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Moral Maze

Does the media reflect or exacerbate public disquiet?

Moral Maze

BBC

Society & Culture, Religion & Spirituality

4.5609 Ratings

🗓️ 4 September 2025

⏱️ 57 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

One story has been dominating the news for several weeks: immigration. Whether it’s debates about how to stop the small boats, protests outside asylum hotels, speeches pledging mass deportations or balaclavad ‘patriots’ painting red crosses on roundabouts, there’s been no shortage of reporting and impassioned opinions on the subject. It is no doubt an important issue for many people, but is it as big as our perception of it?

‘Media’ comes from the Latin word medius, meaning "middle". It is a form of communication which mediates between our perception of the world and reality. Print and broadcast media are governed by codes of practice which prohibit the distortion of truth through the publication of inaccurate or misleading information. But are there more subtle ways in which the media can influence public opinion, creating a feedback loop of ‘newsworthiness’?

Defenders of print journalism contend that it takes its news priorities and agenda from real public concern and real events of objective importance. Journalists and columnists may put a spin on them, but their concern is to report and dramatise, not to distort. Critics of the papers – particularly the right-wing press – believe they have their own political axes to grind, and they set the collective news agenda while having an interest in stirring public anger via commercial ‘clickbait’. Even the BBC has had its impartiality scrutinised by those who believe it has given undue prominence to Nigel Farage (who is currently experiencing a surge in the polls) in its political coverage for more than a decade. In that time, however, social media has completely changed how we consume the news. Mainstream media, for all its faults, has a process of accountability when its deemed to have made errors of editorial judgment. Whereas social media algorithms are designed to promote discontent above fact-checking.

On balance, does the media reflect or exacerbate public disquiet?

Chair: Michael Buerk Panellists: Inaya Folarin Iman, Tim Stanley, Mona Siddiqui and Matthew Taylor. Witnesses: Zoe Gardner, Paul Baldwin, George Monbiot and Baroness Tina Stowell MBE.

Producer: Dan Tierney.

Transcript

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0:00.0

I'm Rory Stewart and I grew up wanting to be a hero and I'm still fascinated by the ideas of heroism.

0:09.0

In my new series, I'm taking in the long sweep of history from Achilles to Zelensky and asking, what is a hero?

0:16.0

Simply doing your job, being a decent human being.

0:20.0

A true hero is someone who just kind of shines by

0:23.1

their own light and that light is to be recognized by others. The long history of heroism with me,

0:28.6

Rory Stewart. Listen on BBC Sounds. BBC Sounds, music, radio, podcasts. Good evening. The news this summer has not been so much about what's happening in this country

0:41.8

as who's trying to come to it. Immigration has dominated the headlines, been the central media

0:47.6

narrative, small boats, asylum hotels, the perception of hardening attitudes towards

0:52.8

incomers and resentment at unwanted

0:55.3

demographic change. There's no doubt that many people do feel strongly about both sides of

1:00.7

this increasingly polarised issue, but they're concerned about, angry about, worried about,

1:06.1

lots of other things, too, that receive far less attention. Do the media reflect public concern or create it for

1:13.6

their own political or commercial reasons? And if that's a question for the mainstream media,

1:18.6

governed by loose framework as it is of laws and codes of practice, how much more so for the jungle

1:24.3

that is social media? Are we being informed or inflamed? The media on trial

1:30.7

in the moral maze tonight. Our panel, Mona Siddiqui, professor of religion and society at King's

1:35.8

College London, the commentator and campaigner Inaya Filarin Iman, the historian Tim Stanley,

1:42.4

and Matthew Taylor, chief executive of the NHS Confederation. Historian,

1:47.2

you are, Tim, of course, but also a media prince. Where do you stand on this?

1:51.1

I work for the Daily Telegraph, I should confess. And I find it hilarious when people say the media is right wing.

1:57.0

They've clearly never listened to Women's Hour. In a free society and a free market,

2:02.3

what the papers ultimately do is give the punters what they want. And I have absolutely no shame

...

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