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Fixing the news | Coleen Christie | TEDxVancouver

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    My biography on my Twitter page says
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    I am a skeptic and an optimist.
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    I believe in science,
    and infinite possibilities
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    and that kind of sums up what I am going
    to be talking about today.
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    What a world we could live in
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    if we were a truly informed society.
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    A society that, by and large,
    understood every facet
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    of the social, political, environmental,
    economic realities that we face everyday.
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    Well, a news culture often indicates
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    its potential for being truly informed.
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    Hi, my name is Coleen Christie.
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    I am a news anchor,
    a broadcast journalist, if you will,
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    and I am a little hesitant to say that
    because I recently found out
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    that broadcast journalists rank number six
    on the list of most despised professions.
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    (Laughter)
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    We are just above tax auditors.
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    That's right,
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    most people like tax auditors
    better than broadcast journalists.
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    (Laughter)
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    It sort of feels like when Sally Field
    made her Oscar acceptance speech,
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    but it is the opposite;
    you hate me, you really hate me.
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    (Laughter)
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    Not me personally,
    give me a few minutes, you might.
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    (Laughter)
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    But at least we are doing better
    than lawyers, they are at number three.
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    That gives me hope.
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    (Laughter)
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    I anchor for CTV Vancouver, an affiliate
    of the number one network in Canada.
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    I got my start in news
    in a rather unusual way.
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    I started in marketing and promotion
    so it gives me a unique perspective,
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    on the business of news;
    you see, I have always understood
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    that news is a product
    that needs to be sold.
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    But it is a really important product.
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    I grew up in a home
    where news was important.
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    My mother would pour
    over the morning newspaper
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    on the days that she was not working.
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    She knew all of the issues,
    all of the players,
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    and she had a grade-8 education.
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    As a family, we would watch
    the nightly newscast together,
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    and we actually paid attention.
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    I think that because my parents
    came from poverty,
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    they were very aware of the importance
    of informing us and educating us.
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    Conversations over the dinner table
    were often political, often heated.
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    "Please pass the gravy, I cannot believe
    you are such a socialist!
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    Would you like more potatoes?"
    That sort of thing.
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    (Laughter)
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    Yeah, back then, our choices
    for news sources
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    were a little more limited
    than they are now, that is for sure,
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    but wherever we got our news,
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    we pretty much trusted that it would be
    trustworthy and dependable.
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    Boy! Things have changed, haven't they?
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    In this modern news-age,
    information is power,
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    and never has our ability to leverage
    that power been more at risk.
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    In the last ten years, there has been
    a remarkable change
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    in our news consumption habits.
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    Due, in large part,
    to the explosion of digital media.
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    That explosion has created
    more competition,
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    and it has changed our legacy platforms,
    being newspapers and televisions,
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    and it has actually changed
    what we consider "newsworthy" to be.
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    In a recent survey
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    - you might find this interesting -
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    nearly 90% of North Americans said
    they were "hungry for their daily news",
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    but get this;
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    nearly 50% of them said
    they could not trust it.
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    Trust is an issue,
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    and I think part of that trust issue is
    wrapped up in our sense of bias in news.
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    Yes. of course, with polarized news
    organizations like Fox News on the right,
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    and MSNBC on the left,
    it is absolutely clear that bias exists,
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    but as a journalist on the inside,
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    I think it is an oversimplification
    to say that all media is biased.
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    In fact, I propose to you today
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    that the problem
    with media is not bias at all.
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    The problem with news today is you.
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    The question I put to you
    is not which news you can trust,
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    but can you trust yourself
    to consume it wisely?
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    News, in essence, is factual storytelling.
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    Everyday, journalists attempt
    to share information through stories.
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    But let's make something
    very clear from the get-go.
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    There are essentially
    two kinds of sources for news.
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    There is mainstream credible news,
    and then there is everything else,
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    and based on your lack of trust,
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    the line between the two must seem
    pretty blurry to you.
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    Now of course there are exceptions.
    There are always exceptions.
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    The simplest definition of "credible news"
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    is: information reported after
    a rigorous series of checks and balances
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    to ensure accuracy and fairness.
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    Most people consume their news everyday
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    without knowing that,
    or even thinking about it
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    and I think it is important
    we understand the process.
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    So for example, in television, news ideas
    come from anywhere and everywhere.
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    It is our assignment editors job
    to assemble those ideas
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    and create a potential list
    of the stories that we will cover.
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    The next step in the process
    might surprise you.
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    We actually debate and discuss
    each one of those stories' ideas.
