Fitting the left-wing agenda
It is hard not to notice the lack of curiosity and journalistic scepticism among the left-wing media lately.
It is hard not to notice the lack of curiosity and journalistic scepticism among the left-wing media lately.
We should be mature enough to understand and discuss the failings of our forebears, but we should not airbrush history.
Laws meant to guarantee diversity of “voices” are redundant as every news site on the planet is available online to all.
It really is no wonder so many people who consume mainstream media are sceptical about journalism.
News Corp Australasia executive chairman Michael Miller’s address to the Melbourne Press Club on July 25 made some important points about newspapers.
Declining media quality is having a bad influence on the standard of national politics.
Nothing better highlights the disregard for facts by Twitter and the progressive media than coal.
“Tony Abbott: Rudd redux”. That was the title of the Abbott chapter of my book released last October.
In the modern “comment-is-king” media world, real reporting takes a back seat to megaphones.
“This is David Weisbrot’s Prince Philip knighthood moment,” said News Corp Press Council representative Glenn Stanaway.
Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/author/chris-mitchell/page/35