Subsidized media today are so self-pitying it is no surprise they missed the biggest scoop of their lives, the death of subsidized media. Spy the columns and TV punditry and you encounter the same excuses. It was Russian bots or internet poaching of Chevrolet dealer ads or misinformation or Instagram micro-shocks or inflation. It was always someone else’s fault. Tara Henley, podcaster and former CBC producer, gets the answers. “If media want to restore public trust, we have to examine our own actions,” she writes. “Unpacking our role is essential for making sense of the crisis in media.” “Most people do not distrust the media for vague, rote reasons but instead for achingly specific ones,” writes Henley. “Indeed, they frequently cite the specific wording in the specific stories that they believe falls short.” Canadians do not expect infallibility. They expect hard work and honesty. It is not too much to ask. The Trust Spiral notes the descent of media under withering scrutiny blew wide open in the pandemic, an "overheated moment." READ MORE



