I don't think anyone found the idea offensive; it's just not the world we live in right now, and berating the world from our high horses will not change it. There's an apparently subtle difference between acknowledging something as resistant to change and claiming that it is preferable.
I thought I was being unsubtly facetious there. Shitty rainy socialist island is not anywhere close to the moral highground lol
Yes, capitulation is not helpful, but temper tantrums are scarcely more so. What is helpful is identifying a subset of the causes of undesirable conditions that are mutable with whatever means are available to the people who want them changed. Show people something concrete and it's amazing how many will at least identify specific reasons they don't want it, which is way more helpful than whining until no one takes you seriously.
So yes. Informative press is great. How do we get it given everything else?
One temper tantrum is useless, a tantrum spiral is deliciously useful. Trying to identify mutable causes to organize a response on a Tanna Tuvan Dwarf ASCII iron mining simulator in a thread where you haven't established any consensus on whether it is even worth pursuing a change in the status quo is jumping the gun just a bit. It is like you say, activism - everyone arguing over whose proposals are the least useful and most offensive. Attacking media consolidation and partisan news harnesses this most delightful mind trap, getting people outraged over the identity of the brands, much in the same way that it's poor forum etiquette to cite the Daily Mail as your source. The most effective thing anyone can do online is discredit the authority of discredited news, perhaps with exception to attacking their ad revenue, archiving their articles to document their incompetence, corruption and bias and electing antitrust zealots into power.
We *have* public broadcasting, TV and radio. It's really good. It's not as well funded as the BBC, obviously, but I'm okay with that. The BBC seems pretty benign, particularly from my side of politics, but I think it's fair to be suspicious of government-run news. Particularly when it overwhelms all other news agencies in the country.
The BBC has a tendency to waste millions of sterling on nepotistic projects and political garbage, while its political impartiality comes with an asterisk - there's lots of ways they can tilt the stage, so to say, without falling afoul of public oversight. Despite all that it's pretty good, and I'd say the lack of an onslaught of advertising and top notch journalism sans economic interest makes the occasional £10M interracial orgy* worthwhile.
*
The BBC TV entertainment division is going through a phase where they are trying too hard to be HBO. It is an awkward phase to say the least.I guess if they got too overtly political, people would literally riot over the 150 pounds/househould yearly fee for most people with a color television (blind people get half rate, apparently??)
I'm surprised blind people don't get TV for free since... Well I'm sure some minister thought it was clever.
tldr; BBC is really cool, though wow it kinda dominates your airwaves, is that safe? Maybe our public broadcasting should be a little less starved without getting that powerful.
Any State Media can be as useful, useless or harmful as the State it is a part of. Trekkin is correct in that I am being too whingy without providing enough of substance, and so my meaningful contribution is to suggest that one way to introduce meaningful change in all US media companies is to enforce existing US media regulations + reform media regulations to bring the FCC more in line with something like Ofcom.
Ofcom is the sexier, less known pillar of British media. Like the BBC it wastes loads of public money giving itself loadsa money, but it is also responsible for "incentivizing" private news into behaving themselves. The economic incentive is simple: If they misbehave, Ofcom can drive aforementioned media out of its own media.
It is an organization responsible for regulating and punishing all news media, including the BBC, should they be found to be politically biased and/or inaccurate. That is not to say that News in the UK does not have political leanings - just that they must fundamentally scrutinize and challenge everything political they present on their show. For example Fox News got
pulled off the air a while back because they brought in a political commentator and Ofcom ruled they broke regulations for neither being critical (scrutinizing the assumptions and assertions of their guest) instead encouraging their guest's assertions (insinuating them as fact in narrative-building).
Due impartiality and due accuracy in news
5.1 News, in whatever form, must be reported with due accuracy and presented with due impartiality.
5.2 Significant mistakes in news should normally be acknowledged and corrected on air quickly (or, in the case of BBC ODPS, corrected quickly). Corrections should be appropriately scheduled (or, in the case of BBC ODPS, appropriately signalled to viewers).
5.3 No politician may be used as a newsreader, interviewer or reporter in any news programmes unless, exceptionally, it is editorially justified. In that case, the political allegiance of that person must be made clear to the audience.
The full regulations is a spicy list, well worth a read. They detail everything with far superior skill and clarity than I ever could. If Fox News had followed the rules set by Ofcom, Fox News UK would be a respectable and reliable news outlet.
What's more,
all political advertising on radio and broadcasting is banned in the UK. This is easily one of the sexiest bans any democracy has made. In exchange the parties get like 2 broadcasts for free for each election, which basically means you have to sit through them once every 5 years or so. Compared to US Presidential campaigns spending the economies of small Asian nations every day on attack ads, it's heavenly bliss. It also means that the party with the most money isn't the one always guaranteed to win, since on paper the playing field is even between the smaller parties and the larger ones (as usual, there are loopholes, but the fundamental structure is sound).
tl;dr
1. Stop the FCC from selecting its leadership from the leadership of the USA's media giants. Changing the selection process of commissioners would be necessary. Senators and Presidents beholden to aforementioned media giants, commissioners beholden to their political party ensures that there will never be successful anti-bias media regulation, unless a Pirate Party managed to storm US elections and pigs fly.
2. Make anti-bias regulations in media.
3. Enforce them!
Making an independent anti-bias media regulator might be easier than reforming the FCC though. In conclusion; state media with dominant audience-share is fine and safe as long as it is beholden to powerful regulation which affects all equally well, to the benefit of the audience, with the objective of imparting unbiased and accurate information.