Media Watch drops ball on Four Corners blunders
Paul Barry is too busy policing politically correct thoughts about climate and COVID-19 to keep watch on journalism.
Paul Barry is too busy policing politically correct thoughts about climate and COVID-19 to keep watch on journalism.
Politicians and journalists should always question scientists, and never be ‘cancelled’ for doing so.
On January 26 in regional Australia people aren’t on Twitter, parading views that cost nothing and achieve less. They are too busy having fun.
A sense of proportion used to be the hallmark of serious journalism. But that’s been thrown out in a quest for clicks.
Political opportunism and suspicion plague a fight over South Australia’s Lake Torrens.
An inquiry into ties between politics, judicial appointments, the bureaucracy and policing could help Victoria avoid a repeat.
Reaction to the proposed news bargaining code designed to ensure publishers are paid for content on Google and Facebook is probably too optimistic.
The left media here has let Labor write its script on Australia-China relations since 1972. They are usually wrong.
This year’s Walkleys included some brilliant work, but a couple of winners were like halftime match reports without a full-time score.
Looking for applause on social media is a failure of journalistic rigour. Twitter does not reflect society. The media must.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/chris-mitchell/page/20