lunes, 16 de mayo de 2016

Why the New York Times was blindsided by Donald Trump

Why the New York Times was blindsided by Donald Trump



Adventures outside the comfort zone

Why the NY Times was blindsided by Trump
Michael Cook | May 16 2016 | comment 
    






The biggest mystery of American politics is why the media failed to take Donald Trump’s campaign for the Presidency seriously. A year ago he was a just a vulgar buffoon; now he is the presumptive nominee of the party of Lincoln, Eisenhower and Reagan and could easily become the next leader of the free world.

It’s as if astronomers failed to notice an asteroid hurdling from outer space until it was about to explode over New York City. Were they out to lunch? Or partying? Or failed to clean the lenses of their telescopes?

But perhaps it’s unfair to blame the media. Journalists write for their readers and share their values and prejudices. One explanation must surely be that Trump supporters and readers of the New York Times are living in parallel universes.

This struck me forcefully when I looked at the ten “most emailed” stories on the New York Times a couple of hours ago. They were, in the following order:

1. Crossing the Line: How Donald Trump Behaved With Women in Private

2. THE HEALTH ISSUE: An Old Idea, Revived: Starve Cancer to Death

3. WHERE I LIVE: Seven Places in Europe We Call Home (shoes, museums and food in seven capitals)

4. 36 HOURS: 36 Hours in Amsterdam (for people who can afford to fly there for a weekend)

5. Unearthing the Secrets of New York’s Mass Graves (not as exciting as it sounds, unless you live in the Bronx)

6. OPINION: Sexual Freelancing in the Gig Economy (about Tinder-driven relationships for people working 60 hours a week)

7. GRAY MATTER: Why Are the Highly Educated So Liberal? (about why readers of the Times are smart and successful)

8. THE UPSHOT: What Was the Greatest Era for Innovation? A Brief Guided Tour

9. OPINION: The Busy Person’s Lies (by the author of “I Know How She Does It: How Successful Women Make the Most of Their Time.”)

10. THE HEALTH ISSUE: The Cancer Almanac
The most popular stories are constantly changing, but this is a typical mix. The Times readers are consistently interested in (1) health, (2) food, (3) sex, and (4) success. In themselves, basically. They live in a world with plenty of neuroses but no unemployment. They travel to Copenhagen for a bit of power-shopping as effortlessly as if they lived in Plainfield, Indiana, and were going to a mall in Indianapolis.

Note that none of the trending stories is concerned with keeping a job, illegal migrants, Nafta, Chinese imports, political correctness or potholes. Times readers don’t have to worry about keeping their jobs; they’re too busy buying better selfie sticks.

This rubs off on the journalists. Do they actually know anyone who will be voting for Donald Trump? When Times columnist Nicholas Kristof sought to explain the candidates's misogyny, racism and vulgarity in March, he created an imaginary Trump voter. Perhaps he couldn’t find a real one in Manhattan.

All this explains why the lead story is Crossing the Line: How Donald Trump Behaved With Women in Private. The Times is campaigning hard against Trump by digging up all the dirt it can on his private life and finances. Although he is a New Yorker himself, he threatens the status quo of its liberal, highly educated, rich readers.

I have no doubt that its journalists will find plenty of scandals. But whether the guys in this Carrier plant in Indianapolis who have just learned that their jobs are going to Mexico will give a rat's is another question altogether. And their votes might decide the election.

Michael Cook is editor of MercatorNet. 
- See more at: http://www.mercatornet.com/articles/view/adventures-outside-the-comfort-zone/18069#sthash.LPHPX6kL.dpuf



MercatorNet
These were some of the stories in my news feed last week:
“Italy’s Parliament voted Wednesday in favor of a new law legalizing same-sex civil unions” (Slate). “A victory for Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, who supported the bill” (New York Times). “It's the last country in Western Europe to do so” (NPR).
It all sounded like a triumph for democracy. But then I read a phrase in The Economist – “Polls show that most Italians still oppose same-sex marriage”. Huh? Did I miss something or has the Italian democratic process steamrolled Italian democracy?
In a story below Chiara Bertoglio explains how political expedience and Machiavellian deal-making explain how Italian legislators blew a raspberry to the people they represent.

Michael Cook 
Editor 
MERCATORNET

Has Italy become more ‘civil’ by recognising same-sex unions?
Chiara Bertoglio | CONJUGALITY | 16 May 2016
The step has certainly made it less democratic.
Read more...
Adventures outside the comfort zone
Michael Cook | FEATURES | 16 May 2016
Why the NY Times was blindsided by Trump
Read more...
A British Muslim pushes for polygamy after same-sex marriage
Michael Cook | CONJUGALITY | 16 May 2016
Some women feel empowered so why not support them, a lawyer asks
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Quebec: a study in the tensions of immigration
Marcus Roberts | DEMOGRAPHY IS DESTINY | 16 May 2016
What will happen to Quebec’s cultural distinction?
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“Protect doctors’ conscience rights!” Belgium’s advice to Canada
Michael Cook | CAREFUL! | 16 May 2016
Three doctors speak out
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Why helicopter parents need to read ‘The Trumpet of the Swan’
Stephanie Cohen | READING MATTERS | 15 May 2016
Sometimes even parents are in need of redemption.
Read more...
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