The books have simple one-word titles. I have finished reading one and am halfway through the other. Neither is about media or journalism, but both should send important messages to those who presume to report on our society. The titles of those books are Mattering and Noise.
Mattering is really a self-help book. Written by former CBS Sixty Minutes producer Jennifer Breheny Wallace, it is aimed at people who feel their relevance is unrecognised, slipping away, or (worst of all) non-existent.
Noise is an altogether different book. Written by three professors – Nobel prize winning psychologist Daniel Kahneman, business strategist Olivier Sibony, and legal scholar Cass Sunstein – it is a deep analysis of what gets in the way of sound judgement.
After I finished Mattering, and was reflecting on yet another profound insight in Noise, it suddenly occurred to me that I was reading about things that are fundamentally important for the future of professional news media.
Let’s start with mattering.
At a personal level I am sure we have all, at some time in our lives, questioned whether or how much we matter to our friends, work colleagues, local community and society in general. The multitudes who have been made redundant at a point in their working lives invariably ask such questions. So, too, do people like me who are increasingly separated by advancing age from the occupations that helped define us. Even a change in personal circumstances may give rise to doubts about whether we matter.
However, mattering is not only a personal need. We are social animals and our sense of identity and worth are bound up with neighbourhood, community and country. Just as we need to know that we are significant to those who directly touch our lives, we also need to know that we matter collectively.
This raised in my mind a question that I invite you to ask yourself the next time you read your newspaper or tune in to a news bulletin. This question is this: “Does this tell me that I or my community matter?” Continue reading “Next time you see a journalist, ask if you really matter”
