Is it just me or was there a notable shift in our news coverage somewhere around the beginning of this week?Beany wrote: Fri Feb 25, 2022 11:56 pm All of this is from a very Western standpoint however and subject to, to be frank, propagandistic tendencies; was chatting to a Swedish chum today (so culturally a bit more familiar with dealing with Russian bullshit - they learn about Russia in school in a similar way we learn about Nazi Germany and England Vs Scotland, etc) who pointed out that Russian separatist movements have been operating in Ukraine in what we agreed could be a somewhat 'IRA' sort of manner (as a cultural touchstone for me, rather than an accurate depiction) for near a decade now, and poor diplomatic efforts from Ukraine have functionally enabled this escalation to occur to an extent. It's more complicated than most would like to believe (because black and white is easy to digest and sell, greys are not) , and certainly than is being reported. It's possible it's all propaganda from both sides. Not being in the area means basically none of us can confidently read the room, politically.
Understandable, of course, but I'm finding it somewhat disquieting that all our news reports seem to now be following the "War propoganda 101" format - Highly pejorative headline - tightly edited footage of atrocities - voxpops with crying mothers - queues of brave young men clamoring to enlist.
Also, why is the TV news on all channels based on the same 3 bits of smartphone footage? There must be millions of hours of footage being captured, but yesterday, for example, the tightly edited vid of the missile truck running over the car, the aftermath of the cruise missile hitting the tower block, and, again tightly clipped footage to Russian police dragging off protestors, were all being pushed in unison by the different news agencies.
We're closer to a state of war than we've been in 70 years - *of course* the MoD is taking a hand in managing the news flow. Maybe it just comes across as clunky and transparent because the full-on military departments are less media-savvy than actual media professionals, but it feels concerning that they've felt the need to flip the coverage into full propaganda mode so quickly and so completely.