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- Comments: Gated by NETNEWS@AUVM.AMERICAN.EDU
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!paladin.american.edu!auvm!FORDMULC.BITNET!FLICKER
- Original_To: BITNET%"stat-l@mcgill1"
- Message-ID: <STAT-L%93010723102018@VM1.MCGILL.CA>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.stat-l
- Date: Thu, 7 Jan 1993 23:10:00 EST
- Sender: STATISTICAL CONSULTING <STAT-L@MCGILL1.BITNET>
- From: FLICKER@FORDMULC.BITNET
- Subject: Network news
- Lines: 28
-
- While we all like to be cynical about the commercial media and the
- ratings systems, and Ed Johnson certainly sounds like he has grounds
- for additional distrust, lets not let impatience and distaste make
- us lose sight of -- the data.
-
- The original posting referred to the "McNeil/Lehrer Report" (pardon
- me if I misspelled a name) -- the PBS (not-for-profit/Public Broadcasting
- System) news program -- a show that does not sell advertising time.
-
- I suspect we may have to look more closely at Robin McNeil and Jim
- Lehrer's omission of a statistician on the program. Perhaps the
- professional field needs to educate the media that truly understanding
- statistical results is not self-evident.
-
- Marcia Flicker
- Fordham University
-
- P.S. -- It won't be easy to convince journalists that specialists are needed.
- My own personal bias, having been exposed to a few print and broadcast
- journalists, is that their own professional training may undermine their
- appreciation of the depth of knowledge required in academic fields. After
- all, many of them switch from covering environmental issues to war coverage
- to the economy, etc., etc., -- picking up enough information in each area
- to write a story that at least sounds credible to the rest of us laymen.
-
- Alenxander Pope wrote, "A little learning is a dangerous thing, drink deep
- or touch not the Pierian spring." Some of the journalists I've met never
- seemed to have heard that quote.
-