The morality of news coverage
Moral Maze
BBC
4.4 • 623 Ratings
🗓️ 5 July 2023
⏱️ 57 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Comparisons have been made between the news coverage of two tragedies at sea. The first was the capsizing of a boat off the coast of Greece, in which more than 500 migrants from the Middle East and Africa are thought to have drowned. The second is the catastrophic implosion of the Titan submersible carrying five people, including a billionaire explorer, who paid a huge amount of money to see the wreck of the Titanic. While the first story made the news, the second story was rolling news.
Moral Maze panellist Ash Sarkar faced a backlash when she tweeted about what she saw as the “grotesque inequality of sympathy, attention and aid... Migrants are “meant” to die at sea; billionaires aren’t.”
This raises the question of the moral purpose of the news – particularly when it comes to public service broadcasting – and the difference between reporting what people want to know and what they need to know. For some, the ‘ticking clock’ coverage of the Titan tragedy was ghoulish and sensationalist. For others it was merely a reflection of the trajectory of the story: the hope, the endeavour and the jeopardy. Then there is a question of scale – does a larger body count have a greater moral claim to be covered by the news? Or is it natural for British media to reflect a greater sense of empathy for British citizens?
What makes the news, what is left out, and how it is covered, is a decision made by editorial teams and individuals with their own view of what is 'newsworthy'. But what about our responsibilities as consumers of news? Does the demand for immediate clickbait sensationalism over thoughtful analysis from the other side of the world create a news environment which is out of kilter with what matters? Is this simply human nature or something we should seek to redress?
What news stories should make a moral claim on our attention?
Producer: Dan Tierney.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | BBC Sounds, Music, Radio, podcasts. |
| 0:04.9 | Good evening. They were two news stories about death at sea. |
| 0:08.9 | One involved a handful of rich people who'd paid fortunes to dive to the wreck of the Titanic, |
| 0:14.0 | the other hundreds and hundreds of migrants who'd paid for them big money to be smuggled into Europe. |
| 0:19.8 | The way the first story got much more news |
| 0:21.7 | coverage than the second has been a major talking point of the week, with many saying the media, |
| 0:26.5 | and by extension we their consumers, cared more about a few mainly white billionaires than a lot |
| 0:32.1 | of poor, mainly brown refugees. News professionals would point to the different trajectories of the stories. The migrants |
| 0:39.6 | were either rescued or dead almost before we'd heard of them. The Titanic tourists were, |
| 0:44.3 | mistakenly, as it turns out, thought to be alive and rescuable for days in a classic race |
| 0:49.7 | against time. The news value was the jeopardy. Nonetheless, it does raise profound questions about the |
| 0:55.2 | priorities of the news media, particularly public service broadcasters such as the BBC. As it happens, |
| 1:01.3 | the corporation was thought, not least by itself, to have done well covering the migrant story. |
| 1:07.1 | But to choose one recent example was Philip Schofield's daytime dalliance, really the most important thing happening in our troubled world, as the BBC News website and much of the rest of the media appeared to suggest earlier this month. |
| 1:21.4 | What should be news and what not? |
| 1:24.9 | What should have a moral claim on our attention. |
| 1:28.2 | That's our moral maze tonight. |
| 1:29.5 | The panel, Ash Sarker, editor with the Navarra Media Group, |
| 1:32.5 | the feminist author Ella Weillan, the historian Tim Stanley, |
| 1:35.9 | who writes for the Daily Telegraph, |
| 1:37.6 | and Matthew Taylor, chief executive of the NHS Confederation. |
| 1:41.7 | I've got some skin in this game, of course, panel, which I will try very hard to set aside. |
... |
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