Jump to content
GreaseSpot Cafe

As Bad As It Gets


Sudo
 Share

Recommended Posts

I have MSNBC as my homepage but am not entirely happy with it..

And this is a case in point. Just lookie at this screen capture I took just a few minutes ago..

aep3.jpg

Now what would *YOU* think would constitute 'AS BAD AS IT GETS'?? If you click on the article you see that only 11 people were killed out of a population of about a million. Couldn't get any worse, huh? Heck, its obvious to a dang IDIOT it could have been a lot worse. It reminds me of when they suckered me in last.. when they had "experts" and seasoned newsmen on the scene and called the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina "Total Devastation".

I was expecting images of Nagasaki or Hiroshima of August 1945 but what did I fine? When I clicked around the Internet, it looked like most of New Orleans was still there. Yeppers.. there was the Super dome. Yep.. there was St. Louis church and the French quarter just as I remembered it from many visits.

So why am I posting this? 1) To see if anyone other than me is just really peeved that the news media uses these inflammatory words, terms and phrases when they are clearly deceiving and 2) To see if anyone else recognizes that the news media does *indeed have an agenda.. to inflame every story they can to get viewership.

sudo :realmad:
Link to comment
Share on other sites

awe Sudo... put on the nose piece and crank it to 80% for a few minutes and then mosey on over to the Cheech and Chong thread and take a couple of hits or have a brownie... life's too short brother...

...but the media does have an agenda, to sell advertising and (I'm with Michael Moore on this) to instill fear... but I'm not gonna get red-faced over it...

Edited by Tom Strange
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sudo, clearly there is no good news to report. If they could find good news, they would report it. Same thing with the war and everything else going on in the world. :wink2:

Reporting on the survivors would just be propaganda and not true news. This death and destruction is what constitutes "news", the rest is just "press release" information. Besides that, who wants to hear good news? Good news is boring.

At least that's what "they" say. :asdf: Do you know how to change your homepage? I can help if you don't.

Come on down to the Cheech & Chong thread. I've tried the Strange One's brownie recipe and am sharing. :spy:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Couple of points:

"As bad as it gets" is in quotation marks; I suspect in the live feed, those words came from the man with his hands over his face, because the caption that goes with his photo reads:

Lewis Harrison wipes his face after pulling children from the Fun Zone skating rink after a storm destroyed the building and a tornado moved through the area in Montgomery, Ala., on Wednesday, Nov. 15.

I would imagine that pulling dead kids out of a skating rink pretty much is as bad as it gets. It doesn't have to be about 100s or 1000s killed to be a horrendous event.

Now, I know how popular it is to bash the media, and I also know it's sometimes well deserved. But not always. Newspapers and magazines aren't published and news on TV isn't broadcast purely as a public service. These entities are in business, and they sell what people will buy. Plain and simple.

The question, "Why is there no good news?" has been asked for decades that I know of, and probably longer. The answer is simple. If that headline had said, "It rained a little bit in Alabama yesterday," it wouldn't have gotten anyone to watch the newscast (and subsequently buy sponsors' products).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I thought the same thing you did Linda Z. It was related to the man in the photo. Newspapers only have so much space to print stuff. They're not going to have room for much of anything other than this kind of reporting at this time, so close to the event. They still have people missing!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Here, maybe I can fill in the void a little:

Thousands of planes landed safely today. School was held without any gunshots being heard all day in most every town. And millions of fuzzy little bunnies didn't get run over by any mean 'ol diesel trucks.

Better?

BTW, I was in New Orleans about 8 weeks after the storm, and I've never seen such destruction ANYWHERE at ANYTIME. I was in Mobile for hurricane Frederick in '80, in Sylmar for the Northridge quake in '94 and in Kobe, Japan for that quake a year later, and been through a dozen or so floods around the PNW. They were like a lipstick smear in comparison. Southern Lousiana got seriously f-ed up, buddy...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I find it interesting to look at news reports and remove emotive and provocative verbs (in particular) and substitute more bland ones:

(eg) local health chief admits ... (probably something quite innocuous) - becomes

local health chief says/comments/....

The perspective on some of the more outrageous articles out there changes dramatically.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Evidently...

I'm the only one here who is bothered by the hyperbole. I learn from this kind of feedback, guys and I appreciate your replies. I'm seeing that the media have their viewers pegged pretty well, it appears. I should have realized that a professional outfit like MSNBC would have known what would appeal to most of its viewers. I mean, they have people who are experts at this sort of thing either on staff or consultation.

sudo (who lives and learns and adapts accordingly :) )
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sudo, I'm not so sure in this case it's hyperbole. I still contend that pulling dead children from a collapsed building very well might have been "as bad as it gets" to the person who had to do it.

Drama and emotion are what catch people's attention. The man made a dramatic statement, and the MSNBC reporters reported it to get the viewers' attention.

I'm really curious: How would you word your headlines on a Web site or in a newspaper for a story like this if you were in charge?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Linda,

Re:"Sudo, I'm not so sure in this case it's hyperbole."

So you think it was just a quote, then, and therefore MSNBC could legitimately lead off a story about storms killing 11 people with: 'As Bad As It Gets'. Right? Evidently, Krysilis saw it similarly. I think it's obvious hyperbole to make someone click on the story, myself.

If a city was able to reduce its gang related deaths from 50 a year to just 1 then I'm sure they could get that same quote from the mother of the one death, don't you think? To HER the death of her son is "As Bad As It Gets", no? Even though things are getting really really better. This is just an off-the-top-of-my-head ridiculous example, Linda. Like my example of the devastation of New Orleans after Katrina. In spite of what Geo says.. it wasn't total devastation and I'm surprised HE missed my point. Yeah, dude.. I know it was bad but was NOT total devastation and that's what I was pointing out.

Its like the media crying wolf. Oh, there must be a little tribal sparring going on over in Darfur I see.. the media is (quoting someone there, of course) calling it genocide :sleep1: .

sudo
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Right? Evidently, Krysilis saw it similarly. I think it's obvious hyperbole to make someone click on the story, myself.
Sudo, I see what you are getting at but I agree with Linda and Krys. "As bad as it gets" is in quotes.
Now what would *YOU* think would constitute 'AS BAD AS IT GETS'?? If you click on the article you see that only 11 people were killed out of a population of about a million. Couldn't get any worse, huh?

Actually, you don't have to click on the link to find that out, you see it right under the as bad as it gets header, "Storms kill 11 in South, officials fear higher toll." So you learn that right there in one glance. The hook is if it is only eleven deaths then as you pointed out, things could have been a lot worse. So the reader says to themselves, "Self, that is not as bad as it gets, what is it that they are talking about. I shall click and find out." That is how they get you, not through hyperbole, but by leading the reader there and leaving them with a question. Then after clicking they read the quote in context and maybe understand it a little better....or not.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Lindyhopper,

Thank you sir. We are almost on the same page, I think. Yes, since as you say, it gives the death toll at 11 in the 'hook', my assumption was that it had to be something ELSE other than those 11 deaths that made it "As Bad As It Gets".

I actually feel a bit silly now for starting this thread. I thought it was a 'no-brainer' as to how MSNBC was using hyperbole but have been taught a lesson about peoples' conceptions. I reiterate.. I live and learn and adapt accordingly.

sudo
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I do agree with you Sudo in that too many headlines do not come close to the story they're reporting! They are sensationalized on purpose to get us to do, whatever "they" want us to do or think.

But I don't think it's true in this case. I red those words not as a headline but as a caption to the photo! That's how I decided.

Edited by krysilis
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

×
×
  • Create New...