Veteran journalist Stan Grant says media's coverage of Voice to Parliament 'terribly predictable'

  • 7 months ago
#nt #voicetoparliament #stangrant #abc
Famous journalist Stan Grant, in his first interview since his departure from ABC earlier this year, said that media should have a "reckoning" on the media on complex issues such as The Voice to Parliament. Lock Points Grant says that the scope of the media's problems cannot discuss big ideas Grant says that scope of media cannot discuss great ideas in Darwin, he says that news is working to increase hostility in community. While talking Darwin, he says that news is working to increase hostility the community which he left ABC August middle of online abuse. Grant, who had previously hosted Q+A, resigned from the publisher in August after being exposed to intense abuse on social media. In an interview with ABC for a week from referendum, an experienced journalist said that scope of referendum is very simple and accused media of not being able to discuss complex issues. "I think in many respects, unfortunately, it could be very predict, Grant Grant said. He continued "I think once again weight history our democracy, difficulty cope with unfinished work our country." In 18 months since it was officially announced at Garma Festival, Grant said that debate about voice about voice was "very big for media". "I don't think we can get stuck in newspaper title in the fragility of 200 years of this date, television news or radio interview or discussion. "These are too much for our media politics, so we are insignificant disrupting the platform is rhetorical shouting, we don't really talk." The media gives 'sound' to hostility, Grant says Grant spoke with ABC in Darwin before he delivered the Vincent Linkari Memorial conference to Charles Darwin University on Friday night. "Tonight is the opportunity to talk with love, real honesty, depth and compassion, challenge these great ideas to bring weight."Said. He continued "Most questions revolving around problem of sound and effectiveness sound ... It is played in the Northern Region." Grant rejected idea that hostility to parliamentary debate has increased in recent months, and instead argued that media gave a larger platform up to a referendum. He said that the discussion focuses very much that people do not agree instead of looking for common ground. "I think I think in media, the media, what is going on and a more constructive approach to need for destructive tendencies and instincts need to be a reckoning."

Recommended