Thousands
protest press credibility in march against mainstream media
Thousands
of people in the UK and US united in their rejection of mainstream
media in a mass protest. Protesters targeted the headquarters of
media giants like Fox News, the BBC and NBS, decrying their narrow
coverage of world affairs.
RT,
17
November, 2013
The
March Against Mainstream Media (MAMM) organized the international
protest via social media and challenged the established media to
cover it.
In
a statement posted on the MAMM website, the organization said big
media outlets had two options: “report on the fact that thousands
of people are currently protesting outside of their buildings because
they are keeping important news from the public’s eyes,” or
ignore them.
Across
America people turned out brandishing banners, condemning established
news channels.
“Boycott
the media!” one banner read in High Point California, while in
Kansas city supporters of the movement wearing Anonymous masks
delivered the message “America deserves the truth!”
A
recurrent theme that cropped up a number of times in the US protests
was the media’s coverage of the stricken nuclear plants in
Fukushima Japan that were damaged in the 2010 earthquake-triggered
tsunami.
"The
radiation from that plant is going to reach us and affect us, not
just in California but worldwide. How is it going to affect us, how
is it going to affect our water, our food supply, and our way of
life?" said one protester to KMPH Fox 24.
Meanwhile
in London, supporters of the anti-establishment movement gathered
outside the offices of the BBC in a sit-in-style protest.
Jet
Barnett, one of the organizers of MAMM spoke to RT and said the march
was a sign that people were beginning to look for their news in
alternative media.
“We
want mainstream media to listen, to let them know that the people are
finally coming together and influence them to make a change,” said
Barnett to RT, adding that the organization is fighting to restore
journalist integrity.
Confidence
in US mainstream media has been declining sharply over the past
couple of years with only 44 percent of Americans trusting mass
media, according to a Gallup poll in September. The figures for this
year are a slight improvement on 2012 when the survey saw trust in
the media fall to a record low of 40 percent.
However,
a large amount of Americans (46 percent) believe media has become too
liberal, compared to only 13 percent who regard mainstream news
coverage as overly conservative.
Gallup’s
statistics show the steady decline in media trust in America from
2005, with Democrats reportedly having the most confidence in
American news outlets.
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