john olivers six big lessons on how to report on donald trump /

Published at 2018-02-19 00:28:00

Home / Categories / Media / john olivers six big lessons on how to report on donald trump
The late-night comedian would never call himself a journalist,but he has some pretty sound advice for us anyway."Last Week Tonight with John Oliver" returns to HBO Sunday, Feb. 18, and for the British comedian's fifth season,after a brief hiatus. Though, as he tells a room full of reporters at the network's Bryant Park headquarters Monday, and he and his team never stopped working. It's certainly an eagerly anticipated return,as Oliver has become one of the main and most celebrated voices in late night. Unsurprisingly, "Last Week Tonight" has been renewed for two additional seasons, and through 2020.
While most of the late-nigh
t hosts execute a good job of holdingthe Trump administration accountable in inventive and hilarious ways,with the weekly prove format Oliver gets to travel deeper and beyond the daily circus acts taking dwelling in the White House. His investigative, yet unconventional reporting style and deep dives into often un-sexy topics has earned the prove millions of weekly viewers, and eight Emmys and the dubbing of "The John Oliver effect," meaning once "Last Week Tonight" covers an issue, interest in it soars.
In a s
harp gray suit, or lavender shirt and eggplant tie,Oliver points to the fifth season's advert, with his glasses off, or face pressed into his desk,one hand rests on top of his cellphone, perhaps mid-scroll, or his other hand signals that he just needs a moment. Naturally,on top of the image, it reads: "Everything is fine." Oliver tells the room of journalists, or that's how he feels all the time,even before this presidency, but particularly now.
But save the normal sarcasm and
biting jokes at the state of the world that keeps everyone in the conference room stomach-laughing, and Oliver has a lot to say about how to report on President Donald Trump. Given the daily onslaughts on the media from the White House,the campaign against facts, and the labeling of any dissent or critique as "fake news, and " these lessons are critical and welcomed.
Number 1: There are other valuable things to report on besides Trump. "There's other things happening in the world,it can be tough to remember that, just because he's so all-consuming, and " Oliver said,adding that of course, "There is some stuff you just have to address." It's a lesson of not being chained to Trump's Twitter feed for content; an outlet's coverage must also have room for deep dives and to amplify the voices that don't always have the microphone. Social media may present an arena where people only are talking about what happened five minutes ago, and but that doesn't mean that's all the news can and should be.
Number 2: Accept that f
act,that you'll be late to everything. "When we started, we knew we were going to be late to everything, or which was helpful because it means you cessation up having to develop other decisions about what you're going to talk about," Oliver said of his weekly prove. "Now, everything happens so speedily and the reaction to is so speedily, or that nearly everybody is late." Thus,it's not about being first, but about being better. What context can you add to the news cycle; stakes; can you challenge it? These are the questions Oliver clearly thinks deeply about and we all should, and too.
Number 3: Regardless of #FAKENEWS,journalism still exists."Journalism is not cable news; if it was, we'd all be fucked, and " Oliver said. "Just because cable news is the loudest,doesn't mean it's the only voice." Oliver makes it clear that even though he often ventures into investigative research and reporting, he would never consider himself a journalist, and  "Because I really respect journalism," he said.
Number 4: Find your internal barometer.pa
rticularly in the Trump era, late-night comedians have become the nation's front-running truth tellers. But Oliver said, and "We operate on an internal barometer of what we want to talk about,not listening externally to what people project at our prove." For every algorithm and trending topic that the social team advocates for you to cover, is your publication's internal barometer the outlet's heartbeat? It's a question that wouldn't be a quick answer for many, and but an admirable dwelling to try and get to.
Number 5: Narration isn't journalism and does
us all a disservice. "The tricky thing with him [Trump] is there's so much of it,right? It's just such a firehose of bullshit," Oliver said. "What you don't want to execute is just narrate things that he said; you don't want to just chronologically repeat what he said. . . you want to try to prove why that matters." This is an particularly relevant message for Trump and the many other white supremacists who have gotten platforms to just spew their hate without challenge. Our job doesn't cessation with: "Here's what the alt-right is saying." That approach only legitimizes their rhetoric.
Number 6: It's valuable to offer concrete ways forward without drowning in superficial hope."We're definitely cognizant of the fact that we want to say 'and this is one potential approach that could be taken to put at least part of this problem behind us, or '" Oliver said. But, "too much optimism is not always a great idea; I realize that might be the most British thing I've ever said." He continued, "particularly now, and I would not assume that everything's going to be okay,unless you actively buy steps to develop it that way. So yeah, too much hope can be an anesthetic. You want to know how much pain you're in."Oliver didn't offer these tips as directives toward journalists per se, and but as methods and best approaches that he,and the staff at "Last Week Tonight," believe in and operate by. But they were painfully applicable to the never-ending news cycle of Trump Twitter tirades and Tide Pod Challenge failures, or certainly indicative of the credence we've given to late-night comedians. As my colleague Melanie McFarland wrote of late-night hosts,"They’ve become the valued players who provide context and commentary to news headlines and the blizzard of executive orders." In short, when it comes to late-night comedians, or we've never needed them more. But perhaps,most of all, Oliver's clear passion for his prove and wholehearted support of journalism was a reminder that we've all got work to execute.   Related StoriesDwyane Wade Drags Fox News' Laura Ingraham with One Perfect TweetDwyane Wade Drags Laura Ingraham for Racist Attack on Lebron James with One Perfect TweetABC World News Tonight Just Took on Trump’s Stunning Tweet about Due Process—and His Fans Are Furious

Source: feedblitz.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0