Whanganui Chronicle

The one giant favour social media has done for us

- Teuila Fuatai

While the change

by-stealth model has been tough on establishe­d media outlets, it has also forced a move to more inclusive representa­tion

Iapplied for a job last week — the first in a while. The decision led to some reflection on changes I’d seen since I entered the workforce. I started as a junior reporter at APN — now NZME, the publisher of the Herald — in 2012.

After being hired, it took about three months before a round of redundanci­es was announced. That evolved to rolling layoffs and a stop on new employees for a while.

There was a brief moment of concern regarding my own job before someone more senior explained how things worked. Essentiall­y, cuts and savings weren’t going to be made at the junior end of the pay pool.

The thinning staff landscape then blended into a world I was attempting to understand. For me, it was about the basics. How to write, how to spell, learning who sat where in a courtroom, and understand­ing the layers of local government and DHBs. Even rememberin­g the names of colleagues and who to ask about what was a learning exercise.

I can’t pinpoint exactly when I found a rhythm of sorts, but the days did become less frantic and that feeling of cluelessne­ss eased. Notably, as my level of experience increased, the influence of establishe­d media outlets such as the Herald also changed.

The Herald has been the paper of record for most of my life, as a bornand-bred Aucklander. When I looked at possible options after university, it was certainly high on the list. I wanted to work at a news outlet that spoke to lots of New Zealanders. Looking back, that broad ambition from my early 20s inspires a cringey smile accompanie­d by one key question: “What exactly did I mean?”

It is a question I’ve asked numerous times over the years. What qualifies as “lots of New Zealanders” and who fits the demographi­cs of this descriptor?

As a journalist who has worked predominan­tly in mainstream news spaces, the face that comes to mind is invariably Pa¯keha¯, straight, with a middle-class background. Perhaps that’s because when I started working, that was the overwhelmi­ng vibe of the newsroom. A tad naively, I had not thought much about the implicatio­ns of that — particular­ly on the types of stories I’d be telling.

Generally, the perspectiv­es and stories prioritise­d were those most people in the newsroom related to.

It, therefore, took more work to promote the ones which didn’t immediatel­y grasp overwhelmi­ng interest because of the places or communitie­s they were about.

For me, navigating this is a normal part of my work.

While internal change to address that bias is ongoing, I believe one of the more significan­t influences has come from outside traditiona­l media. Enter: social media and the age of internet freedom.

Since the likes of Facebook and Google took hold, there has been an unmissable shift in attitudes around what qualifies as “news” and “public interest”. I’d liken it to change by stealth — particular­ly when it comes to managing precarious advertisin­g margins and staff resources.

For large, establishe­d media outlets, that change has generally not been kind.

Those rolling redundanci­es which marked my entry into the workforce are indicative of that. The rise of clickbait and less substantiv­e news items have been another side-effect.

However, in a perverse turn of events, the narrowing of establishe­d media has also led to an opening up of sorts. The internet has broadened the ways and spaces different stories and perspectiv­es can be illustrate­d.

For those of us who have generally been misreprese­nted — or wholly unrepresen­ted — that shift is comparable to an evening out at the market.

We get to see ourselves in more authentic ways through the perspectiv­es of those who understand us.

Only a few weeks ago, I did an interview with an anti-domestic violence campaigner who was about my age. He mentioned that during his formative years in Christchur­ch, the only positive representa­tions of Pasifika were through Shortland

Street or in the All Blacks.

“That’s why it’s so important we show all the other parts to us,” he said. At that point, I was pretty proud to be telling his story.

So, while the change-by-stealth model has been tough on establishe­d media outlets, it has also forced a move to more inclusive representa­tion. Yes, there is still a way to go, but for those of us on the inside, the baby steps are well worth it.

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 ?? Photo / Jason Oxenham ?? Making a Pacific statement at the Auckland Town Hall: a large ei (a Cook Islands lei or garland) by the Pacific Mamas artists' collective is installed on the clock tower.
Photo / Jason Oxenham Making a Pacific statement at the Auckland Town Hall: a large ei (a Cook Islands lei or garland) by the Pacific Mamas artists' collective is installed on the clock tower.

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