The Manila Times

Seeing through fakes

- Kikiam

react. The best solution to such a push is a non-response, but some would fall into the trap. The art of pivoting has not been practiced and head-on responses have always been the way to go.

Because of fake news, misinforma­tion and alternativ­e truths, propaganda is easier and spinning need not be carefully planned, unlike before. Then, everything had to be laid out, horizons planned, scenariobu­ilding completed and exit strategies mapped out. Today, the only thing one needs to do is to spread the virus and pollute the channels and voila, the swarm exponentia­lly encompasse­s the landscape of news. That is what happened in the days leading up to the 30th Southeast Asian (SEA) Games.

From the cauldron design and price to the uniforms to the now famous to the check-in to assigned hotels to the vehicles that ferried athletes. There is the fake Biñan football stadium, the fake makeshift press center, the use of the Nepal sports facility as the

cover mantle, among others. Much has been said. And in the rampage to destroy the pre-opening, some of the MSMs went berserk and became reckless. Good thing Filipinos today are discerning, they see through the fakery and call them out.

Social media guidelines have been issued in relation to the SEA Games coverage, covering the post

capacities and their personal post

format.” This is a welcome developmen­t to distinguis­h what is of

the journalist­s would know the difference. Journalism ethics need to be reviewed since broadcaste­rs and reporters are no longer just personalit­ies; some are celebritie­s and to that extent the priming has changed. The gray line between reporters and celebritie­s has blurred.

The fact checkers are silent (gone?), proving that their roles have been compromise­d. And with the “always on beta” social media applicatio­ns, netizens are now picking up the slack and are becoming vanguards to make the collective shout-outs, a truly selfregula­ting, user-based approach. This is a good developmen­t the light of some media practition­ers becoming propagandi­sts in the real sense of the word. Imagine the country being depicted as a “war zone.” The label has been made against the country which has extended the very freedoms they enjoy. The sad part is that the map of the country is now the dart board and with the practice sessions, the board is riddled with holes to the detriment of Filipinos.

Good news does not sell in this country. Bad news is a multimilli­on industry and during political campaign season, it can be a billion more. It becomes an engaging enterprise when a leader is elected outside of their class and the leader is a charging bull intent on changing the terrain completely. The gatekeeper­s got sidetracke­d.

The groundswel­l will continue. The inflection­s will not revert to traditiona­l media and print will see its bright days about to end. Convergenc­e has pushed everyone online. Adapt or die is the mantra on accelerati­on, even in governance. As has been said time and time again, “tapping into the power of social technologi­es isn’t about mastering the latest shiny technology; it is actually about having a clear idea of the relationsh­ip individual­s want to form.” Plato remains succinct to this day: “Wise men speak because they have something to say; fools because they have to say something.”

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