How am I being at all vague? I didn't say the government controlled it. I didn't say they constantly prop up the government. I said it's government-run because they foot the bill. You can bet that there are things that PBS and the CBC simply will not run because of this. The idea that making a law saying a government owned news station must be fair is laughable, and it's even more laughable that people cite this law as a reason why it is fair.
We clearly have different ideas about the media's position so this argument really can't go much further. I do agree with you that framing your news stories as "this is happening BUT x, y, and z are also happening/have impact on this/etc." is good. But I'm not of the mind that this automatically equates with journalistic integrity. Story selection, guest selection, and a host of other ways news outlets can influence how they convey their message are equally and often more important than "showing all sides." "Showing all sides" is useful in some cases, but it's just as easy to criticize that as it is to criticize a station spending 2 minutes on 25 stories per hour.
We clearly have different ideas about the media's position so this argument really can't go much further. I do agree with you that framing your news stories as "this is happening BUT x, y, and z are also happening/have impact on this/etc." is good. But I'm not of the mind that this automatically equates with journalistic integrity. Story selection, guest selection, and a host of other ways news outlets can influence how they convey their message are equally and often more important than "showing all sides." "Showing all sides" is useful in some cases, but it's just as easy to criticize that as it is to criticize a station spending 2 minutes on 25 stories per hour.
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