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Created on: February 23, 2009
What does it take to make poverty an important news story?
It is true to say bush fires, hurricanes, stabbings, terrorists attacks, terminal illnesses and war are justifiably news items which are filtered in to millions of homes every single day. Any reasonably intelligent person can then deduce for themselves that the after effect of these events must produce poverty-stricken circumstances for most of the victims. These traumatic tragedies are news items which concern people world-wide for immediacy reasons. Every victim has a relative or friend possibly on the other side of the planet who will be wanting to be informed. Friends or family, working, living or holidaying abroad may get caught up in a large or small unprecedented conflict or accident.
However in main-stream news there are few regular news items on the subject of global poverty or even the 'relative' poverty which exists on our own door-steps. Statistics are bandied about occasionally with the lastest unemployment figures, or how many people starved to death during the famine of 2001 for instance. Poverty itself is not a dramatic incident which can be 'newsflashed', problem solved, and filed under 'yesterday's tragedy' in some newsroom archive, to be forgotten about until dug up by historians in the next century. Poverty is an on-going dilemma which, like a verruca on the big toe of society, can be and is tolerated, by those who choose to turn a blind eye, which it seems, is most people.
In fairness, there are people out there who study the subject, research the topic, and even make attenpts at resolving the dilemma. Not all are politicians and these voices do not generally get heard. There are real people who manage community groups and provide services to help improve the quality of life to hundreds of under-priviliged citizens, the existance of whom the ordinary well-heeled man-in-the-street doesn't even recognise, never mind acknowledge.
Which takes me back to the question: "What does it take to make poverty an important news story?" Imagine the scenario where you turn on the news one morning and the head-line states: BREAKING NEWS: "Poverty is a Reality!" The news reader- goes on: "It has been brought to our attention this morning that there are some very very poor people in the world TODAY who are finding life very, very, very tough. Some are reported to be dying even as we speak and many more are due to die within the next few minutes, days and years. The government has called in the emergency
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What does it take to make poverty an important news story?
The question at hand is, how do we take a massive problem, 25,000 hunger related deaths everyday*, and get the media
Poverty only seems to become an important news story when the powers-that-be decide it is an important issue. When the G8
Any television show requires both advertiser and viewer attention and interest. If the viewers tune out, then the story
I have no sympathy for the homeless in the inner cities, well not as much sympathy as I once had. I live in Johannesburg
by J Mock
In an ideal world any poverty related issue would warrant the full attention of the world's media, but the present scale
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