The Sun (Malaysia)

Shaken& Truth slanted

> The internatio­nal media seems to have forsaken accuracy in its rush to feed humanity’s appetite for sensationa­l bad news

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FRANKLY, I no longer listen to the internatio­nal media. Luckily, I still have the voices in my head. Which leads me to the following question: “What is the main activity of the trained accountant?”

If you answer “embezzling money from clients, government­s, charities and pretty much anyone who wanders by”, you are not far wrong.

“Wait,” says the nearest beancounte­r. “That can’t be right. That’s not our main activity. We just do that in our tea breaks.” Or so you’d think. Type ‘accountant’ into Google’s news search function, and items about them stealing stuff outnumber all reports about them doing mainstream accountant stuff, such as auditing companies, filing tax returns, being boring, telling atrocious jokes, spilling coffee on their dark suits, flying to Bermuda with suitcases of cash, etc.

Clearly, accountant­s are victims of the media’s (and humanity’s) inherent bias towards bad news.

I first got interested in this some years ago when there was a spate of articles about piano teachers molesting students. I was shocked.

Piano teachers might be slowrockin­g, hollow-eyed obsessives, yes, but uniquely evil?

Then came a spate of articles about DJs being uniquely evil for the same offence. I was shocked again.

Then came articles about TV hosts being uniquely evil, priests being uniquely evil, parliament­arians being uniquely evil, etc.

A statistici­an eventually explained it to me. Pretty much everybody in the world has had to fend off a creepy guy at least once. That’s 7.6 billion victims.

So any journalist asking if anyone has been sexually harassed by a [insert profession here] is guaranteed to get 500,000 people putting up their hands.

Andrew Cline, a professor who studies this, explained: “Once a master narrative has been set, it is very difficult to get journalist­s to see that their narrative is simply one way, and not necessaril­y the correct or best way, of viewing people and events.”

A massive recent study in the US showed that the most common industries for sexual harassment cases were hotels, food service, retail and manufactur­ing.

Piano teachers, deejays and TV hosts didn’t even make the top 10, and we all know that accountant­s and priests reproduce asexually, like algae and water fleas.

Fortunatel­y, no one takes journalist­s all that seriously these days.

We could be turning on the TV one night to find a newscaster saying: “Breaking news: Nobody believes us any more.”

One of my colleagues says that whenever he hears a surprising piece of news, he asks himself: “Is it true or is it CNN?”

I thought that was a bit cruel, until I watched the channel and saw a report blaming Republican­s for the last Ice Age, which was 2.6 million years ago.

So when did we stop believing in what the internatio­nal media say?

In 2016, every major internatio­nal media outlet repeatedly told the world that Hillary Clinton would be the next US president, and that a win for Donald Trump would lead to instant financial collapse in every market.

In both cases, the opposite was true.

Anyway, any accountant reading this can now go back to what you normally do. If it’s embezzling, I don’t want to know. My fingers are in my ears.

Nury Vittachi is an Asia-based frequent traveller. Send ideas and comments to lifestyle.nury@ thesundail­y.com.

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