AppleQueso wrote:I've always assumed that all news was handled this way. I've never imagined that say, Japan's news reports much on things outside of Japan unless it actually affects Japan.
Never watched the BBC?
AppleQueso wrote:I've always assumed that all news was handled this way. I've never imagined that say, Japan's news reports much on things outside of Japan unless it actually affects Japan.
Hatta wrote:AppleQueso wrote:I've always assumed that all news was handled this way. I've never imagined that say, Japan's news reports much on things outside of Japan unless it actually affects Japan.
Never watched the BBC?
Hatta wrote:AppleQueso wrote:I've always assumed that all news was handled this way. I've never imagined that say, Japan's news reports much on things outside of Japan unless it actually affects Japan.
Never watched the BBC?
prfsnl_gmr wrote:There is nothing feigned about it. What I wrote is a display of actual moral superiority.
Limewater wrote:AppleQueso wrote:I've always assumed that all news was handled this way. I've never imagined that say, Japan's news reports much on things outside of Japan unless it actually affects Japan.
I think it's also worth mentioning that the United States is a large country with a large population. If you live in Europe and you're getting news from 2000 miles away, you're almost certainly getting news about another country. If you live in the United States and you're getting news from 2000 miles away, there's a very good chance you're still talking about a place within the states.
I'm not a big fan of American news reporting, but I don't really know enough about the news anywhere else to make any sort of informed comparison.
martin31406 wrote:General_Norris wrote:MrPopo wrote:I think it's criminal [...] Carmen Sandiago
I see what you did there
The map is also a reflection of the U.S. media. Watch any U.S. news program. Their news is, for the most part, obsessed with the U.S. and the U.S. alone. When they cover nations outside the U.S., it's usually because those nations affect the U.S. in a particular way. With the Middle East, you learn about terrorists and oil. With Columbia, you learn about the drug trade. With the nations in Africa you learn about poverty, violence and HIV. It's perhaps the least informative news in the western world.
BoringSupreez wrote:Besides, the UK is so small not much newsworthy stuff happens there I would imagine.
Hatta wrote:AppleQueso wrote:I've always assumed that all news was handled this way. I've never imagined that say, Japan's news reports much on things outside of Japan unless it actually affects Japan.
Never watched the BBC?
martin31406 wrote:Watch any U.S. news program. Their news is, for the most part, obsessed with the U.S. and the U.S. alone.