaremongering about climate change.
A strange comment indeed. Here from the horse's mouth (Peter Sissons):
From the beginning I was unhappy at how one-sided the BBC's coverage of the issue was, and how much more complicated the climate system was than the over-simplified two-minute reports that were the stock-in-trade of the BBC's environment correspondents.
These, without exception, accepted the UN's assurance that 'the science is settled' and that human emissions of carbon dioxide threatened the world with catastrophic climate change. Environmental pressure groups could be guaranteed that their press releases, usually beginning with the words 'scientists say . . . ' would get on air unchallenged.
On one occasion, an MP used BBC airtime to link climate change doubters with perverts and holocaust deniers, and his famous interviewer didn't bat an eyelid.
On one occasion, after the inauguration of Barack Obama as president in 2009, the science correspondent of Newsnight actually informed viewers 'scientists calculate that he has just four years to save the world'. What she didn't tell viewers was that only one alarmist scientist, NASA's James Hansen, had said that.
My interest in climate change grew out of my concern for the failings of BBC journalism in reporting it. In my early and formative days at ITN, I learned that we have an obligation to report both sides of a story. It is not journalism if you don't. It is close to propaganda.
The BBC's editorial policy on climate change, however, was spelled out in a report by the BBC Trust - whose job is to oversee the workings of the BBC in the interests of the public - in 2007. This disclosed that the BBC had held 'a high-level seminar with some of the best scientific experts and has come to the view that the weight of evidence no longer justifies equal space being given to the opponents of the consensus'.
The error here, of course, was that the BBC never at any stage gave equal space to the opponents of the consensus.
But the Trust continued its pretence that climate change dissenters had been, and still would be, heard on its airwaves. 'Impartiality,' it said, 'always requires a breadth of view, for as long as minority opinions are coherently and honestly expressed, the BBC must give them appropriate space.'
In reality, the 'appropriate space' given to minority views on climate change was practically zero.
Moreover, we were allowed to know practically nothing about that top-level seminar mentioned by the BBC Trust at which such momentous conclusions were reached. Despite a Freedom of Information request, they wouldn't even make the guest list public.
There is one brief account of the proceedings, written by a conservative commentator who was there. He wrote subsequently that he was far from impressed with the 30 key BBC staff who attended. None of them, he said, showed 'even a modicum of professional journalistic curiosity on the subject'. None appeared to read anything on the subject other than the Guardian.
This attitude was underlined a year later in another statement: 'BBC News currently takes the view that their reporting needs to be calibrated to take into account the scientific consensus that global warming is man-made.' Those scientists outside the 'consensus' waited in vain for the phone to ring.
It's the lack of simple curiosity about one of the great issues of our time that I find so puzzling about the BBC. When the topic first came to prominence, the first thing I did was trawl the internet to find out as much as possible about it.
Anyone who does this with a mind not closed by religious fervour will find a mass of material by respectable scientists who question the orthodoxy. Admittedly, they are in the minority, but scepticism should be the natural instinct of scientists - and the default setting of journalists.
Yet the cream of the BBC's inquisitors during my time there never laid a glove on those who repeated the mantra that 'the science is settled'. On one occasion, an MP used BBC airtime to link climate change doubters with perverts and holocaust deniers, and his famous interviewer didn't bat an eyelid.
Meanwhile, Al Gore, the former U.S. Vice-President and climate change campaigner, entertained the BBC's editorial elite in his suite at the Dorchester and was given a free run to make his case to an admiring internal audience at Television Centre.
His views were never subjected to journalistic scrutiny, even when a British High Court judge ruled that his film, An Inconvenient Truth, contained at least nine scientific errors, and that ministers must send new guidance to teachers before it was screened in schools. From the BBC's standpoint, the judgment was the real inconvenience, and its environment correspondents downplayed its significance.
At the end of November 2007 I was on duty on News 24 when the UN panel on climate change produced a report which later turned out to contain significant inaccuracies, many stemming from its reliance on non-peer reviewed sources and best-guesses by environmental activists.
But the way the BBC's reporter treated the story was as if it was beyond a vestige of doubt, the last word on the catastrophe awaiting mankind. The most challenging questions addressed to a succession of UN employees and climate activists were 'How urgent is it?' and 'How much danger are we in?'
Back in the studio I suggested that we line up one or two sceptics to react to the report, but received a totally negative response, as if I was some kind of lunatic. I went home and wrote a note to myself: 'What happened to the journalism? The BBC has completely lost it.'
A damaging episode illustrating the BBC's supine attitude came in 2008, when the BBC's 'environment analyst', Roger Harrabin, wrote a piece on the BBC website reporting some work by the World Meteorological Organization that questioned whether global warming was going to continue at the rate projected by the UN panel.
A green activist, Jo Abbess, emailed him to complain. Harrabin at first resisted. Then she berated him: 'It would be better if you did not quote the sceptics' - something Harrabin had not actually done - 'Please reserve the main BBC online channel for emerging truth. Otherwise I would have to conclude that you are insufficiently educated to be able to know when you have been psychologically manipulated.'
Did Harrabin tell her to get lost? He tweaked the story - albeit not as radically as she demanded - and emailed back: 'Have a look and tell me you are happier.'
This exchange went round the world in no time, spread by a jubilant Abbess. Later, Harrabin defended himself, saying they were only minor changes - but the sense of the changes, as specifically sought by Ms Abbess, was plainly to harden the piece against the sceptics.
