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Thomas Martin's avatar

Very insightful article but, with great respect, Kevin, no mention of the elephant in the room, namely, the state propaganda organ, aka CBC, which, unlike private sector news organizations, is flush with cash.

What are implications for free expression in the media with this state of affairs?

Well, as this article demonstrates, any reporter/journalist in the news business today is acutely aware that that their hold on their position is tenuous and that all it takes is a bad earnings report for their position to be the victim of a corporate reorganization. 

But, of course, at the same time it will have escaped no one living under this sword of Damocles that if you can somehow sign on with the CBC your days of financial worry are behind you. 

Once ensconced in the CBC you can coast to retirement and a lavish pension on a salary and benefits you could only dream about in the private sector.

And, as a bonus, no need to worry about remaining on top of your game. As long as you are ideologically correct, the fail-up principle will protect you even as you descend into irredeemable mediocrity and spend your days writing the rank puff pieces that the central committee orders.

But the openings are few and the candidates many!

How are you going to be one of the chosen few who gets to sign on and put their financial worries behind them?

By pressing the PM and his Keystone Cops cabinet for answers on the hard issues of the day? By taking at face value the adage that the role of the media is to call the powerful to account?

Or, given we live in the real world, do you stand a better chance of landing a sinecure at the CBC by accounting to the powerful and becoming known for fawning, supine, adulatory, coverage of the PM and his sorry and supremely talentless front bench?

To ask the question is to answer it, it seems to me.

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Bonnie Kohlman's avatar

Great article! I have been a "news" watcher since I was about 12 - a long time ago. However, I became totally jaded to our nightly news broadcasters once they started spouting their opinion instead of giving us facts. Ever since Trump ran for election, it was like an explosion of opinion instead of fact. So I just well stopped ingesting what our main stream media outlets like CTV had to offer. I am sure I am not an oddball - so I think yes, the business model is to blame, but only to an extent. The lack of accountability that was shown for "just offering facts" was what I feel killed "news outlets"

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