8.00 pm!
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Correct, the 6 o'clock news was pretty even handed. Interesting however that the issue of BAME excess deaths is being pushed hard but male excess deaths has been dropped like a stone, so for some reason the media think 15% of the population matter more than 50%. IMO until 'they' can help either group it should just be mentioned in passing
BAME groups are demanding research into why they are adversely affected by the virus. If it was 70/30 with women being the highest figure, I bet that we'd have women's groups demanding an investigation also.
Listen to the demand for men...........
Surprise, surprise Sky's 41% headline story from this morning appears to have disappeared from their timeline of stories for the day.
If I was the minister giving the daily briefing and I was being questioned about how I was doing my job, I wouldn't be able to resist saying to the questioner 'after your agency run that particular load of crap, I don't know how you have the nerve to have a go at me'
How the BBC on Friday and Sky today, had the nerve to put questions to the government, I don't know.
Brendan O'Neill
11 mins
In the UK right now, we have a government trying it's best to tackle a novel new virus and inevitably making some mistakes.
And we have a public trying its best to socially distance and inevitably making some mistakes.
And then we have the media elites sneering at us all.
Raging against the government if it takes any kind of misstep and wagging its finger at any member of the public who dares to go for a second jog or who dares to pop into Tesco Metro for some tinnies at 10pm.
Journalists have no idea how much they are loathed right now.
Someone should tell them.
Get that man a coconut or goldfish.
There's far too much point scoring, trying to cause the politicians to trip up or drop a sensationalist headline. It's counter productive, wastes people's time on worrying about whether *insert news outlet here* is going to demand their resignation, so accountability is eroded to protect individuals employment. Potentially useful press conferences where we should be able to seek information and discuss concerns, start with the politicians immediately putting their defences up, therefore we get a shirade. Its a shame in a crisis like this, as we should all be singing from the same sheet. But hey, me and my leftie views!
I stopped following it all a couple of years ago, so only see it in chunks where it comes on the radio or the wife's watching it when I'm in the room. I can honestly say it's one of the best choices I made for my sanity.
I blame the advent of 24 hour / multiple news bulletins. If they only had 20 minutes to update you on the news, you'd get all the information you needed without all the crap that goes with it. Instead they try to fill far too much time, with nothing useful to actually report
Ready for my new rant about the media?
Some significant news had emerged over night, which should be widely published. The Lancet has published the very welcome figures that from test results from the Newcastle NHS, that frontline staff are just a little LESS likely to have contracted the virus, compared with clerical staff with no exposure, in any way, to patients.
This should be headline news, especially for those frontline staff, who must be worried sick. Has anyone heard of this article? Put it like this if the tests had shown that frontline staff were more likely to have contracted the virus, you can imagine which story would have led the news this morning.
The Guardian this morning is running an article this morning about the poor mental health in 50% of the frontline staff. Talk about hypocrisy, they and their media friends are constantly whipping up the hysteria levels about the dangers of their job and suppressing any opposing FACTS.