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    A group of highly experienced, trained,
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    knowledgeable, diverse individuals,
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    practically anybody in our news room
    who wants to participate,
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    weighs the news value merits
    of each story.
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    Is it something our audience wants?
    Is it something our audience needs?
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    Next, we assign stories to our reporters,
    our "boots on the ground".
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    They go out and they find facts,
    and they assemble those facts,
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    and they provide context for the story.
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    Yes, some stories are more complex
    than others, but generally speaking,
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    if, at the end of the day,
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    a new story does not have
    enough news value,
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    or if it does not pass the 'sniff test',
    it does not make it to air.
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    That is how most news rooms
    throughout the world work.
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    For the most part, that process works.
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    The one thing we cannot escape
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    is the perception of bias.
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    We fight very hard to avoid it,
    but we cannot, somehow,
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    avoid the perception of bias
    in our reporting.
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    Let me give you an example.
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    We are accused of two things
    whenever we cover an election campaign.
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    We are accused
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    of simultaneously supporting the incumbent
    and supporting the challenger.
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    (Laughter)
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    It never fails. It never fails,
    and of course, we are not doing either.
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    You see, mainstream news
    has no political agenda.
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    "What?" you say.
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    It is absolutely true.
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    Mainstream news has no political agenda.
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    Yes, there is right-wing
    conservative news, and yes,
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    there is its counter-balance on the left,
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    but I am talking about mainstream media.
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    For those of us who work in the middle,
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    the very notion of partisan conspiracies
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    is absolutely ridiculous.
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    Except for that lunar landing,
    that was a total fake, never happened.
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    (Laughter)
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    Now, of course, that is not the case
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    with organizations
    which use narrative journalism
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    to promote a particular ideology,
    a political perspective.
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    No, and they are harder to spot these days
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    with the proliferation
    of online news sources
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    that do not use
    journalistic checks and balances
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    and so easily can be passed
    off as legitimate.
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    And mistakes that can be perceived
    as bias, can be made,
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    but I believe they are less intentional
    than you might think.
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    And when those mistakes are made,
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    most credible media outlets
    adhere to their own self-discipline.
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    The news media has been correcting errors
    along the way for more than 100 years
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    and whether to our general
    satisfaction or not,
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    it has to be acknowledged
    that it certainly does happen.
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    Discipline is big part of the job,
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    but it is not exactly the toughest part
    of the job for me personally.
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    In case you did not get this already,
    when I go to work in the morning,
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    I do not have to worry
    about being infected,
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    shot, kidnapped, tortured,
    raped, or executed
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    like some of my colleagues do.
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    Shout-out to the colleagues in the field
    who risk their lives every day.
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    (Applause)
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    Yeah, it is a calling, it is a calling.
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    No, I got it pretty good,
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    considering tough day at the office
    for me might be a bad hair day
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    (Laughter)
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    but it is not tough for me, it is tough
    for you because you have to look at it.
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    See how that works?
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    The hardest part of my job
    is keeping my mouth shut.
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    I am not talking about afternoon meetings
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    where my colleagues would love it
    if I kept my mouth shut.
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    No, I am talking about
    when I am presenting facts,
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    I cannot telegraph my own
    personal opinions on divisive matters.
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    I cannot let that through.
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    I cannot risk it.
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    As a communicator, it is my job
    to help you understand the story,
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    it is not my job
    to tell you what to think.
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    I cannot risk it, we cannot risk it.
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    You see the truth is,
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    mainstream media
    cannot afford to take sides.
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    I use the word "afford" on purpose.
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    Bias is bad for business.
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    Let me show you
    how the money works on that,
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    we will just follow the money.
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    Our democratic society needs
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    independet news
    to keep us informed and free.
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    And news, the news industry,
    needs consumers to survive.
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    So in television, consumers are viewers.
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    The more viewers, the higher the ratings,
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    the higher the ratings,
    the more ad revenues.
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    Ad revenues maintain operating budgets,
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    operating budgets pay for journalists
    to gather information to keep us free.
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    That is how it works.
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    Any blatant bias on our part
    could potentially alienate
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    vast numbers of our viewers.
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    That is a bad idea.
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    Bias is just bad business
    in the news business.
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    Some recent studies have revealed
    some interesting statistics
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    on our consumption habits.
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    I should note that most of us
    still consume our news from television.
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    But we are branching out.
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    A majority of North Americans now say
    they consume news on multiple platforms.
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    Still, nearly 90% of us
    are consuming that news
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    from one single news organization.
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    So let me tell you what that looks like,
    I will paint a picture for you.
