Tuesday, November 21, 2023

Memo to RNZ: the country has moved on

I wonder, does RNZ realise that the government changed five weeks ago? Its editorial judgment suggests not.

The story that led its bulletins this morning – in other words, the news item that RNZ’s editors considered the most significant of the day – revealed that new National Party MP Cameron Brewer had made an election night speech in which he celebrated the return of the “stale, pale male”. Someone had recorded the speech and leaked it.

RNZ reports that Brewer, who was elected in the Upper Harbour (Auckland) electorate, could be heard declaring himself “a glass ceiling breaker” to laughs from the crowd.

“I’ll be the first male MP for Upper Harbour," he said to cheers. “Stale, pale males are back!”

The tone of the story, by deputy political editor Craig McCulloch, was implicitly judgmental. It presented Brewer’s comments against a backdrop of “scrutiny” – mostly by the media – of a lack of diversity in the National caucus, where 70 percent of MPs are men and 80 percent are Pakeha.

The 8am version of RNZ’s story even implied that Brewer was crowing at having displaced the Sri Lankan-born former MP, Labour’s Vanushi Walters. It introduced a racial element into the story that wasn’t substantiated.

That was reinforced by a headline on RNZ’s website: “New National MP Cameron Brewer celebrated victory for ‘stale, pale males’ after defeat of Sri-Lankan-born rival”. But there was nothing in the story to suggest that Walters’ ethnicity was anything other than coincidental.

At worst, this was a harmless but politically ill-judged remark at a private function by an inexperienced new MP hardly anyone has heard of. He was speaking amid the euphoria of an election victory, probably after having a few celebratory drinks.

Brewer explained it to RNZ as a poor attempt at humour. He would hardly be the first novice politician to be embarrassed in the cold light of day by an injudicious comment made in a moment of heightened emotion.

Let’s take him at his word and accept that his statement was intended humorously. But even if it wasn’t, it was surely neither surprising nor outrageous that a conservative male MP should welcome a change in a political environment where the now-ousted dominant caste and its media cheerleaders often gave the impression they regarded maleness as toxic.

Yes, this was a legitimate news story – but the lead story on the state broadcaster’s morning bulletins? Really? The purpose, clearly, was to portray National as a party of unreconstructed white male triumphalists. (My personal view, for what it’s worth, is that National does have a surfeit of brash, privileged young men in its caucus – but that’s for the party to sort out if it thinks they are an electoral liability. Ultimately, the voters will determine whether these are the sort of people they want to be represented by.)

The question posed at the start of this post shouldn’t be misinterpreted as suggesting RNZ should kowtow to the new government. That would be a betrayal of journalistic principles. No one wants a return to the era of Robert Muldoon, when the media were browbeaten and intimidated.

Rather, the point of the question was that the election result signalled an emphatic change in the mood of the country. For six years, wokeness ruled largely unchallenged. The media generally reflected the ethos of the governing elite. A story such as the hit job on Brewer would barely have raised an eyebrow.

But the election result was a rather big clue that the public had had enough and wanted something different. It’s no longer business as usual. RNZ needs to realise that and catch up.

All mainstream media ideally should strive to reflect the society they serve, but state-owned media especially. Stories that pander to the prejudices of the bullying metropolitan Left strike a jarring note now that the country has moved on.

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Parliament has changed, but the govt hasn't - yet.

Anyway, RNZs "how to vote" article was still prominently featured even after the offical count was out. Time seems to move slowly for RNZ.

Paul Peters said...

From my point of view he was making a joke out of the fact a pale stale male had won a seat as PSMs have been the bete noir and ultimate enemy of the social revolutionary bloc for many years.
It was a dig at his opponent but, because she was Sri Lankan, Radio NZ, Stuff and all msm have seized on the joke with relish to make it a racist ''thing''. I expect to see it make the Brussels Broadcasting Corp (BBC) of white self- loathing and empire flagellation and woke EUSSR empire building in the former UK
A non PSM making a similar remark about defeating PSMs if they had won would have been ignored or even confirmed approvingly by our fake journalists - Paul Peters

pdm said...

I will go with competence over diversity any day.

Lets look at a few Ministers that apparently meet the diverse definition in the government of the last 3 years:

Kelvin Davis
Ayesha Verrall
Willie Jackson
Jan Tinetti
Ginny Anderson

In my opinion most `stale pale white males' in the just elected National Party would do a better job than any of them. Then there is the competent Maori Man who regularly wins an electorate seat on his own merits, Shane Reti, who will be the Health Minister by the end of this week - a very capable Health Minister I expect and far better than the one he replaces.

Trev1 said...

Surely the time has come to put RNZ up for sale?

hughvane said...

@ Trev1 - a disposal sale I hope.

RNZ (Concert exempt) is a disaster, manipulated beyond all reason and reasonableness by trendy lefties (I refuse to use that ‘w’ word). It is absolutely convinced that it - along with its co-conspirators in television media - has access to the truth as its biased and prejudiced journalistic staff perceive it.

R Singers said...

Going back to trying to pillory National MPs is probably much safer and less internationally embarrassing than editing Reuters articles and realising you're actually endorsing genocide.

Richard said...

Craig McCullough's profile on RNZ tells us a lot about the person.
I think it is supposed to be humorous, but since humour doesn't exist now in RNZ-land, I suppose we should take it literally.
"Craig spends his spare time composing Facebook status updates and memorising hip hop lyrics. He knows 'Rap God' by heart and is constantly baffled as to why that doesn't generate a greater level of awe and respect."
Now 'Rap God', for those who do not know, is an extremely misogynist, racist song that celebrates rape, mass murder, ethnic cleansing, and just about any other vile practice. It is written by white American Eminem.
I imagine it is written in an ironic, self-deprecating manner, but since such humour does not exist in McCullough's world, I suppose we should take it at face value and assume McCullough supports the ideas promoted in the song.
To avoid hypocrisy, McCullough's profile should be highlighted by RNZ and he should resign immediately.

Cat Kynoch said...

Yes Richard, I wonder if this particular 'piece' could have been a point of difference with Karen Hay and one that may have contributed to her departure from RNZ.. Cat Kynoch

Yoda said...

Well said Karl. My thoughts were that Radio NZ's treatment of this 'story' was predictable. They turned it into a race issue. When I heard the young MP's comment, I took it to be an attempt at self-deprecating humour with perhaps an element of an underlying dig at those who feel one should apologise for being white/pakeha. Radio NZ confirmed itself to be one of these entities. Their judgemental 'editorialisation' was Clayton's Journalism and further demonstrates that elements of the media have lost their objectivity and are now largely a mouthpiece for whatever political influence the reporter (or his editor/employer) is under at the time. Meanwhile, not a word is said in the media about Willie Jackson's inflammatory comment about "Maori going to war" over a proposed referendum on clarifying the Treaty principles. I wonder if the story about the young National MP's comments would have been given the same treatment had it been a new Maori MP in his or her excitement at unseating the Labour MP, announcing how great it was to be breaking through the "colonialist pakeha ceiling?" Yeah, thought not.