Kathimerini English

TV is part of the problem

- BY ALEXIS PAPACHELAS

Private Greek television channels are to a great extent responsibl­e for the sorry state of affairs today. Hyperbole and over-dramatizat­ion are ingrained in our TV culture. Take, for example, the issues of social security reform or farmers’ taxation. These are both extremely thorny matters but at some point they need to be addressed; yet listening to broadcasts and news bulletins on these issues the past few days you would think we are in the middle of some major national catastroph­e. It is true that the cost of social security has spiraled out of control and that drastic and very painful cuts will have to be made to pensions, but we should not forget that there’s a reason things reached this point. When Tassos Giannitsis served as labor minister over a decade ago, he put forward a proposal for the radical reform of the pension system. His efforts were lambasted by the media and his proposals branded “bloodthirs­ty cutbacks.” The same was the case when the government of Costas Karamanlis brought up the issue of raising valueadded tax and reducing the tax-free threshold for the self-employed back in 2008. The battle for ratings led to the mentality that anything goes when it caomes to getting more viewers. There has never been a serious discussion about the crucial issues in the public television debate. Experts and academics with profound knowledge about important questions were cut from the screen because they were seen as stuffy and bad for ratings. They were replaced instead by a medley of colorful lunatics, some of whom went on to become lawmakers and ministers thanks to their newfound popularity. Arrogance, extreme positions and a good brawl or two pushed up ratings and got the TV loons votes. What’s funny is that the channels that were most guilty of populism at times when they should have been serious ended up being targeted by the very people they promoted. No one escapes from the beast of populism. Even those who feed it will be bitten at some point.

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