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    You are at home,
    you have got the TV on to CNN,
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    you have the tablet open to CNN's webpage,
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    you are following CNN's breaking news
    on your Twitter feed on your phone,
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    and you have no social life.
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    (Laughter)
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    Myopic?
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    Yeah, perhaps.
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    Unless you have got a thing
    for Wolf Blitzer. Hey, no judgment.
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    (Laughter)
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    Here is the ironic part though.
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    In a survey done this year,
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    North Americans said they feel
    more informed than ever before.
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    Well of course we feel more informed,
    it feels like we are getting more news,
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    but what we are getting
    is more of the same news.
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    It is coming at us faster and faster
    and we know statistically,
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    that our attention spans
    are getting shorter and shorter.
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    That is changing the kind
    of news we want to consume.
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    Trying to keep your attention
    has never been harder.
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    In television the average news story
    is less than two minutes long.
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    Sometimes as short as 20 seconds.
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    Think about that.
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    Wow.
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    Boredom is your bias,
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    and if we do not keep you engaged,
    you are going to leave.
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    We do not want you to leave.
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    In television, we spend all day gathering
    quality information that you can trust,
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    even though 50% of you do not trust it.
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    (Laughter)
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    Your information dinner is served,
    and we throw in dessert too.
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    Oh yeah, trending videos.
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    You know, the bizarre,
    the wacky, the funny.
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    They make it into
    most major newscasts now,
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    and they are among the top rated
    segments of those newscasts.
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    It is true. It is true. Yeah.
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    A caution; we are very aware
    of trivializing news,
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    and we are very cautious not to.
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    But we are competing with Jon Stewart
    for goodness' sake.
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    (Laughter)
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    We are dancing as fast as we can
    to keep you entertained and informed
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    so that you will stick around.
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    But you say, "Hey, digital news gives me
    what I want when I want it,"
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    and that is absolutely true, scarily so.
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    Your online habits are watched,
    followed, and fed.
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    With each click of the mouse,
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    you leave a digital breadcrumb trail
    so that you can be fed more of the same.
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    And social media is contributing
    to your bias, it really is.
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    Since 2009,
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    traffic to social media news sites
    has gone up by 60%.
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    A full 70% of people surveyed
    recently in North America
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    said they used social media
    as a news source.
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    I got nothing bad to say
    about social media, I like it.
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    Hey, Twitter is a fantastic tool
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    for communicating
    and for delivering breaking news.
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    But if you are using social media
    as your primary news source,
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    you have got to be cautious
    - because think about it -
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    It is your neighbor or the person
    who works next to you,
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    who likes cat videos,
    they are your news director.
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    (Laughter)
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    And you know what?
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    Your editorial team on Facebook
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    is only as good
    as your friends on Facebook.
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    So true.
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    And on Twitter, there is no news director.
    No, there really is not.
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    # Competitive. #Sensational.
    #KimKardashian.
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    (Laughter)
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    I am only throwing in Kim Kardashian
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    because I am hoping
    that when somebody googles her name,
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    this TED talk comes up.
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    (Laughter)
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    # Shameless.
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    You are the subjective news curator
    of your world, and we know statistically
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    that you like to get news
    from people who think like you do.
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    It is a fact.
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    And on top of that,
    being well-informed online
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    requires more effort
    and more discipline on your part.
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    You are only going to click on the things
    that look appealing to you, right?
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    Think about it, it is
    kind of like going to a buffet.
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    You are not going to get two salads.
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    (Laughter)
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    But you know, you see those desserts
    sitting there, they look pretty good.
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    Nobody is watching.
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    Take two. What the heck?
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    We are human.
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    We like pie.
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    Our personal preferences feed our biases,
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    and our personal content curation
    supports them.
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    By definition and design, digital media
    gives us more of what we already like.
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    You create your own
    information playlist, if you will.
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    It is kind of like, I do not know,
    like the Songza of news.
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    The system feeds you
    more of what you want.
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    It feels good, but how are you ever going
    to be exposed to something new?
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    How are you going to see
    a different perspective?
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    If you keep listening to 8 on the 80s,
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    how are you going to hear
    new music for goodness sake?
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    Come on. (Laughter)
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    Whether we realize it or not,
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    our subconscious bias is driving
    our news consumption habits,
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    and it is keeping us less informed
    than ever before.
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    You know what? We know what happens.
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    When our trust in media
    is at an all-time low,
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    it means that our appetite
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    to seek out new and more varied
    variety of news sources diminishes,
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    and our biases are strengthened.
