Legion of wake-up calls embedded in news trust report

I shudder at the sheer horror of it all!

There we were: Stuck in a remote part of East Cape with no cellphone coverage, no satellite tv feed, and a radio that did no more an emit an angry hiss.

We were victims of news deprivation – a cruel form of externally imposed news avoidance.

I know that some people would relish the thought of finding themselves in a news blackout but, like people suddenly deprived of their daily tonnage of caffeine, we get withdrawal symptoms if we are deprived of the news media’s daily version of reality.

The fact you are reading this commentary confirms that we did survive the ordeal. Our travels took us further down the East Coast of the North Island and normal services were resumed. Now we are back home.

Our personal news desert meant I did not see or hear coverage of JMaD’s 2025 Trust in News report until I was reintroduced to my computer (any attempt to take it on holiday would have had unfortunate consequences).

I was pleased to see a slight drop in the number who sometimes avoid the news – down from 75 per cent to 73 per cent. I now know what they are missing. Continue reading “Legion of wake-up calls embedded in news trust report”

Slow death of the newspaper editorial

Newspaper editorials are disappearing, crushed under an avalanche of opinion from the well-informed, the ill-informed, the misinformed, and the malicious.

It is a slow death, with the institutional voice of the newspaper being heard less often and with less authority.

It is not solely a New Zealand problem. Last year in the United States, the Virginia Press Association scrapped its editorial award after receiving only one entry in 2023. That was the year America’s major newspaper chains such as Gannett began cutting back on editorials.

In New Zealand, most of our regional newspapers only run an editorials a couple of days a week at best and, often as not, the same editorial is shared by all newspapers in each group. Stuff’s metropolitan titles The Post and The Press and the Waikato Times follow the same pattern as the group’s regional tiles. Only the New Zealand Herald and Otago Daily Times continue to carry a daily editorial.

For reasons that frankly elude me, the Weekend Herald (the week’s largest circulation paper) has decided that its editorial column should almost always be devoted to sporting issues. There is nothing that warrants their elevation to the leader column. They belong on the sports pages. And they stand in stark contrast to the Sunday Star Times’ wide-ranging and well-argued editorials, which are accorded a prominent position on page 3 and are signed by the editor Tracy Watkins.

Perhaps there is an inevitability about the slow death of editorials or leader columns. Continue reading “Slow death of the newspaper editorial”

Time to treat social media like a cancer-causing industrial chemical

Answer me this (a simple yes or no will suffice): If there was a product that had the potential to cause your child serious and demonstrable harm, would you expect the Government to place controls on it?

The logical answer is yes. And there are many such products that the Government does control to prevent harm to children. Age restrictions on the sale of alcohol and tobacco are the most obvious examples.

Three news items I saw in the past week convinced me that the Government – and society as a whole – is falling tragically short in the control of one product that does more harm to young people than liquor and cigarettes combined. It is social media.

No parent could have read the lead story in the Weekend Herald without feeling enormous empathy for Cambridge Middle School principal Daryl Gibbs. The headline on that story was ‘I put to tool in her hand’: Principal shares daughter’s online ordeal. It told of how within three weeks of giving his 13-year-old a smartphone, she had downloaded Snapchat and received her first ‘You should kill yourself’ message.

He shared his feelings of guilt and admitted he was naïve to think that placing limits on her connections would keep her safe. It did not. She suffered anxiety, depression, and absenteeism from school as a result of what she saw on her phone. What was most disturbing was the fact that her contacts were being monitored by her parents. The harm was coming through people she knew. Continue reading “Time to treat social media like a cancer-causing industrial chemical”