The bad part of this is that WE are discussing it. This is the kind of discussion that SHOULD be happening at KTRH. At one time, it was the kind of conversation that DID happen in newsrooms.
That is a very good point. At Radio 10 in Buenos Aires, after the morning news and information block, we'd have a "recap meeting". Did we overdo anything? Did we miss details on any subject? What should be prepped for tomorrow based on today's show? What should be an ongoing subject in newscasts the rest of the day? And more.
This was a big meeting, as the morning show had 7 live talents and a reporter / writer staff of about 20. Also there were the news people that would cover news in the breaks in the talk shows the rest of the day. And, when I was in Bs. As., there would be me and the news director and sometimes the manager.
Terms to be used, such as a "yes/no" on people's nicknames and charged or polarizing terms were visited if anything had changed. There was always a discussion of how to describe the Peron-named party and movement which was always as charged as MAGA terminology in the US. There was no written style sheet, as there was a fear that it would circulate externally and cause misinterpretation.
I remember that happening. What do we say, and how do we say it. Because its our f-ing JOBS to have that discussion. What Mark Roberts was alluding to in his first post is that one station in Colorado actually DID have that conversation. Maybe that willingness to think and talk about the process is core to being a journalist.
I agree, but depending on the root or core values of the station or network, the terminology might be very different.
Returning to the current case:
Blue-leaning news focus: "undocumented immigrants" or even "refugees".
Red-leaning news focus: "illegals" or "illegal immigrants".
This made me think of the difference in writing, particularly by staff editorial writers, back in the day of the Herald Tribune and the New York Times. Both targeted the more educated audience segment, but one leaned right and the other was centrist with a slightly New York liberal slant.