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    We see that every day.
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    You get camps over here,
    you have got another camp over here.
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    These guys are not listening
    to these guys.
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    They do not want to; there is no trust.
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    It is all ego-driven, fear-based,
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    heels dug-in, no progress.
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    We are behaving like children except
    if we were children we would be punished,
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    but in this sense, the people
    who are behaving this way,
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    they get their own TV shows
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    or their own constituents,
    as the case may be.
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    As artist and activist Ruben Blades
    so eloquently put it,
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    "We risk becoming
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    the best informed society
    that ever died of ignorance."
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    (Applause)
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    So how do we achieve the promise
    of being a truly informed society
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    when our own personal biases
    keep us locked in a feedback loop,
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    giving us more and more of the same?
  • 19:47 - 19:51
    What would happen if, for example,
  • 19:52 - 19:57
    we chose a second or third news source
  • 19:57 - 20:01
    outside of our normal consumption habits?
  • 20:03 - 20:07
    Well more news diversity
    would make us better informed,
  • 20:07 - 20:09
    would certainly make us sound smarter,
  • 20:09 - 20:13
    that comes in handy at weddings,
    Bar Mitzvahs, TED conferences,
  • 20:13 - 20:14
    (Laughter)
  • 20:14 - 20:18
    but sounding smart is not the goal.
  • 20:18 - 20:20
    That is not what this is all about.
  • 20:21 - 20:23
    This is about freedom.
  • 20:25 - 20:30
    And the news media
    is the guardian of our freedom.
  • 20:31 - 20:35
    We hold authority to account,
    you hold us to account.
  • 20:36 - 20:39
    You are free to choose
    whatever news source you like,
  • 20:39 - 20:42
    but if you are choosing more
    of the same, is that freedom?
  • 20:42 - 20:48
    Getting news that reinforces
    your own beliefs feels good,
  • 20:48 - 20:49
    but it is a false sense of security
  • 20:49 - 20:54
    and one that does not promote
    greater growth or deeper understanding.
  • 20:54 - 20:58
    It certainly does not challenge
    us to challenge our own views.
  • 20:58 - 21:01
    So how do we know if we are getting
    enough variety in our news diet?
  • 21:01 - 21:06
    Well, if everything you are consuming
    makes you feel great,
  • 21:06 - 21:08
    chances are you need
    to mix it up a little bit.
  • 21:08 - 21:12
    And you know what?
    The news media needs to do its bit too.
  • 21:12 - 21:17
    We need to make news more relevant,
    particularly my branch of the news.
  • 21:17 - 21:19
    We need to help people understand
  • 21:19 - 21:22
    why a story is important,
    and how it affects them.
  • 21:22 - 21:24
    Anybody can collect facts.
  • 21:25 - 21:28
    We need to provide context.
  • 21:28 - 21:33
    The old notion of, "Eat it, it's good
    for you!" just does not work anymore
  • 21:33 - 21:37
    when one click away
    there is something more tantalizing.
  • 21:38 - 21:43
    If we lose you, we lose,
  • 21:43 - 21:46
    and then we all lose.
  • 21:50 - 21:56
    As iconic broadcast journalist
    Charlie Rose so beautifully put it,
  • 21:57 - 22:01
    "We learn from each other,
    even when we disagree,
  • 22:01 - 22:04
    especially when we disagree."
  • 22:05 - 22:07
    The more we strengthen
  • 22:07 - 22:11
    the virtues of tolerance,
    diversity, and understanding,
  • 22:11 - 22:15
    we will have a [ ]
    against the hatred and extremism
  • 22:15 - 22:19
    that has wreaked
    so much havoc in this world.
  • 22:19 - 22:23
    So I implore you, battle your biases.
  • 22:23 - 22:27
    Empower yourself with more diverse news.
  • 22:27 - 22:34
    And maybe, just maybe,
    we will have an informed society,
  • 22:34 - 22:40
    a truly informed society,
    and enter a new age of enlightenment.
  • 22:41 - 22:42
    Thank you.
  • 22:42 - 22:43
    (Applause)
Title:
Fixing the news | Coleen Christie | TEDxVancouver
Description:

This talk was given at a local TEDx event, produced independently of the TED Conferences.

Coleen Christie is using the power of television to try to make the world a better place. For over a decade, she has anchored a nightly television news broadcast, empowering viewers with information and connecting them to issues that matter and to each other. Coleen brings a life of journalistic experience from behind the camera to the stage to shed light on the consumption of media in the Information Age.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
22:59

English subtitles

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