ARRC Journal 2019 | Page 59

READY FOR TODAY – EVOLVING FOR TOMORROW only has this misunderstanding played out in the news, but it has manifested itself elsewhere – to the extent of being acknowledged and addressed by military and non-military members alike – by appearing in trade, academic and third- party publications. 21 22 23 Perhaps there is hope yet again, however, at least within the US Department of Defense. In 2017, then-US Secretary of Defense James Mattis directed senior military leaders to start engaging the mass media. He stated, “Communications (sic) is the job of the commander, not just the PAO,” seemingly acknowledging a trend of some commanders avoiding media engagements altogether. 24 While a relevant point, every service member should – and must – be ready to engage the media in order to communicate their organisation’s key themes and messages to all audiences, not just senior leaders. Training is obviously central in this regard; PAOs are not absolved of their duty to educate members of their formations regarding the nature of news and how to engage the mass media. Likewise, commanders and leaders at all levels should support their PAO in this effort for the sake of readiness and not simply dismiss such training as trivial or a waste of time. 25 The Nature of News There are two essential elements the military leader must consider in order to understand the nature of news. First, one must ask the question, “What is news?” Of course, there are dictionary definitions of the term, but something more insightful is required to understand it. One sentiment of what news is holds that if “…‘a dog bites a man’ – that’s a story; ‘A man bites a dog’ – that’s a good story.” 26 Another asserts that news is “women, wampum and wrongdoing,” or more simply put, “sex, money and crime.” 27 Thought- it is, and to not view the mass media as some sort of entity to be feared or avoided. Mass media organisations exist to make money primarily through the sale of advertising space. In order to sell advertising space, they must give advertisers a reason to buy such space. That reason comes by way of the readers, listeners and viewers that mass media organisations strive to attract who will consume advertising as a by- product of consuming news and associated programming (a mutually beneficial relationship for The mass media industry is first and foremost a money-making business advertisers and the that relies on attention grabbing headlines to generate profit by way of mass media). In order advertisers and subscribers. to attract a followership, Second, the military leader must the mass media run headlines that grab understand that the mass media business one’s attention and entice them to read, is just that – a business. 29 Notwithstanding listen or view. This leads us back to the state-funded organisations such as question of ‘what is news?’ Because the British Broadcasting Corporation, women, wampum and wrongdoing never mass media organisations exist to make fail to attract an audience, editors-in- money and they do so, primarily, through chief will always assign their journalists the sale of advertising space. 30 It is all to cover such stories thereby dictating well and proper that individual journalists what news is. In the era of the 24-hour may accept the daily stress of deadlines news cycle, controversial headlines are for an average, meagre salary of what sell and good news rarely features $40,000 (£24,000 in the UK) per year out for good reason – audiences have little of some noble sentiment of keeping the interest in it. 36 It is perhaps human nature 31 32 33 general public informed. However, to gravitate toward stories of controversy, their corporate leadership did not go into murder, scandal, gossip and the like, and business with the monetary objective of news editors are acutely aware of – and breaking even or tolerating losses; noble capitalise upon – this fact. 37 sentiments do not pay the bills or achieve the bottom line of generating profit no Knowing that mass media is a business matter how much some journalists may should, theoretically, put military leaders complain. 34 35 at ease. When a journalist requests to cover a military unit’s operation, The nature of news, then, is a concept exercise, etc., nine times out of 10 all that is easily understandable and allows that the journalist really cares about is the military leader to see it for what provoking as these and other efforts to wax philosophical about what news may be, there is a more straightforward and practical answer: News is whatever the editor-in-chief says it is. 28 21 Company Commanders, “Why Bother with the Media?,” Army Magazine, July 2010, https://www.usma.edu/caldol/siteassets/armymagazine/docs/2010/CC_ARMY_10-07%20(JUL10)-Media. pdf. 22 Steven Boylan, “The Military-Media Relationship: An Exercise in Strategic Patience,” Military Review 91, no. 5 (September-October 2011): 5-6, https://www.armyupress.army.mil/Portals/7/ military-review/Archives/English/MilitaryReview_20111031_art001.pdf. 23 Thomas Day, “The Media is Failing to Communicate the Military to Civilians,” Task & Purpose, February 17, 2015, https://taskandpurpose.com/the-media-is-failing-to-communicate-the- military-to-civilians/. 24 Kevin Baron, “Mattis to Generals: Start Talking to the Press,” Defense One, October 9, 2017, https://www.defenseone.com/politics/2017/10/mattis-generals-start-talking-press/141639/. 25 Meghann Myers, “The Army just dumped a bunch of mandatory training to free up soldiers’ time,” Army Times, April 24, 2018, https://www.armytimes.com/news/your-army/2018/04/24/the- army-just-dumped-a-bunch-of-mandatory-training-to-free-up-soldiers-time/. 26 Jesse Williams, The Stolen Story and Other Newspaper Stories (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1899), 223. 27 Kathy English, “English: Who decides what’s news,” Toronto Star, May 1, 2010, https://www.thestar.com/opinion/public_editor/2010/05/01/english_who_decides_whats_news.html. 28 Carole Howard and Wilma Mathews, On Deadline: Managing Media Relations (Long Grove, IL: Waveland Press, Inc., 2000), 33. 29 Howard and Mathews, On Deadline, 36. 30 Stephen Quinn, “An Intersection of Ideals: Journalism, Profits, Technology and Convergence,” Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies 10, no. 4 (December 2004): 1. 31 “Average Journalist Salary,” PayScale, accessed December 7, 2018, https://www.payscale.com/research/US/Job=Journalist/Salary. 32 Average Journalist Salary,” PayScale, accessed December 7, 2018, https://www.payscale.com/research/UK/Job=Journalist/Salary. 33 Jay Harris, “News and Profits,” The Nation, May 10, 2001, https://www.thenation.com/article/news-and-profits/. 34 Christine Lagorio, “Does Media’s Profit-Quest Harm Democracy?,” CBS News, February 8, 2007, https://www.cbsnews.com/news/does-medias-profit-quest-harm-democracy/. 35 Victor Pickard, “Take the profit motive out of news,” The Guardian, July 23, 2009, https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/cifamerica/2009/jul/23/newspapers-internet-adverstising. 36 Adam Epstein, “Here’s what happened when a news site only reported good news for a day,” Quartz, December 5, 2014, https://qz.com/307214/heres-what-happened-when-a-news-site- only-reported-good-news-for-a-day/. 37 Jacob Burak, “Outlook: Gloomy,” Aeon, September 4, 2014, https://aeon.co/essays/humans-are-wired-for-negativity-for-good-or-ill. 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