So CanWest's imperial media used to own 1/3 of the free Metro daily paper in Vancouver. They have clearly learned something from Metro's tendency to skip any actual news on the front page and just run an ad because today, The Province decided to mostly skip any news [real, soft or nearly] and run a mattress ad. Maybe they were hoping for bloodshed, terrorism or carnage at the fireworks or the Pemberton rock festival, and receiving none, just bailed and went for dropping the pretense of them actually being a real newspaper and just run an ad, like the flier that they really are.
And after yesterday's cover reporting "Rock 'N' Roll 'N' Chaos" without the actual chaos, they have gone one step further to demonstrate their lack of journalistic integrity with a mattress ad.
Monday, July 28, 2008
The Province Newspaper: Mattress Ads as News
Posted by
stephen elliott-buckley
at
10:59 AM
1 comments
Links to this post
Labels: CanWest, Corporations, Journalism, Media
Sunday, July 27, 2008
The Province Newspaper Flexes its Fear-Mongering Muscle Again
In their tradition of tabloid, sensationalist pseudo-journalism, The Province newspaper in Vancouver, pablum flagship of the CanWest media domination in town, described the Pemberton rock festival as "Rock 'N' Roll 'N' Chaos."
Astonishing, this chaos. CTV news tonight said the RCMP kicked out a small number of people from the event over the weekend, considering there were 40,000 people there each day.
Chaos makes me think of terrorist attacks, total violent anarchy and a tone of unruliness that merits bringing in the riot squad.
As it turns out, it was just a rock show. No real news there for a paper that panders in fear when slow summer news weekends emerge. No carnage at the fireworks last night, I'll assume, since no blood showed up on the cover this morning, just this photo of concert fans.
And it's hard to see The Province as a legitimate media source when we read their own entertainment columnist end his last blog post tonight with this:
"Thanks are in order for all the concert-goers who kept it on the up and up, not turning any of the minor inconveniences into cause for misbehaviour and to all the hard-working volunteers on site. And, most of all, to Pemberton for letting us all come up and, admittedly, make a real mess all over someone's farm and have a ball."
Alas, no mass arrests there tonight either. Too bad because tomorrow's headlines will have no gore to lead with.
Posted by
stephen elliott-buckley
at
11:44 PM
0
comments
Links to this post
Labels: Art, CanWest, Journalism, Media, Vancouver
Friday, July 11, 2008
Our Precarious Neoliberal World
Canada22's 2008 Canada Day message spoke of $140 barrels of oil and $1.50 litres of gas. This week we have seen more evidence of our precarious economy making us think about how growth-based capitalism is fundamentally toxic and cancerous to our planet and our society.
On Tuesday this week we saw Joseph Stiglitz, former chief economist and now serious critic of the World Bank, write about the moral and economic collapse of neoliberalism.
Yesterday we learn that the federal government, staunch neoliberals, have the capacity to break from neoliberal, laissez-faire, hands-off economic non-regulation to stop the victimization of our economy by the American sub-prime mortgage implosion by no longer supporting 40-year mortgages and no money down mortgages. Whew! :)
This might actually start deflating the bubble of insane housing prices in Vancouver and to a lesser degree, in most other places in Canada. Vancouver homes cost 3 times what I feel they're worth. If Garth Turner is right and Vancouver prices drop 30%, that's half way to where they should be for the majority of citizens to be able to afford a home. 60 year old homes in my neighbourhood are assessed this year at $1.2 million. The cheapest houses in Vancouver are typically listed in the high $500,000s.
But now we need to start thinking about addressing neoliberalism and growth economics. Business schools teach us that the economy is like a corkscrew generally pointing up. There are cycles of growth and decline in a general uphill direction. But constant growth is about constant extraction and exploitation of our human and natural resources.
A no growth model is cyclical, more like the seasons. It is also more sustainable. Tom Walker of the Work Less Party spoke about this at Canada22's founding workshop on Earth Day 2006.
But how do we switch off growth?
Kevin Potvin explores that idea in a few recent pieces in The Republic.
In "There's Always Revolution, You Know" he examines why revolution is and isn't possible in Canada today. The piece doesn't go into much about how to make that revolution happen, though. Canada22 is all about exploring that, though.
In "No one right or left will say what needs to be said" he examines how addressing our criminal negligence and abuse of our ecological symbiotic relationship may force us to reject growth-based economics.
Finally, he examines how capitalism and speculation are synonymous in "Did Saudi Arabia suddenly go anti-capitalist?". So we should not be surprised that oil speculators are involved in the rise in the price of oil to over $140/barrel.
So, what are the lessons from all this?
Global neoliberalism undermines social, economic and political stability and cohesion.
In Canada22, we're working up a vision of a post-neoliberal world, nation, region and community. We're figuring out how to get there from here. And we're looking for all the people and groups fighting for social and economic justice to come together to coordinate our confrontation with neoliberalism.
That's all. :)
And with your dedication to justice and community building we'll develop our vision, path and network...all while building the hope and optimism we need to face the crises on the horizon.
Posted by
stephen elliott-buckley
at
12:52 AM
0
comments
Links to this post
Labels: Activism, Canada, Canada22, Class War, Community, Corporations, Economics, Environment, Neoliberal Economics
