I’ve asked this question before, but it’s time to ask it
again: do TV journalists have any idea how precious and self-absorbed they
look?
The evidence overwhelmingly suggests they don’t. Over the
past couple of weeks we’ve witnessed an unedifying orgy of self-aggrandisement as
Newshub journalists and broadcasters very publicly and ostentatiously mourn the
imminent loss of their jobs.
Paddy Gower, Mike McRoberts, Samantha Hayes, Lloyd Burr,
Eric Young and Melissa Chan-Green have all invited us to share their grief, although
Chan-Green, holding back tears, at least had the self-awareness to acknowledge that other
people have faced tough times too.
Young, who I’ve always respected as a newsreader, deserves
special mention for his maudlin display on a video released today. “There’ll be
no time for self-indulgence,” he says of his final bulletin. Just as well,
because we’ve seen far too much already.
It has been a strange combination of self-pity and self-celebration.
The Newshub team are appealing for public sympathy while simultaneously bigging
themselves up in a manner that many ordinary New Zealanders will find risibly over-the-top
and more than a little self-centred.
They’re behaving as if they’re the first people ever to experience
the trauma of losing their jobs, but of course it happens all the time. Businesses
constantly fail, often with far more damaging consequences for those affected.
Untold thousands of unskilled and semi-skilled New Zealanders have
been thrown out of jobs by technological change or economic upheaval and faced a
far bleaker outlook than the relatively small number of skilled and talented people
affected by the Newshub closure, some of whom have already acquired new and presumably
well-paid jobs.
The difference, of course, is that all those anonymous victims
of redundancy had no public platform from which to draw attention to their
misfortune. Newshub journalists do, either via their own medium or through others
in the media (such as the Herald’s
Shayne Currie, who has assiduously reported all the hand-wringing). I’m sure it’s
not lost on the public that they are exploiting a privileged position.
Yes, losing your job must be tough. It's also problematical, from a public interest standpoint, that there will be one less competitor in the news arena. But the Newshub
journalists would probably win more sympathy, and certainly more respect, if
they took it on the chin, just as thousands of anonymous workers had no choice
but to do when they found themselves surplus to requirements.
I wonder, what makes the Newshub employees so special that
their fate warrants all this wailing and breast-beating? What makes them think
they have more emotionally invested in their work than all those other poor
stiffs who fell victim to the cruel caprice of changing markets? An obvious
explanation is that television is a uniquely ego-stroking medium. It can create
the illusion, at least within the bubble of those working in the business, that
the lives of the people who report and deliver the news are themselves a matter
of vital public interest. Fatally, they come to regard themselves as
celebrities.
It’s worth noting that this overweening egotism and sense of
entitlement doesn’t afflict all journalists. Hundreds of print journalists have
lost their jobs in recent years, with serious consequences for the public’s
right to know what’s going on in their communities. They went quietly, without public
fuss. What is it that makes TV journalists think their role is so uniquely precious?
Similarly, when the Evening
Post ceased to exist as a title when it was merged with The Dominion in 2002, it marked its own
passing with a one-off commemorative issue that was notably light on
self-congratulations. Hardly a word was published about the individuals who
produced the paper. It was largely left to readers and public figures to write
about what the Post had meant to them
and to Wellington. (And bear in mind, this was a newspaper that had been an
essential part of Wellington life for 137 years. Newshub, by way of contrast,
came into existence only 35 years ago and was never more than a secondary
player in its market.)
Well, here’s the news, to coin a phrase: life will go on. A
timeline of Newshub’s history, published today in the Herald, graphically demonstrates that TV news and current affairs programmes
come and go and are soon forgotten. The timeline serves as a striking reminder
that television is essentially an ephemeral medium. Many of the shows mentioned
have long since faded from the public memory, along with the names of the
people who presented them. The same will happen to the 6 o’clock Newshub News,
and possibly sooner than many of its grieving employees imagine.
Footnote (appended July 7): On Muriel Newman's Breaking Views page, a commenter named Gaynor responded to this piece by wondering where the mainstream media were when good people were losing their jobs because they chose not to have the Covid jab. No sympathy for them. A good point that I wish I'd thought of.