SirRoxalot said:Information without context is simply noise. The role of media was as a filter for all the noise and as an aggregator of information. The most important function of the media, especially with so much more information available, is to sort the important from the mundane, and to scrutinize what's presented as "fact" in order to determine its veracity.
I think the classic example of what you have defined are the small town stations here and there a number of years ago decided that hiring a news person was expensive. Affordable was installing a spare amplifier down at city hall, ordering in a phone loop, and broadcast the council meeting live. No commentary. No interpretation. Just the raw, bloody meeting, guts and all. (I use such a graphic description because those broadcasts were really that bad!)
Today, where I live, the cable system does much the same thing.... with pictures.
Without a mentor sitting at your side, you have little understanding of what is going on.
Even worse are broadcasts of a Zoning Committee meeting. Y.... a... w.. n.