Friday, January 29, 2010

JUST A SIMPLE SIMPLETON.


Last week Rais Yatim said that:
  
" Malays using Twitter to run down the government are going against Malay tradition."



Now after a hiding from the rakyat he tells Bernama this:

(Bernama) - Readers will most likely shift to the Internet for news, if the traditional media continue with their old style of presenting news based on what the editors feel that people should read or use the media as a propaganda tool.

Information Communication and Culture Minister Datuk Seri Dr Rais Yatim said this was because the Internet allowed the people to read what they wanted to read. (Because the MSM will not dispense truth!)

"The Internet has created a new phenomenon of change all over the world," he said at the opening the International Conference on Free and Responsible Journalism, here, today. (At International conferences, he goes saintly, this devil.)

The text of his speech (by APCO?)was read by the ministry's deputy secretary-general (Information), Datuk Azmi Ali. (Was Rais told to be conveniently absent?)

Rais, however, said the role of responsible journalism was still relevant to the development of a nation.

"Journalists need to be free and self-governing to fulfill their duty of providing information to the people with a simple guideline, such as their first obligation is to truth, their loyalty is to the citizens, the essence is discipline of verification, and maintaining independence from those they cover." (What a mouthful of drivel!)

"Journalists face daily risks posed by tight media laws and the threats against them include non-renewal of the printing license for their publication, lawsuits, jail or fine, and harassment in the form of newsroom interference by the government." (And who made these rules?)

He said in countries without freedom of the press, the majority of people who reported the news might not follow the subscribed standard of journalism. (What is the subscribed standard of journalism. What manner of animal is that? I thought it was to tell it as it is.)



contributed by MOB1900

 NOW READ WHAT MY FRIAY GUEST BLOGGER “UPPERCISE” WROTE SOME TIME LAST YEAR:

 

The NST dilemma

By Uppercaise

Posted on 23 May 2009

(or THE CASTRATION OF A NATIONAL ORGAN)*

*Italics in BLUE my 2 sens.

CUTTING through the bilious fog of chatter about who’s in and who’s out, there remains the age-old dilemma that the Nasty Times has lived with since Tengku Razaleigh engineered the takeover of the Malaysian half of The Straits Times in the early 1970s.

That is, whether to be a professional purveyor of objective news and balanced opinion, or merely be a selfserving mouthpiece of the political and commercial interests of those in power, and survive on their handouts.

After the takeover an early portent of the skirmishes to come arose with the newly-appointed Marketing Director, of whom (the late)Pak Samad cuttingly observed that producing a newspaper was not like selling soap (as the man used to do at the factory next door, which spilled out a cloud of noxious orange fumes all day). And as (also the late)David Tambyah later remarked, “We’re being screwed between the bookkeepers upstairs and the timekeepers downstairs.”

There’s not much difference today. Only in who’s calling the shots, and which floor they occupy. And these days, the noxious fumes are totally produced in-house.

Those were relatively easy times for the then not-so-Nasty Times: secure in its near-monopoly, having seen off the Eastern Sun, and with only a moribund Straits Echo and a fledging and struggling Star nipping ineffectually at its heels, secure in its political backing, enhanced by a cosy relationship with an establishment then still imbued with self-belief and principle.

The NaSTy Times was able to pull off the occasional challenge to authority, one of the more memorable occasions being when the Bar rose as one against the monstrous challenge to individual liberty engineered by King Ghaz, among others, who proposed hooded anonymous witnesses testifying from behind a screen in security cases under Emergency powers. The NST’s extensive coverage of the response of an aghast establishment, with a long front-page lead on the debate at the Bar EGM, led to the proposal being watered down.
Can anyone imagine the NST carrying out anything like it today? (fat chance!)

The Nasty Empire’s dilemma has been a constant no matter whose hands were at the controls. In any case control is only nominally in the hands of those appointed to high position. The real power lies in the prime minister’s department, the Umno president’s aides, Umno’s media control committee, the faceless Umno-controlled bureaucrats of KDN, especially the publications unit, and with the in-house stooges of Special Branch, the military, and foreign intelligence trying to pull off their little escapades in the background.

Against all this, what’s a professional journalist to do? And with the political pap put out at the behest of those concerned mainly with political survival, what’s a Circulation manager to do?

