Posts Tagged ‘Dominion Post’

  1. Some French madness – surely?

    Published on Tuesday, June 7th, 2011
    How can I be so naïve?  How could I have missed this, especially when I’ve read so many books about Stalin and his “ism”, as well as Nazism.

    I read in today’s Dominion Post (Telegraph Group report) that the Smurfs are racist!   Yes, none other than those little blue comic figures with the elf-ist hats.

    Apparently one Antoine Bueno, 33, sociologist and lecturer at the eminent Sciences Po political sciences school in Paris reckons the Smurfs represent an “archetype of totalitarian society imbued with Stalinism and Nazism”.

    Surely the lesson in this for those of us who are communicators, is that we must pay more attention to potentially obscure and hidden messages least we or our clients or organisations are found to be guilty of the same outrage.

    But perhaps there is another explanation: Monsieur Bueno spent too much time sitting in the sun or wind at Roland Garros over the past two weeks.  Or is it just another way of getting publicity for a recent book?

  2. Entire towns are falling off their ladders

    Published on Monday, August 30th, 2010

    It’s Safety New Zealand Week.  This morning I was reading in the Dominion Post of a renewed campaign to alert us to dangers at home. Apparently last year more than 650,000 of us were injured in the home – one every 48 seconds. Staggering!

    This afternoon ACC kicked off its campaign with a statement detailing more grim statistics. These include more than 17,000 accidents in bathrooms each year, 87 stair-related accidents every day, and 133 injuries per week to children from running through glass or falling from windows.

    Last year we paid out $622 million through our ACC levies for the treatment and rehabilitation of people injured in the home. (I love the way ACC refers to “New Zealanders” and “their” levies, as if they are from another country.)

    We’re obviously a careless bunch because in the past 12 months 5,400 people were injured using a ladder at home – that’s 15 people every day. Never mind that this equates to a significantly-sized town of ladder victims alone.

    Having Safety Week has to be a good thing, but I would like to know how we fare in relation to other OECD countries. I suspect these figures are not apparent because others don’t have such generous systems as our ACC, and they simply have to fork out for their own carelessness. Or it is just the male can-do attitude that gets us into trouble around the home and up ladders.

    I’ve seen lot of ACC television adverts over the years – people tripping over toys and the like – and sometimes I wonder whether we’ve become too self reliant on others doing our thinking for us. Perhaps this is why we are so accident prone.

    Now I’ve not been above carelessness myself over the years, with a busted elbow and compound fracture of the arm.  Discreetly I did this outside the home.

    Perhaps one answer is to have a home-accident prosecution system akin to the workplace one. 

    Other possible solutions are living away from home, having only single storey dwellings without roofs, licensing the use of ladders, or hiring an expert, which would make many of these incidents workplace claims. Just a thought.

  3. Poorly served by media accuracy

    Published on Thursday, March 12th, 2009

    We have no right to expect accuracy from the media.  And the media has no right to promise that they will give us accurate reports.

    I came to this Damascene realisation only recently, or more correctly, I only recently faced up to this realisation. This is tough when you’ve spent a career working with the media and for a time even being part of it.

    What brought this on? Well, in fact it was media’s treatment of the teacher stabbed at Avondale College, a person known to me through a shared recreational pursuit over a couple of years*.

    The stabbing occurred late morning on Tuesday, March 3. By the next morning it’s hard to believe that anyone following the story did not think that the incident was in large part due to racism. Indeed, most people would have tended to believe this teacher was prone to racist comments.

    This is because in their pursuit of this story the media recorded the comments of anyone prepared to say anything, and if they did not have the comments first hand, to leverage the report of other media.  Those making such statements were guaranteed anonymity.

    Under these circumstances it was impossible to present an accurate report, so in the circumstances why impugn someone’s reputation?   For the sake of a story I guess, regardless of accuracy and integrity.

    In its own defense, the media insists that it searches out balance, by getting comment from or on behalf of the victim. When they can’t, it is a matter of editorial judgment – or lack of it – to go, or not, with what they’ve got.

    In such cases, the media tends to justify its position by stating the obvious: These are the statements of those we interviewed; we do not vouch for their accuracy.

    Following the earlier media reports, we learned through the court process that the stabbing was premeditated and, through a report of what police told the school community, “racism was not a motive”.

    Inevitably this does not resonate as deeply and widely across the media as the earlier, lasting accusations.

    Not trusting the accuracy of media is one thing, but not trusting the statements made by a government department is quite another. In Tuesday’s Dominion Post I read the disturbing report of how the strategic communications manager for Internal Affairs, according to his boss, seemed to be “talking at cross purposes with the media” over the timing of the return of Winston Peters’ ministerial vehicle.

    ‘Talking at cross purposes’ is a euphemism for avoiding factual, accurate responses.
    The comment of the Dominion Post’s chief reporter on this sad incident was (in part) that the public should be able to expect civil servants… to give straight answers.

    I agree whole heartedly. I hope he will agree with me that consumers of the news media have a right to fairness, balance and good editorial judgment.

    * I visited my paddling buddy in recent days, but we did not discuss any details of the incident, aside from the bodily impact and affect of the stabbing, or the likely causes.