Keep up with
Newstalk ZB

Tue, 21 May 2013, 20:43

Have Your Say

Talkback 0800 80 10 80
Overseas +64 9 307 1080
Text 9292

Follow Us

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • RSS
  • Sign Up

Site Search

Search Search

Select your region:

Mike's Editorial: Coverage of protests

Share |

By: Mike Hosking | Thursday, April 26, 2012 7:49 AM

Well I hope the hikoi I watched on the news Tuesday night has swollen in numbers by about a thousand fold because if it hasn’t, I don’t want to hear about it or see it again.

Something has happened in this country. There were maybe 20 people, a handful, a tiny collective, a bunch of mates with not a lot to do. They’re going to march from the top of the country to Wellington to show their outrage over asset sales. Good luck to them. But why is it news? Why are we paying them any attention? How is it a couple of dozen people who don't like something can draw any attention at all?

20,000 people, that’s a story. But a couple of dozen? I can find you a couple of dozen who are aggrieved or want change on any number of things, a republic, becoming Goths, becoming communist, becoming part of Australia, civil war, but we largely dismiss them as fringe or nutters. We don't give them a platform, don't interview them.

The old favourites were there among the 20 - Mike Smith (tree chopper and professional protestor), Hone Harawira (professional agitator). They’re the same people, that’s all they know how to do, be against stuff. That’s fine. Let them have any opinion they want, let them march and stamp their feet and collect their signatures and make their noise.

But the noise and its coverage and exposure has to be in perspective, and the coverage we see of many of these things is hopelessly out of kilter. It seems to have got to the stage that no matter how small and insignificant your group is, no matter how many of them are the same old rent-a-crowd faces, all you have to do is pick something to be against and the media can’t grab a camera, a microphone or a notepad fast enough.

News should not be made up automatically of bored, aggrieved people. This is a big, complex and fascinating world. A myriad of genuinely interesting things happen in any given day and I can tell you that a handful of the same old same olds yet again marching doesn't deserve the attention they’re being given.

 

Larry's Memo: May 21

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

GCSB The Inspector-General of Intelligence has looked into 88 spying cases ...

Chris' Lynchpins: The single sex school ...

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Call me sceptical but I do wonder how serious St Bede’s College is ta ...

Mike's Editorial: Teaching profession st ...

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Well praise the Lord, do we see some common sense at last in the teachers&r ...

Political Report: John needs to sort the ...

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

State Homie John Key's certainly been a globe trotter in his time at the to ...

Ramblings of a Redhead: The Curse of Bea ...

Monday, May 20, 2013

I sighed with a heavy heart as a read this latest article on the Daily Mail ...

A new reality TV concept

Monday, May 20, 2013

I can't keep track of all these unreal reality shows. I don't try to but th ...

Advertisement
Mike Hosking Breakfast
Advertisement
  • Road through Redcliffs open again

  • Council met its obligations over dam

  • Christchurch Airport losing its CEO

  • Dismissal of chef who appeared stoned ruled wrong

  • Waterspouts in Auckland, moderate tornado risk

  • Concern Redcliffs home wasn't being monitored

  • Teachers to be recognised in new agreement

  • Oklahoma tornado: Death toll nearing 100 +VIDEO

  • Alistair Helm: CVs don't help ...

  • Karl Anderson: truck drivers n ...

  • Steve Merczynski: the Oklahoma ...

  • Jim Veitch: the GCSB enquiry

  • Tuesday-Things People Do Not W ...

  • Friday-Budget Passion

  • Thursday-Topless Research

  • Wednesday-Gilmore So Gone

National Convention Centre

Do you support the Government's deal with SkyCity over the National Convention Centre

Vote Now

View Results