{"id":6563,"date":"2022-04-06T12:06:56","date_gmt":"2022-04-06T12:06:56","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/9thstreetjournal.org\/?p=6563"},"modified":"2023-06-14T14:54:55","modified_gmt":"2023-06-14T14:54:55","slug":"reflections-how-journalism-can-save-the-world","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/9thstreetjournal.org\/2022\/04\/06\/reflections-how-journalism-can-save-the-world\/","title":{"rendered":"Reflections: How journalism can save the world"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/p>\n
In light of rising disdain for journalism\u2014often known merely as the \u201cmedia,\u201d that undifferentiated behemoth\u2014as biased or corrupt or useless in this age of skyrocketing polarization and information overload, it\u2019s time for an ode to journalism as a way to tell stories that change the world.<\/p>\n
When journalists cover an event or investigate an issue, they bear witness to something not everyone has seen. Maybe they\u2019re among the few people allowed inside that refugee camp. One of the few people who got to interview that hostage crisis survivor. Regardless of what they\u2019ve seen (no matter how seemingly mundane), the journalist is somehow changed.<\/p>\n
The journalist now knows more about who someone is, how something works. Maybe they bear witness to suffering, and they experience empathy in a way they hadn\u2019t before. The lens through which they see an issue, or the world at large, is widened or even reshaped. Things look different.<\/p>\n
It’s the job of the journalist to impart this to readers. The average citizen doesn\u2019t have a press pass; they can\u2019t go to Afghanistan or Ukraine to speak to refugees because how could they? But the journalist has the power to enable readers to come along, to be there, too. Through skillful storytelling, the journalist plants readers in the very seat they occupied, experiencing the events they experienced. The reader bears witness, their lens shifts, things look different.<\/p>\n
This process requires an adept journalist and an at-least-somewhat engaged reader, but it\u2019s universally applicable within journalism\u2014from a short local story about a town hall meeting to a feature about a Key Issue Of Our Time. And I think it\u2019s exciting and inspiring and the way we\u2019ll save ourselves.<\/p>\n
I think many of the most complex problems of our time are due to lack of information, or misinformation, or misunderstanding. And that the existence of institutionalized racism is something everyone could grasp if they only talked to certain people, read certain books. Same with anthropogenic climate change. Same with a global inequality gap that\u2019s reminiscent of feudalism. I believe we as a country\u2014even as a species\u2014could get on the same page and fix some stuff.<\/p>\n
But the people whose attention I\u2019d grab if I could are not <\/em>talking to those people and reading those books. And it\u2019s no longer enough for people with an eye to social justice to live in an echo chamber, endlessly refining their own positions and basking in the sounds of their own voices while pretending those who disagree don\u2019t exist. They do exist\u2014people whose opinions on climate change were handed to them by Big Oil. People who refuse to acknowledge structural racism. People whose capitalist convictions have never been questioned. They exist. And in order to engage them, it\u2019s time to appreciate the power of the most accessible, populist avenue for change we have: the viral article. (Especially<\/em> contained within a viral tweet.)<\/p>\n Imagine this: a bill is being debated on the House floor that would impose some sort of controversial measure. Like a way to federally control rent, let\u2019s say. A legitimate news outlet assigns a journalist to the story. The journalist crafts a beautiful, heart-wrenching, factually impeccable story about a few victims of the housing crisis and the way this bill would transform their lives. The story grabs you by the shoulders with its lede, lyricism, and pathos, but teaches you much through an excellent amalgamation of expert opinions and statistics. It offers nuance: interviews with people who have been affected in contradictory ways, experts with diverse opinions. The story goes viral.<\/p>\n In classic internet fashion, it owes its reach to the style of the writing and the appeal of the \u201ccharacters,\u201d rather than the bill\u2019s crucial civic implications. But viral is viral. And it\u2019s ubiquitous on platforms like Twitter and Instagram\u2014hundreds of thousands see it.<\/p>\n Hypothetical Reader Amy is a conservative from the Midwest who thinks the bill harkens back to the days of Soviet Russia. Or maybe she\u2019s a wealthy woman who considers herself liberal but is nonetheless worried about anything that would deflate the income she receives from her Airbnb. She could assume any number of identities that makes her inclined to oppose the bill. Whoever she is, she finds the article because her son sends it to her, or an old friend reposts it on Instagram, or someone she follows on Twitter posts something criticizing it. But for whatever reason, she clicks.<\/p>\n And that\u2019s all you need. Because true stories told well often speak for themselves.<\/p>\n Probably, Amy\u2019s mind isn\u2019t changed forever, just like that, happily ever after. But if the journalist did a good enough job to keep her reading, then something changed for Amy. A spark of empathy, some facts she never thought to consider, even a flash of curiosity that leads her to do some research. Because of the journalist\u2019s skillful storytelling, Amy was able to bear witness. And because of that, somehow, things look a little different.<\/p>\n I think that\u2019s how we save the world.<\/p>\n Above: Photo of Zella Hanson by Rebecca Schneid \u2014 The 9th Street Journal<\/strong><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" In light of rising disdain for journalism\u2014often known merely as the \u201cmedia,\u201d that undifferentiated behemoth\u2014as biased or corrupt or useless in this age of skyrocketing…<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"om_disable_all_campaigns":false,"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[15],"tags":[234],"class_list":["post-6563","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-reflections","tag-reflections","entry"],"yoast_head":"\n