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The younger producers these shows now have do not understand the tradition of how news was (and should still be) presented. During WWII, Mr Lorne Greene was one of the readers of national broadcasts at CBC Radio. With his deep voice, and taking into account the sometimes overwhelming reports of how the war was going in the early days, he was called the Voice of Doom. These broadcasts were not for entertainment, but to inform, and I suppose considering the time, to combine the strengths of a nation towards one task.
Today, it can easily been seen, the function of TV is to advertise. Viewers expect dramatic pictures, and feel good stories: video from the latest plane crash or which vendor on Broadway has the best pretzels.
Mr MacNeil also presents in detail just how crazy things have got to when it comes to paying these talking heads. The newsreader HAS to draw the audience, not to inform them but hold them for the commercials. I guess that is one of the reasons I always liked the MacNeil/Lehrer Newshour on PBS. No commmercials and a whole hour of news. The networks should learn you can't present a whole day's worth of national and international news in 22 minutes.
Mr MacNeil also shows us, from the inside, how the media makes the news instead of only reporting it. I don't want to give away anthing from the plot, but when one 'reporter' does an interview that became the news.
Finally, I have to add, the concept of the Hollygo character was some of the most interesting reading. If there was any mystery in "Breaking News" it had to ber 'her'!
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