highwaystar101 said:
But when that happens it's no longer news - the news has to be objective by definition (Ofcom knows this and enforces it) If you want opinion, read a newspaper (or opinion-paper as they should be called in Britain), go on internet forums, or watch opinion programmes - like The Big Questions on BBC One. |
I'd actually make the counter arguement as well that the BBC is quite biased. Honestly compaired to a newspaper like the unfortunatly named Christian Science Monitor that always goes out of the way to also advocate unpopular positions it looks extremely biased.
I'd argue there is no such thing as "Unbiased news coverage."
The reporters political beleifs are practially the whole framework from which he views things. That will ALWAYS effect how he views things even if they try not to. There whole view of what unbiased means actually is biased.
The guy who hires people is going to want unbiased people, so he hires people HE thinks is unbiased... etc.
While i'm not a fan of advocacy journalism, I think it would be reckless to consider non advocacy based news shows unbiased... and EXTREMLY reckless to only have one main news source.








