Listening Post: http://www.aljazeera.com
When teenager Malala Yousafzai was shot by the Taliban, Pakistan's media was warned to curb its coverage of the story.
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This week: The chilling impact of the gun on journalism in Pakistan and a look at the history of presidential debates. When
news broke from Pakistan that a 14-year-old girl had been shot by
members of the Taliban just for promoting female education on her blog,
news organisations around the world jumped on the story. In Pakistan,
however, they had to treat the subject with care. The Taliban warned
local media to curb their reporting, or deal with the consequences. This
is not just a story about one attack - it is a tale of how the
journalistic environment in Pakistan has grown so dangerous. According
to media watchdog groups, at least 20 journalists have been murdered
since 2010 and not one of those cases has resulted in a conviction.
In this week's News Bytes:
The speaker of the Tunisian parliament has announced that the country's
new constitution, which is still a work in progress, will not contain
any clause that criminalises blasphemy. Spain's best-known and
bestselling newspaper El Pais has announced it is cutting its
workforce by a third. Rupert Murdoch created a Twitter storm when he
labelled three British celebrities who met with Prime Minister David
Cameron 'scumbags'. The three, including actor Hugh Grant, were
discussing the UK government's response to the phone hacking scandal.
And in India, good news for cartoonist Aseem Trivedi as charges of
sedition brought against him by the state of Maharashtra have been
dropped.
A little over 50 years ago John F. Kennedy and Richard
Nixon made television history when they stepped in front of the cameras
for the first televised debate between two candidates trying to get to
the White House. On that night, television changed the rules of the
political game forever. Kennedy won the debate, not so much because of
what he said, but because of the way he looked when he said it. Since
then, many a campaign has come unglued in an instant; one single,
crystallising moment during a debate. This is a format that values style
over substance and voters have punished politicians who have failed to
understand that.
Finally, the figures are in for the online media
event that made Austrian daredevil Felix Baumgartner a household name.
In four minutes Baumgartner's plummet from the edge of space racked up
millions of hits on the YouTube live stream alone. You have probably
already seen video of the stunt, so we have come up with a bit of a mash
up that mixes in Baumgartner's alter ego from the Land of Lego. We
found him in an advert for a toy fair coming up in Austria and the mash
up is our video of the week.
http://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/listeningpost/2012/10/2012101914316525220.html |
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