This isn’t a “this is a very important and underdiscussed topic” thread, just a conversational thread of things I’ve noticed about treatment of certain news stories over the past two days, while writing about what the BBC’s future should be, so thinking about the media.
-
-
Also found it was increasingly hard to find the origin/facts behind stories it’s assumed everyone’s talking about on Twitter, and so easier to avoid story details altogether if you want to on both.
Show this thread -
Every story I read about a “social media controversy” majorly overstated the controversy, and often used it as a hook to write about a subject without needing to justify it, or ignored specifics on who was aggrieved, framing it as an amorphous blob v blob within the culture wars
Show this thread -
Google defaulting to show you most recent results first in straight searches is both incredibly annoying but also means it’s much harder to find context even in recent history, around the coronavirus.
Show this thread -
But the biggest thing I noticed was how unusable the Independent/New Statesman websites are: WAPO put two whole pages of “accept our terms” bunf before you hit your link, but that left me calm cos the site works, unlike jumping pages & ads that load slowly while text disappears.
Show this thread
End of conversation
New conversation -
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.
msdawnfoster@gmail.com Tusk is the best Fleetwood Mac album. Only care about LFC.