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Charlie Beckett

January 14th, 2017

Public Debate at LSE: How should journalists cover President Trump?

2 comments

Estimated reading time: 5 minutes

Charlie Beckett

January 14th, 2017

Public Debate at LSE: How should journalists cover President Trump?

2 comments

Estimated reading time: 5 minutes

My think-tank Polis is hosting a public debate at the LSE on Wednesday January 25th at 6.30pm with the London Press Club on how the news media should respond to a Trump Presidency. In the wake of Brexit there are all sorts of issues being raised about the new ‘populism’ and the wider context of ‘fake news’, propaganda, hacking, trust, and ‘elite’ bias in ‘post-truth’ or ‘post-fact’ world.

So far the speakers will include CNN’s Brian Stelter via Skype from New York, the Economist’s Anne McElvoy, The Independent’s John Rentoul, and James Ball from BuzzFeed who used to work for the Guardian in the US (and for WikiLeaks) plus Alex Sundstrom from Republicans Overseas.

#LSETrump

You can reserve a free ticket by clicking here. 

Doonesbury with a prophetic take on the liberal nightmare that came true
Doonesbury with a prophetic take on the liberal nightmare that (almost) came true

I hope that we can get beyond the usual liberal angst on this. Just because the Remainers and the Democrats lost doesn’t mean that the world has gone mad or that it’s the end of civilisation. I think that we label a lot of things as ‘fake news’ or ‘post-truth’ simply because we disagree or don’t understand something. But I do agree that journalism is facing some real challenges to adapt to changing political cultures in the US and UK – and perhaps in other countries, too. There’s a lot at stake.

Here are some articles by me about these issues – they include a lot of links to other people’s opinions.

What does the Trump triumph mean for journalism, politics and social media?

How can we clean up media and democracy in 2017?

How do you report on something that isn’t true? Dealing with Trumps Tweets

Deliberation, distortion and dystopia: the news media and the UK EU referendum

This article by Charlie Beckett, director of Polis, LSE @CharlieBeckett

 

 

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Charlie Beckett

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