Walking through the Global Times (one of the most influential English-language Chinese newspapers in the world) and Shanghai Television Station offices, I felt like a little kid in a candy store. It was exciting seeing the places where newspapers and television broadcasts all come together. Here are some things I learned:
– Global Times is a national newspaper.
– Global Times has done a lot of reports on environmental issues, more than before. A representative said that because air is not an exclusive thing, more importance can be attached to it, and there will be more policies on it.
– A spokesperson said she thinks the trend in online media will be more apps, and that the website is easy to access.
– A day at the Global Times is packed and moves quickly, and the stories must include foreigners, since it is an English-language newspaper.
– At the Global Times, before the paper goes out, the editor might call the reporter in charge of a story to fact check on seemingly small things like whether the source “told the Global Times” or “said” – there is a HUGE journalistic difference between the two! “told the Global Times” means that the newspaper directly reached out to that person, and the person responded as a result of that point of contact.
– The readership of the Global Times is foreign research fellows, diplomats, and business circles. The newspaper also functions as an English-learning entity for people.
– Professor Fang said that the in the West, the Global Times is seen as nationalist and conservative.
– The Chinese version of the Global Times has a daily circulation of more than 1 million.
– A spokesperson said she thinks journalists should be allowed to express their own views in opinion columns.
– The representative said she thinks the SPJ Code of Ethics should be universal, and the bottom line is that journalists should not and do not tell lies, and that every country has problems with journalism.
– The representative said that aspiring journalists should be passionate and should resist temptations of better-paying jobs.
– At the Shanghai Television station, examples of programs are Shanghai Live and Bridge to Japan.
– Shanghai is the first Chinese city to have English-language news.
– International Channel Shanghai has three branches – news, features, entertainment.
– ICS’s target audience is the expat community and people who speak English.
– Journalists focus on interviews, angles, and stories, and don’t feel limited or pressured.
– ICS keeps a neutral stance on general news reporting.
– TV journalism is facing a serious challenge from new media, and now, responsibilities including keeping up with what the new media releases round-the-clock. Working in TV journalism is not a 9-5 job.
– Traditional media quality controls content – microblogs might have inaccurate reporting, one of the people we talked to at STV said.
The representative at the Global Times touched on this, but journalism, in practice, can never truly, truly, truly be fully objective. For instance, if you interview five sources but only have space to include the three in your article, you are exercising selection bias on some level. If you were to write every single thing every single person said, paying no attention to spacing and other practical issues, then you would essentially be a stenographer, not a journalist. But, as the representative said, the bottom line is that journalists do not lie. I think good journalism is getting an accurate, representative picture of the event, and honestly writing an article on it. As Professor Fang mentioned during a conversation I had with her, to be a journalist is to accept great responsibility – it is to accurately portray what people who can’t clarify later said.
