ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Language Arts Videos 106 videos
Picking a theme for a party is pretty easy—always go karate party, because they come with nunchuck egg rolls. Themes in writing are a little diff...
Calling a book “non-fiction” is a bit like saying you have a dog. Sure it covers the basics, but there's a big difference between a Doberman an...
ELA Drills, Advanced: Punctuation 4. Which of the words is spelled correctly?
ELA 5: Bias in Media 164 Views
Share It!
Description:
Wait - there's bias in the media? That's not what they told us the last time we tuned into CNN...
Transcript
- 00:13
We're beginning to get a sense of how easy it is for bias to creep into writing, so it's [Someone watching TV]
- 00:18
worth asking: is there bias in the media?
- 00:21
Spoiler alert: totally.
- 00:24
When we talk about the media, we're talking about a whole lot of stuff: radio, television, [Coop pointing at a blackboard]
- 00:28
newspapers, magazines, and the Internet – all means of communication that can reach or influence [Dino pointing at a blackboard]
Full Transcript
- 00:33
people widely.
- 00:35
And when we say "influence,” we mean it. [News program on the TV]
- 00:38
What's said (or isn't said) in the media can have a huge impact on how people think and [Man runs away as he sees scary new story]
- 00:42
feel.
- 00:43
The clearest example of bias in the media is in advertising.
- 00:47
The name of the game is getting people to buy stuff, so advertisers are totally okay [Old TV ad plays]
- 00:51
with displaying bias, whether it's through loaded words, overly broad statements, or
- 00:56
leaving out important information.
- 00:57
Is it crazy to say that a certain teeth-whitening strip will make you rich, famous, and popular? [Teeth whitening advert]
- 01:03
Yes.
- 01:04
But if it sells strips, they’ll say it. [Customer walks up to the counter to buy one]
- 01:06
The more subtle form of bias in the media comes when important information is being
- 01:10
left out.
- 01:11
This usually has less to do with teeth and more to do with the various pressures that
- 01:15
exist across the media landscape. [Hand takes away a page from the important information folder]
- 01:16
Say that the staff of a news show is deciding what stories are going to be in their half-hour [Staff in a meeting]
- 01:22
broadcast.
- 01:23
They can’t exactly cover everything that happened in the last day.
- 01:26
As much as they might want to report on what Fluffy the Siamese Cat’s most recent hairball
- 01:30
looked like, there’s just not enough time.
- 01:32
So they have to decide what stories are going to be important enough to cover and which [Fluffy's hairball is crossed out]
- 01:36
aren't going to get covered at all.
- 01:37
Once they choose the stories, they have to decide how the story will get covered. [Shmoop news van arriving]
- 01:41
They only have so much time to commit to each story, so they have to decide what they'll
- 01:45
write about it, what images and video they'll show, and who they'll interview about it. [Shmoop news presenter holding up a microphone]
- 01:50
Each choice means choosing some information instead of other information, using one expert
- 01:55
with certain biases instead of another one with different biases, one image that conjures [Arrows point to the different expert]
- 02:00
certain feelings instead of another one that conjures different feelings.
- 02:04
In other words, no matter how well intended the reporters, their news will end up with [Newspaper is stamped with 'bias']
- 02:09
a heavy dose of bias.
- 02:10
It’s like choosing your partner in science lab.
- 02:13
You have to make a choice, but your choices are going to leave people out. [Kid holding a flask which explodes]
- 02:16
That’s just how it is.
- 02:18
So yeah, the media is swimming in bias, but that's okay. [Pair of students in the chemistry lab]
- 02:21
The more you know about bias, the better you'll be at spotting it and making judgments for
- 02:25
yourself.
- 02:26
Just don’t turn your brain off the next time you watch TV and you’ll be just fine. [Advert for cookies on the TV]
- 02:30
We know, easier said than done. [Alien appears behind the man watching TV]
Related Videos
Check out the best bias video ever made, courtesy of the most awesome and amazing educational website in existence.
No, this isn't a terrible new mint-peach bubble gum flavor...though it does tend to leave a bad taste in people's mouths.
Those settlers in Jamestown really should have settled down with all that land-stealing. Tobacco's bad for you anyway.
Being born out of multiple wars doesn't quite seem to fit the peaceful, polite Canadians we know and love today...oh wait, they were called The Bea...
Not every cartoon is meant to entertain small children while their mother gets some "Mommy time." There are also political cartoons, which are mean...