Many people wouldn't call that minor, but Harrabin's BBC bosses accepted his explanation.
The sense of entitlement with which green groups regard the BBC was brought home to me when what was billed as a major climate change rally was held in London on a miserable, wintry, wet day.
I was on duty on News 24 and it had been arranged for me to interview the leader of the Green Party, Caroline Lucas. She clearly expected, as do most environmental activists, what I call a 'free hit' - to be allowed to say her piece without challenge.
I began, good naturedly, by observing that the climate didn't seem to be playing ball at the moment, and that we were having a particularly cold winter while carbon emissions were powering ahead.
Miss Lucas reacted as if I'd physically molested her. She was outraged. It was no job of the BBC - the BBC! - to ask questions like that. Didn't I realise that there could be no argument over the science?
I persisted with a few simple observations of fact, such as there appeared to have been no warming for ten years, in contradiction of all the alarmist computer models.
A listener from one of the sceptical climate-change websites noted that 'Lucas was virtually apoplectic and demanding to know how the BBC could be making such comments. Sissons came back that his role as a journalist was always to review all sides. Lucas finished with a veiled warning, to which Sissons replied with an "Ooh!"'
A week after this interview, I went into work and picked up my mail from my pigeon hole. Among the envelopes was a small Jiffy Bag, which I opened. It contained a substantial amount of faeces wrapped in several sheets of toilet paper.
At the time no other interviewers on the BBC - or indeed on ITV News or Channel Four News - had asked questions about climate change which didn't start from the assumption that the science was settled.
I'm glad to say that more recently a number of colleagues have started to tiptoe on to the territory that was for so long off-limits. After the abortive Copenhagen climate summit and the Climategate scandal at the University of East Anglia, a questioning note was injected into some BBC reports. But even then, leading 'sceptics' were still generally regarded with disdain and kept at arm's length.
I've read as far as "I learned that we have an obligation to report both sides of a story. It is not journalism if you don't. It is close to propaganda."
I'm surprised Sissons wrote that.
Journalism is about reporting the truth. In many arguments, one side is just demonstrably wrong. You do the reader/viewer a disservice to offer them nonsense in the name of "balance".
Quote: chipolata @ January 26 2011, 6:18 PM GMTThe one really funny bit on last night's show was when he was talking about PIFs, particularly the recent one about the drunk driver who keeps seeing the body of the kid he killed, especially the draught excluder line.
I did like the hot pens bit, and the advice phone in bit for people who have just murdered someone.
Quote: Kevin Murphy @ January 26 2011, 8:04 PM GMTI've read as far as "I learned that we have an obligation to report both sides of a story. It is not journalism if you don't. It is close to propaganda."
I'm surprised Sissons wrote that.
Journalism is about reporting the truth. In many arguments, one side is just demonstrably wrong. You do the reader/viewer a disservice to offer them nonsense in the name of "balance".
Then why not voice their views and then demonstrate why they're wrong on air or in print? That's what bothered me about that Horizon episode, like ten seconds into that guy's argument against man-made global warming they subtle turn the volume off and the presenter/narrator started taking in voice over as if some one in the BBC had said "we better cut him off here, if we let him go on any longer, he might just convince one of the plebs".
Fair warning GH... at some point in the not-too-distant future a mod is going to come into this thread and wipe out this discussion for being off-topic. They'll probably have a pop at your grammar, too.
Please don't take it as evidence of some kind of conspiracy.
Sissons does not seem to realise that science is not like politics where all views can be treated as equally valid. Wheeling out an opposing view for the sake of it does not provide balance, it just distorts the story; and having some journalistic attack dog barking ill-conceived questions at scientists is not likely to add illumination.
Anyway your lengthy extract from the always objective Daily Mail does indicate that there are some media organs brave enough to defy the scientific concensus and to expose BBC bias. Though in the absence of any new science to justify their scepticism it does seem that they are reduced to wheeling out disgruntled old hacks.
The truth is that there is no significant body of scientific opinion challenging the scientific concensus, and many of those outside the concensus have shifted their position so often as to lack all credibility. Bjorn Lomberg's statements on climate change are typical of the evolution of scepticism as it has been forced to adapt to inconvenient evidence:
"The greenhouse effect is extremely doubtful"
(article in the Danish newspaper Politiken, 12th January 1998)
"There is no doubt that mankind has influenced the CO2 content of the atmosphere and is well on his way to double it. But it is still not clear whether this will lead to severe temperature rises."
(p. 244 in the Danish book from September 1998, 'Verdens Sande Tilstand')
"There is no doubt that mankind has influenced and is still increasing atmospheric concentrations of CO2 and that this will influence temperature. Yet, we need to separate hyperbole from realities . . . "
(p. 317 in 'The Skeptical Environmentalist' from September 2001)
"That humanity has caused a substantial rise in atmospheric CO2 levels over the past centuries, thereby contributing to global warming, is beyond debate. What is debatable, however, is whether hysteria and headlong spending . . . is the only possible response. "
(preface to 'Cool It!' from September 2007)
Global warming is "undoubtedly one of the chief concerns facing the world today" and "a challenge humanity must confront". . . "Investing $100bn annually would mean that we could essentially resolve the climate change problem by the end of this century."
('Smart solutions to Climate Change', to be published about October 2010).
Thank God we have 10 O'Clock Live to give him a platform and bring a bit of balance back into the debate.