It has always been suspected that the reported news may be less than the truth. Former CNN anchorman Aaron Brown addressed Florida’s Society of the Four Arts at Palm Beach on Tuesday. His words were not kind when describing his fellow newscaster and reporters in the cable news industry.
The Palm Beach Daily News reports:
"Truth no longer matters in the context of politics and, sadly, in the context of cable news," said Aaron Brown, whose four-year period as anchor of CNN’s NewsNight ended in November, when network executives gave his job to Anderson Cooper in a bid to push the show’s ratings closer to front-runner Fox News.
When NewsNight spent four hours covering the arrest of actor Robert Blake for the murder of his wife, Brown received thousands of e-mails criticizing the amount of time the show spent on the story. Nevertheless, that show, which aired in April 2002, received the highest ratings of any program since NewsNight’s coverage of the November 2001 crash of American Airlines flight 587.
Important issues, such as the prosecution of the war in Iraq at home and abroad, are being clouded over by "mud-wrestling" that skirts substance, he said. Consider what he called "the swift-boating of John Murtha," the Democratic congressman whose war record was smeared when he called for an exit strategy in Iraq. "Cable didn’t search for the truth, but engaged in mock debates pitting those making the charges against Murtha’s defenders," he said.
Many Americans on the left and the right aren’t interested in the truth, but simply want news that confirms their viewpoints, he said. "You’d think that it’s no more complex than good vs. evil," he said.
It is now getting to the point that in order to get the truth, you have search and discern it for yourself. It is no wonder that the reported news is presented in such a way as to mold opinion and to cover the truth.