What is Newsworthy?
By Trent Loos
We are two weeks into the first positive diagnosis for
Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE) in one cow in the United States.
Consumer confidence in beef is less tainted than the information coming
from so-called “news” networks. CNN was recommending that
you switch to venison as a protein source last weekend. They use very
graphic visuals to sell their point of view; yes I said “sell”
their point of view.
If you look up the definition of “news” on
Webster’s online dictionary, one of the definitions is “material
reported in a newspaper or news periodical or on a newscast." This
doesn’t mention anything about the credibility or reliability
of what is said.
During the holidays, I had a chance to spend time with
my 85 year old grandfather who spends a great deal of time in front
of the television set soaking up all this “news." I shuttled
my wife’s 92 old year great aunt home after our Christmas celebration
and heard some of the same sound bytes from both of them. They have
never met and they live 500 miles apart. What is the common denominator
– television “news."
I have done several national radio interviews in the past
two weeks, and each time I could sense the host attempting to hype this
issue from one cow into a great looming fear of human devastation. In
all of history, 153 people have contracted variant Cruetzfeld Jakob
Disease with zero proof that it came from eating beef.
News should not be a marketing game. Networks seem to
be manufacturing “news” problems rather than looking for
solutions. Despite these network barricades, the USDA and the beef industry
have held strong in getting the word out to the American consumer about
the true risks of beef consumption. The American consumer’s confidence
in the safety of beef has not wavered. Most fast food establishments
reported no decline in hamburger consumption in the first week of the
new year.
Incidentally, a CNN-Time poll suggested that ¼
of the U.S. consumers had concerns about the safety of the beef supply.
If you read the whole report, you would learn that nearly 10% of the
1004 people surveyed didn’t consume beef prior to December 23rd.
Only 7% said they had drastically altered their consumption of beef
due to BSE. Furthermore, with a 3% margin of error, the actual numbers
may indicate that only 4% of Americans have altered their consumption
of beef because of the BSE incident.
If the news media’s constant onslaught of scare
tactics about BSE and a contaminated beef supply, complete with visuals
of staggering cows and hospital patients, didn’t sway the perception
of television’s viewing audience, then perhaps even the public
considers these continuous “news” networks to be a source
of entertainment rather than a source of information.
A network that was actually interested in educating their
viewing audience would be telling them about the real risk to consumers
as the Seattle Times did on Sunday Jan 4, 2004. Since the daily fear
promotion campaign by CNN started about this one cow on Dec 23, 2003,
1 million Americans have suffered some level of food poisoning. Six
thousand of those were sickened to the point of hospitalization and,
unfortunately, 100 have died. A true news network would identify real
threats to human life AND provide real solutions rather than just “selling”
their agenda.
How often do you hear the CDC statistics that 97% of food-borne
illnesses are traceable to improper food handling at home or in a restaurant
and not something that happened on the farm or in the food production
chain? Does CNN report that 74,000 cases of salmonella occur annually
in the United States from reptiles kept as pets?
It is high time networks that want to be considered news
worthy report on issues that truly affect human life. They should quit
planting seeds of fear in the minds of their viewers because most Americans
recognize that if you see it on TV, it is probably just another staged
reality show.
As a new year’s resolution, make it your responsibility
to contact any news source that attempts to mislead the public about
our industry and let them know what the real facts are. It’s time
we separate news from entertainment!
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