Ep. 395 Today's Peep Says Bias Isn’t News, Media Integrity, Listener Laughs, and a Rare Record Spin from the mid '80s
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概要
Ever feel like the news is playing for a team instead of playing it straight? We open with a tense, real-life clash over media bias and use it to map where reporting ends and agenda begins. No euphemisms, no hedging—just a clear case for why “counteracting the other side” isn’t journalism, it’s campaigning. From stacked story lineups to click-chasing panels, we trace how sensationalism blurs facts, inflames tribalism, and erodes trust until fewer than one in three Americans believe what they hear.
We also own the difference between what we do and what newsrooms must do. Commentary is labeled as commentary. A newsroom owes the audience verification, transparency, and an explicit wall between news and opinion. We lay out a simple integrity code: truth and accuracy first, clear sourcing, loud corrections, independence from political and corporate pressure, and unmistakable labels on opinion. When outlets follow that path, credibility compounds. When they don’t, audiences notice—and walk.
To keep the show grounded in community, we lean into listener content that cuts through the noise: a perfectly timed joke, a shout to the overlooked guitar fire of Frank Marino, and a modern country track that proves songs about service and sacrifice still resonate. Then we spin a rare pick from the shelf—INXS’s Kiss the Dirt (Falling Down the Mountain)—a reminder that restraint and texture can be more powerful than a shouted chorus. That’s the energy we’re after: media that trusts the listener’s mind, celebrates craft, and refuses to treat truth like a partisan prize. Tap play, share with a friend who’s tired of agenda-drama, and tell us in a review where you still find news you can trust. Subscribe for more straight talk, sharp music picks, and honest community voices.