Fake News vs. Junk News

By Debra J. Saunders The big fake news stories of 2016 were the polls. Most showed Donald Trump losing big in November thus cable news ran countless renditions of the many ways Trump could not possibly win the necessary Electoral College vote. Getting the story utterly wrong should result in hand-wringing hair-pulling and painful introspection in my profession; instead many in the news business have turned their hungry eyes on fake news disseminated on Facebook and Google. Thats right. After a year of getting the story consistently wrong journalism gurus are pointing to phony stories not produced by the mainstream media. After the election The New York Times ran a piece about Election Day titled The Hoaxes Fake News and Misinformation We Saw on Election Day. An example from the piece: A GOP mayor in Georgia tweeted that Republicans vote on Tuesday 11/8 but Democrats vote on Wednesday 11/9. Hello Gray Lady; it was a joke. How desperate do you have to be to include that tweet as an example of misinformation? Fake stories and memes that crop up during live news events have been a problem on social media for years but a wild election season has highlighted the news medias slow response to them the Times story began. Slow response? Au contraire the media have been too quick to seize upon every little speck of dirt one can find surfing social media. Back in the day TV news looked to newspapers for good stories; now producers troll Twitter for what they call content. Trump could spin out days worth of free TV time from a single tweet -- two days on the tweet itself followed by two days on Trumps failure to react appropriately. (We wouldnt even be discussing this some droll expert would assert if Trump had walked back his original offense.) Journalists always have been overly concerned with what people say as opposed to what they do. Trump understood how to exploit that preoccupation by mining the publics contempt for the media. Yes I know that there are real fake news stories -- such as the one about the armed man who fired off a round or two before he was arrested who went to a D.C. pizzeria to investigate a bogus story about Hillary Clinton. Kudos to the good reporting that took apart the bogus pizzagate story. Thing is for days before that incident cable news was buzzing about fake news and the election -- as if hard-to-swallow conspiracy theories swayed those voters who had not decided between Clinton and Trump. Methinks fake news would not be a ubiquitous story if Clinton had won the White House. It certainly wasnt news when Donald Trump won the GOP primary. Fake news got big when voters acted in a way that did not confirm the mainstream medias preconceptions. There seems to be a cautionary tale in these fake news stories as in: If only voters had heeded real news then Trump would not be president-elect. But really journalists have only themselves to blame for handing the reins of reportage to amateurs. If a candidates remarks on social media confirmed the biases of most of the journalism class then it was a cable news story. 2016 was the year of empty-calorie reportage. Fake news bad. Junk news our bad.
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