Sins of omission - Info and Reading Options
shaping the news at CBC TV
By Cooper, Barry

"Sins of omission" was published by University of Toronto Press in 1994 - Toronto, it has 255 pages and the language of the book is English.
“Sins of omission” Metadata:
- Title: Sins of omission
- Author: Cooper, Barry
- Language: English
- Number of Pages: 255
- Publisher: University of Toronto Press
- Publish Date: 1994
- Publish Location: Toronto
“Sins of omission” Subjects and Themes:
- Subjects: ➤ Canada - Canadian Broadcasting Corporation - Television broadcasting of news - Television broadcasting, canada
- Places: Canada
Edition Specifications:
- Pagination: xii, 255 p. ;
Edition Identifiers:
- The Open Library ID: OL1179132M - OL1680870W
- Online Computer Library Center (OCLC) ID: 29028050
- Library of Congress Control Number (LCCN): 94165780 - cn93095003
- ISBN-10: 0802005977
- All ISBNs: 0802005977
AI-generated Review of “Sins of omission”:
"Sins of omission" Description:
The Open Library:
Studies over nearly a generation have shown that Canadians receive most of their information about the world from television. Barry Cooper contends that what TV, including TV news, does well is entertain, rather than provide accurate factual information or balanced insight. TV news is produced with great deliberation and technical skill. It has a logic that extends from the camera angles used in recording visual material to the anchor's carefully crafted script, desk, and lighting. Cooper argues, however, that TV news is consumed like a live performance. The combination of careful and reflective production with careless and unreflective consumption makes it possible for TV news to construct a world that may be unrelated to the common-sense reality of everyday life. And audiences know they have no way of determining whether TV mediation of the real world in a particular instance is trustworthy. Cooper supports his contention that audiences are right in not trusting TV news by focusing on CBC TV coverage of the Soviet Union, the Reagan-Gorbachev summit talks, the Afghanistan war, South Africa, and the wars in Ethiopia and Mozambique, in roughly 250 broadcasts between June 1988 and June 1989. He places the news items in the context of ongoing coverage so that the weave of displacements, omissions, and emphases comes to the foreground in a way it does not for the nightly news watcher, who sees a mosaic of bits and pieces. The larger question, beyond the matter of the stance taken by CBC TV news in these stories, is the place of television in technological societies such as ours. If TV news is encouraging a growing gap between common-sense reality and the second reality produced by TV, then viewers will increasingly distrust both TV and common-sense reality, a consequence that is discouraging for the prospect of responsible participation in society and responsible democratic government. This is a fascinating and provocative analysis of an important topic that so far has received little attention in Canada.
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