Salesman: NST, NST, hot news today, good news today, get your NST!
Customer:  NST-ah? How much? One riggit ah? What inside?
Salesman: Plenty of news, sir. Everything you need to know.
Customer: But this one all is Barisan propoganda.
Saleman: No sir, it’s all good news, it’s the true story sir. Look, look see this one, you know the real story about the Perak MB. Here look this one you see how great our police people, what a good job they are doing, here this one look all about this Minister, he is so great or not. So many things here la. This one here look about Iskandar is so great.
Customer: Ai yah don’t bullshit lah. You think I want to give you money and then you give me bullshit. (Salesman thinks: Yes, yes, that’s right, that’s what we want) You mad ah. You must pay me mah.
Salesman:  Pay you? But you’re wearing a Chelsea shirt. You paid for this shirt and you advertise Chelsea.
Customer: I supporter mah. Some more can make money from betting. Can make money from NST or not?
Salesman: You can learn good English. We have very good English. (URGGG)Look, see, so many big words, you know or not? You learn to talk big talk, you can get big job, get good money what. How about that?
Customer: Aiyah only for school children lah. Maybe good for teacher lah. We all working people lah. What for we talk big talk like Mat Salleh or what. You gila kah. Some more all your big words also all Barisan bullshit.(preferably cow-dung, to be politically correct gender-wise.) Where got news? Hah, pay money for your news ah! Hah! You better pay me to read lah.
End of story.

Fanciful or not it’s not too far from the truth. Circulation figures tell the story. From its heyday of near 200,000 copies — until The Star caught up and overtook the NST in 1987, at which point it was promptly shut down and told to shut up and sell out — to its current 100,000 or so, the NST has led a path of inexorable decline.  (I’m relying on memory here, without access to figures.) Even without having one hand and a leg tied behind our backs, what can be done in purely professional terms?

First, there’s self-serving p0litical crap.

Follow the PM’s line. Make this Minister look good. That Umno warlord is my friend, play him up. The IGP’s my friend (actually I’m scared of them, they have dirt on me) make sure the police look good. [Dr Mahathir himself recently said, when you're dealing with people who have guns, you have to be very careful. Just as in 1987 he carefully pointed out that the swoop on dissenting voices in Operation Lallang was actually just a police action.]

Then there’s the self-serving Malay agenda crap.

Play up the Malay feller’s deeds (world-shattering invention, world-shattering explorations, world-shattering expeditions). Play down the other feller.(champion Zul Nordin you must!)
Oh wait, no no that’s wrong, now it’s all this unity crap. Okay play up the everybody-together crap. Plenty of feel-good stories and pictures, Malay feller, Chinese feller, Indian feller all doing good things together, eating together (no no cannot say sleeping together), but put the Malay feller in front, okay? Or something like that.

Then there’s the self-serving commercial crap

Okay Astro is a big advertiser, give Astro programmes lots of play. But don’t forget we own all those stations too. Play up our side. Run all their press releases. It’s clean, no need to worry just cut and paste. After all who knows? Easy work. And our friends and ex-colleagues working the other side of the fence can do us some favours some time. Freebies, free trips, free tickets, that sort of thing.

Oh yeah, Telekom also advertise big. Okay big play for Telekom stories. Celcom also? (Yes, yes, they together with 200 Indian nationals will mess up the Barisan Rakyat Bloggers’ sites.) Okay same shit. Hey come on how about Digi, (despite their sponsoring Selangor Government stage for Thaipusam) our friends are there. Okay run any old press release they send.

What gives in the corridors of economic power also determines what gives in the NST. Agriculture the big thing? Play up mangoes and apples. Environment very big? Also very safe. Okay play up Yangtze turtle. Never mind dead leatherback. (Poor Dr Chan, screwed again.)

It’s good to be a press agent these days. There’s a very good chance almost any old press release will make it verbatim. It’s clean, what. Why bother to rewrite? You think you get a promotion for this? Hey, take it easy, why you want to work so hard. A very senior editor told me one day last year in the midst of my struggling to sort out some crap, “Come on lah, all your trying to maintain standards, what’s the point? What’s it going to get you?”

Hmm. What’s it going to get you…

So true. That’s what the Nasty Times is about, at all levels corporate or editorial. Can Johan, Mat Talib and friends change any of that?

GLOSSARY:
  • Pak Samad: my old boss A Samad Ismail, then deputy group editor, later distinguished alumnus of Gulag Kamunting, and literature laureate
  • David Tambyah: deputy managing editor, later production editor, and lifelong stamp collector. Whatever did Ruby do with them? (I am in touch with not-so-well but still gutsy Ruby. Stamps still with her. She might probably will these to her nephews….if they behave.)
  • King Ghaz: Ghazali Shafie, the vain, flamboyant and irrepressible foreign service czar turned Home Minister and later implicated in an arms deal in Papua New Guinea. (RIP. Didn’t he send Pak Samad and Abdullah Ahmad to Kem Kamunting?)
  • Tengku Razaleigh: Tengku Razaleigh Hamzah, Umno whizzkid handpicked by Tun Razak who later engineered the takeover of Guthrie and eventually Sime Darby among other things. That Far Eastern Economic Review cover remains an all-time classic in my mind. Now a hermit-like Yoda of Umno, sometimes referred to as Umno’s last hope. His detractors say, fat hope. (Someone whom UMNO dared not touch and yesterday demanded to give PAS Kelantan what is their right in oil royalties.)

