New guidelines on terrorism: I hope we will not need them

TUESDAY COMMENTARY

Last week the Broadcasting Standards Authority released guidance to broadcasters which, I sincerely hope, gathers digital dust in an unopened computer folder.

The world will be a better place if no New Zealand broadcaster has to ever access the file to ensure local coverage is in line with the detailed guidelines it contains.

The guidelines are not faulty. Nor is the BSA operating outside its remit. The reason  I hope they are never needed is because they cover acts of terrorism and violent extremism. Continue reading “New guidelines on terrorism: I hope we will not need them”

NZ media must rise from Covid blitz

‘Post-war’ reconstruction

This week New Zealand media organisations are participating in a series of workshops that aim to help them through the commercial turmoil of the Covid-19 lockdown. It is an invaluable initiative by the Ministry for  Culture and Heritage that should provide some immediate relief, but no-one should expect it to be the long-term answer to their plight.

If our private sector media are to remain standing when the nation recovers from the aftermath of the pandemic, virtual workshops need to be followed by their own version of the Bretton Woods Conference that reset world financial systems after the Second World War. Continue reading “NZ media must rise from Covid blitz”

Hurricane in the neighbourhood

Community newspapers

News is like a hurricane: The closer it gets, the more important it becomes to you.

Right now, it feels like we are in Tornado Alley, staring down a twister dangerous enough to cut a path of utter destruction through our own community.

Our hurricane has been designated Covid-19 and we face it without our most locally focussed media. Continue reading “Hurricane in the neighbourhood”

Adversity journalism

Tomorrow the country will be at Covid-19 Alert Level 4 and reduced to essential services. It is time for New Zealand media to shift to adversity journalism.

This will require journalists and news organisations to see themselves as part of the national effort to defeat the enemy and not as dispassionate observers. They continue to have a role in holding power to account, but in ways that contribute to that national effort. Continue reading “Adversity journalism”