A credible source
I was in a professional office recently for a check-up. While passing some time during the exam, one of the nurses asked if I had heard about microwaving meals releasing dioxin into food.
I wanted to ask her why the mainstream media hadn’t picked it up if it is true. She said that someone in the office had printed it off the internet. That was my first sign of trouble.
My wife had chastised me some time ago about forwarding things I had received off the internet without checking them out. A couple of years ago I had forwarded an email with a heartwarming message about a famous pianist. I got a scathing response from a friend, as the heartwarming message was a fraud.
A similar message on Denzel Washington proved to be a fraud – a half truth. I was disappointed. I like Denzel and wanted to believe the good things about him. (From what I understand, he is a pretty decent guy, even if that story wasn’t true.)
I don’t like being skeptical, but I won’t accept such stores off the internet now, at least until I check them out. Fortunately, some turn out to be true.
The nurse went on to say that the story also said frozen bottled water releases similar dioxin, and plastic wrap over food heated in a microwave releases dioxin.
According to www.truthorfiction.com, that claim is false or at least unproven. A doctor in Hawaii made the claim five years ago, but has yet to offer any proof.
There are some of us who are skeptical of the government and media, and want to believe that there is a mass conspiracy out there, that government and media is hiding the truth. “There really is something like this out there, and you can’t get verification because of the cover-up.” We buy into these sorts of things too easily.
The problem here is credibility. Unfortunately, anyone can say anything they want in an email, true or not, and a lot of times, even in heartwarming stories, it isn’t true.
The publisher of the Kenly News, Rick Stewart, for the last several years, has been teaching journalism and communications at Barton College. A few months ago he brought three of his students to a newspaper publishers meeting so they could offer some of their views on the newspaper industry and about youth tastes.
Unlike many of us older folk, they were not raised to read a newspaper every day. Many like reading papers off the internet.
We talked about bloggers who post to the internet, and they indicated they enjoyed reading blogs. We talked about responses to blogs, which they liked to post and read other responses.
Interesting to me, one of their comments was they expected newspapers to clean up the blogs on their site. They expect us not to allow just anyone to put whatever they want on our site. Let me assure you, there is plenty of garbage posted to our site from people overseas. All of it is filtered off.
There is a recent movie, which I haven’t seen yet, and I don’t think has played in the area, called “Resurrecting the Champ.” The story, which is mostly fiction, has the seed in a similar incident in which a reporter “discovers” a former boxing champion living on the streets of Denver, Colorado.
In the movie, the story has such appeal, the reporter runs with it, but as he starts checking his facts, he finds that the story is not adding up. It’s a really good heartwarming story, just not true.
With TV shows and fringe publications trying to capture the public interest, anything like this that has even a smudge of credibility gets some play in the media. I recently picked up some free distribution newspapers from Asheville and was amazed at some of the things that they found to publish. They weren’t stories that you will find in the Asheville daily paper, and for good reason.
Every newspaper reporter comes across stories that are good, stories that people want to read about, but in the final analysis, the facts don’t bear out. You will find stories that people will swear to you are true, and in some cases you believe them, but you can’t get independent verification that what they are saying is right. Sometimes you can’t get it because it isn’t right, for whatever reason, and sometimes you keep asking and finally find the right person to tell you the truth.
Are we ever wrong? Of course. But we try very hard to get it right on the front end.
You expect that, and I’m proud that you do. You hold us to a higher standard. And you should.
I wanted to ask her why the mainstream media hadn’t picked it up if it is true. She said that someone in the office had printed it off the internet. That was my first sign of trouble.
My wife had chastised me some time ago about forwarding things I had received off the internet without checking them out. A couple of years ago I had forwarded an email with a heartwarming message about a famous pianist. I got a scathing response from a friend, as the heartwarming message was a fraud.
A similar message on Denzel Washington proved to be a fraud – a half truth. I was disappointed. I like Denzel and wanted to believe the good things about him. (From what I understand, he is a pretty decent guy, even if that story wasn’t true.)
I don’t like being skeptical, but I won’t accept such stores off the internet now, at least until I check them out. Fortunately, some turn out to be true.
The nurse went on to say that the story also said frozen bottled water releases similar dioxin, and plastic wrap over food heated in a microwave releases dioxin.
According to www.truthorfiction.com, that claim is false or at least unproven. A doctor in Hawaii made the claim five years ago, but has yet to offer any proof.
There are some of us who are skeptical of the government and media, and want to believe that there is a mass conspiracy out there, that government and media is hiding the truth. “There really is something like this out there, and you can’t get verification because of the cover-up.” We buy into these sorts of things too easily.
The problem here is credibility. Unfortunately, anyone can say anything they want in an email, true or not, and a lot of times, even in heartwarming stories, it isn’t true.
The publisher of the Kenly News, Rick Stewart, for the last several years, has been teaching journalism and communications at Barton College. A few months ago he brought three of his students to a newspaper publishers meeting so they could offer some of their views on the newspaper industry and about youth tastes.
Unlike many of us older folk, they were not raised to read a newspaper every day. Many like reading papers off the internet.
We talked about bloggers who post to the internet, and they indicated they enjoyed reading blogs. We talked about responses to blogs, which they liked to post and read other responses.
Interesting to me, one of their comments was they expected newspapers to clean up the blogs on their site. They expect us not to allow just anyone to put whatever they want on our site. Let me assure you, there is plenty of garbage posted to our site from people overseas. All of it is filtered off.
There is a recent movie, which I haven’t seen yet, and I don’t think has played in the area, called “Resurrecting the Champ.” The story, which is mostly fiction, has the seed in a similar incident in which a reporter “discovers” a former boxing champion living on the streets of Denver, Colorado.
In the movie, the story has such appeal, the reporter runs with it, but as he starts checking his facts, he finds that the story is not adding up. It’s a really good heartwarming story, just not true.
With TV shows and fringe publications trying to capture the public interest, anything like this that has even a smudge of credibility gets some play in the media. I recently picked up some free distribution newspapers from Asheville and was amazed at some of the things that they found to publish. They weren’t stories that you will find in the Asheville daily paper, and for good reason.
Every newspaper reporter comes across stories that are good, stories that people want to read about, but in the final analysis, the facts don’t bear out. You will find stories that people will swear to you are true, and in some cases you believe them, but you can’t get independent verification that what they are saying is right. Sometimes you can’t get it because it isn’t right, for whatever reason, and sometimes you keep asking and finally find the right person to tell you the truth.
Are we ever wrong? Of course. But we try very hard to get it right on the front end.
You expect that, and I’m proud that you do. You hold us to a higher standard. And you should.