(*  Amended 29 May 2009: changed prime minister’s office to prime minister’s  department )
Uppercaise

 
 

13 comments:

  1. Heheheh... I am an ex-nst journalist.. all i can say is Korek..Korek..Korek!
    Among other crazy shit happening in the NST, in the late 1980s, one of our "illustrious" leader (guess who) was called "recalcitrant" by Aussie PM Paul Keating and nst issued a verbal order to all its journalists NEVER to write or use any stories which portrayed a positive image of Australia.
    We were told the order came from up, up, up there and many of us took that to mean GOD.

    ReplyDelete
  2. NST was the paper, de regeiur in the fifties, sixties and seventies when it was run by professionals like the great Cheryl Doral, Daud Tambyah, Ambrose Khaw, Norman Siebel and many others. Then it was taken over by idiots, or should we call them sycophantic morons like Kadir Jasin and Ahmad Talib. The NST trajectory went downhill, plumbing its depths in the nineties. Its circulation was reduced to about 100,000, from 189,999. A far cry from the seventies when NST was the Mecca of journalism. NST was the place where every journalist wannabe wanted to be. It was the holy grail of journalism. Morons Kadir and Ahmad turned the place upside down, replacing top journalists with half-baked so-called journalists who could not write a single sentence to save their own necks. At least Kalimullah made a decent attempt at reviving an already dead paper. But alas, Ahmad Talib made a comeback, the greatest comeback since Lazarus Cock rose from the dead years ago. Whereas Lazarus made a difference, Ahmad has made NST into a mother of all jokes. Anyway, the NST is already dead and buried. Let it rest in peace.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Looks even a mite like Yoda but intellectually the exact opposite! Real dud.

    ReplyDelete
  4. the day NST began to die was perhaps sometime in 1987 when Munir Majid was removed for a controversial leader.........

    the paper could never even appear to be independent after that......

    ReplyDelete
  5. Why post on something trivial? Rais is an easy target but he is no big deal. If you want to throw punches to BN, do it the heavyweight way, not bantamweight.

    The point is, Pakatan is in shatters! Are you going to do?
    There's fiasco in selangor, Penang and kelantan. Perak is already gone bcoz the three frogs got frustrated with nga & ngeh & puppet nizar.
    Anwar's own problem is looming near. The malays PKR & Pas are not happy with LGE. PAS is split.

    And you want to talk about silly Rais. WTF. Wake up Bernard !!! PR is in BIG trouble, bigtime!!!

    Still want to pick on UMNO? They're kicking their own youth head ( without help from pakatan) and pakatan still wondering how to deal with Zul kulim.

    That's a very long way to putrajaya.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Zorro

    For your weekend reading. I thought this was pretty cool.

    ReplyDelete
  7. That "tweetie old bird" chicken "rais" should be fried and thrown to the dogs as fodder. This bum is not fit to be a minister. Not only talking cock most of the time but awfully stupid in his actions. He should go back to his kampong and fry "chicken raise".
    No wonder we are called Bolehland with minister of this calibre.

    ReplyDelete
  8. anon 3:02, u got a way of putting into words what my mind is vaguely saying.

    ReplyDelete
  9. This Rais Orphan should be awarded the "CAVEMAN AWARD" of Malaysia! But now, it seems, he has suddenly awaken and discovered that MSM news is outdated and young people do not buy the stories published by them! Come on, Orphan, wake up to the tides of change which has already been around for so long! It is only your mind which REFUSED to acknowledge such change!

    ReplyDelete
  10. Anon 3:02 AM

    Your 5 para comment, this is the only sensible point, well done, I agree 100% !! Shame on PKR.

    # Still want to pick on UMNO? They're kicking their own youth head ( without help from pakatan) and pakatan still wondering how to deal with Zul kulim.#

    ReplyDelete
  11. uncle zorro and all reader and bloggers....

    RED ALERT

    please make sure that all your BLOG and news portal internet security protocol are UP and UPDATED.

    this is BECAUSE of this MORNING EVENT that UTARA ONLINE have been DOWN suspiciously by an attack to the news portal....

    here i would like to RECOMEND to all BLOGGER and all WEBMASTER to TIGHTEN UP YOUR SECURITY PROTOCOL TO PREVENT ATTACK TO YOUR WEB AND BLOG....

    sincerely
    according to the quran meaning of the surah al asr
    which meant below

    I SWARE BY THE TIME
    ACTUALLY HUMAN ARE IN LOST
    EXCEPT THOSE WHO ARE ADVISED TO EACH OTHER
    AND ADVISE WITH PATIENT AND TRUTH

    -BOND-

    ReplyDelete
  12. good trees are killed to put out those bad newspapers!!

    ReplyDelete
  13. So many hatred here. People who is always angry is a lost soul

    ReplyDelete