I've been in Houston and have, from time to time, listened to KTRH.
The talk programming is bad enough. But the newscasts can be as bad. The lead story on the 9 am newscast two days ago started out , "A horde of illegals...." Talk about loaded language; not the kind of thing you'd expect in the Associated Press stylebook, that's for sure. Today, the term "illegals" was used multiple times in another newscast. Not "illegal immigrants", which has a somewhat negative connotation, but "illegals", which is dehumanizing. Since the term is used repeatedly, I'm assuming that reporters and anchors are ordered to use that term, despite its deserved negative reputation.
I think even the News Director From Hell that I worked under in 1986 wouldn't have accepted that. He was conservation but also had some sense of journalistic standards. In the 38 years since, that seems to have gone out the window at KTRH.
It makes KOA - about which I've often complained - seem reasonable. At least KOA newscasts generally have avoided such loaded and biased terms. Not so with KTRH.
This is not a political post. This is a post about the consistent and deliberate choice to use a loaded term to describe a controversial situation.
Fortunately, Houston Public Media's KUHF offers a reasonable alternative, and seems to be firmly grounded in the coverage of local issues.
The talk programming is bad enough. But the newscasts can be as bad. The lead story on the 9 am newscast two days ago started out , "A horde of illegals...." Talk about loaded language; not the kind of thing you'd expect in the Associated Press stylebook, that's for sure. Today, the term "illegals" was used multiple times in another newscast. Not "illegal immigrants", which has a somewhat negative connotation, but "illegals", which is dehumanizing. Since the term is used repeatedly, I'm assuming that reporters and anchors are ordered to use that term, despite its deserved negative reputation.
I think even the News Director From Hell that I worked under in 1986 wouldn't have accepted that. He was conservation but also had some sense of journalistic standards. In the 38 years since, that seems to have gone out the window at KTRH.
It makes KOA - about which I've often complained - seem reasonable. At least KOA newscasts generally have avoided such loaded and biased terms. Not so with KTRH.
This is not a political post. This is a post about the consistent and deliberate choice to use a loaded term to describe a controversial situation.
Fortunately, Houston Public Media's KUHF offers a reasonable alternative, and seems to be firmly grounded in the coverage of local issues.