I hope that this will finally cause all those nattering nabobs of negativism to realize that Mr Asper would never silence opposing points of view at his newspapers; and, further, any concerns that his long affiliation (and participation) in the Liberal Party of Canada in no way affects his newspaper's treatment of the p'tit gars de Shawinigan.
It's not like there isn't precedent for openly biased Canadian newspapers. Conrad Black of the initially blocked peerage and former owner of the National Post clearly had an anti-Chretian editorial policy in force. posted by srboisvert at 3:05 PM on June 17, 2002
I don't know if you'd call it bias; I think it's expected the proprietor will have an opinion and will want that taken into consideration by his publishers. Why else would they buy ink by the barrel?
Where the Aspers cross the line, in my opinion, is forcing each of their papers to run editorials written by staff at Asper HQ in Winterpeg and then forbidding their papers from contradicting those so-called "core values." (Firing longtime publishers the day after he's given an honorary degree from the local uni doesn't necessarily prove to sceptical readers the proprietor isn't a thug, either.)
It also doesn't help Asper, Sr is a former leader of the Manitoba Liberal Party.
Come back, Connie, all is forgiven... posted by lupus_yonderboy at 3:11 PM on June 17, 2002
It's now abundantly clear that the Aspers are a bigger threat to media diversity than Conrad Black ever was.
Fortunately CanWest Global/Southam isn't the only source of news in Canada (yet). Their competitors — such as the CBC, the Globe and Mail and the Toronto Star (link to coverage of Mills's firing) are always all too happy to cover the Aspers' controversial interference in their news operations. You can also check out the Campaign for Press and Broadcasting Freedom, the home page of Canadian Journalists for Free Expression, and the satirical Frank magazine, which is usually chockablock with newsroom gossip and has been covering the escapades of the CanWest Global crowd from day one.
Russ Mills is talking about it on CBC Radio's As it Happens as I write this (Eastern time; at 6:30 p.m. your time if you're west of me, on tape delay). posted by mcwetboy at 3:32 PM on June 17, 2002
Doesn't half of Ottawa already call that paper the Sh*tizen anyway? posted by clevershark at 7:39 PM on June 17, 2002
The Citizen isn't very well-liked by most of the people I've talked to (I only read its sports section for the local stuff), but next to The Ottawa Sun, the Citizen is a freaking miracle of modern journalism. posted by Succa at 9:04 PM on June 17, 2002
I live in Ottawa, but I get hardly any news from local media.
A couple of my friends work in goverment media monitoring and they're always freaking out over one bias or another in the canadian print media. Then I'm all like "Huh? They didn't mention any of this on CNN."
I don't know if that's a good thing, but it all feels like panicing over split milk when the farm is just next door. posted by Leonard at 12:57 PM on June 18, 2002
They use the phrase "Winnipeg-dictated," or words to that effect, a lot. (CanWest Global's head office is in Winnipeg.) The Aspers are making my home town look bad. posted by mcwetboy at 2:03 PM on June 18, 2002
Thank you. That is all.
posted by lupus_yonderboy at 2:54 PM on June 17, 2002