Khaleej Times

Youth require a media that genuinely cares — minister

Media should be truthful and present content that is relevant to the obstacles that the young face, UAE official says

- Ashwani Kumar ashwani@khaleejtim­es.com

The media should be able to intellectu­ally challenge and thoughtful­ly provoke people, especially the youth, with their content, said a top UAE minister during the opening day of the Global Media Congress in Abu Dhabi.

In an impassione­d address before hundreds of experts and journalist­s from media houses across the world, Shamma bint Suhail Faris Al Mazrui, UAE Minister of State for Youth Affairs, said in more focus should be given to issues like climate change and not on generating traffic from clickbait headlines.

“I'm a mother of two children. And I can't help but think of how their future will be directly influenced by all of you — by your company's choices and policies, by the algorithms you empower, by the NFTS you sell, by the decisions you make and will make in the future, by the world that you will create — more than they will be influenced by their education, more than they will be influenced by their peers, or any of my savvy parenting techniques,” she said during her keynote speech at Adnec, Abu Dhabi.

"I want to be able to trust that you will all make decisions in their best interests, as well as the best interests of the three billion young people under the age of 30 living today.”

Al Mazrui hoped for a standard of media that is sustainabl­e, truthful, trustworth­y, tolerant and thoughtful.

“We want to make sure that when our kids are left alone with a screen, or a virtual reality set, they will be fed thoughtful ideas, good manners and values, and be able to develop an authentic identity of their own. I want to make sure that they're not going to grow up used to violence through shooting games, or scrolling aimlessly down a feed of celebrity gossip, or waste their life feeling disconnect­ed from their own community values, and disconnect­ed from the most pressing issues of this world and their generation.”

The minister noted that editors and journalist­s have stereotype­d the youth as an audience seeking to be entertaine­d and offered content, which doesn't “have public interest at heart”.

Providing insight into a survey conducted as part of a study, Al Mazrui said that the expectatio­ns the youth have from the media are quite different to what has been perceived by editors.

“Surprising­ly, perhaps, even though young people [are] extremely aware of all the technologi­cal offerings of AI, Metaverse, and NFTS, ticktockif­ication, their answers didn't include much about these, or any kind of enhanced immersive experience. Young people's answers were loud and clear. Content is king. Yes, they wanted it to be enjoyable but they wanted to be entertaine­d differentl­y.

“They want to be intellectu­ally challenged. They want to be thoughtful­ly provoked. They want to be able to learn new skills and gain new insights from the media. They want to be able to answer life's most pressing questions. They want to be able to find meaning through finding solutions to their society and their generation's problems," Al Mazrui said.

"And they want a media from which they can borrow real-life experience­s and risk-free rehearsals of life without going through it. They don't want an algorithm that confirms what they already believe. They certainly, from the study, don't want a news feed that is full of images of the Fashion Police, while the world is going through famine, floods, and wars. They want trustworth­y informatio­n. They want media that is engaging, that genuinely cares for their future, that makes them a better citizen.”

Returning after her participat­ion at COP27 in Egypt, Al Mazrui said young people there were upset with the media's lack of interest in climate change stories.

“How can we talk about [the] future of the media if the future of the planet is on the line? And we are not bold enough to feature it as the most critical story every single day? I know the gossip news on fashion fields or celebrity divorce, or even flashy, ambiguous clickbait, which somehow skip the facts and the fact checking process, can bring more clicks, more likes, more shares, and more profits for you all in the short term.

"But what kind of [a] future can we imagine if our young people end up aimless, depressed, disconnect­ed with mental health issues and jobless? What kind of economy can thrive? What kind of social cohesion can we rely on? What kind of legacy are we leaving behind for those who count on our oral intelligen­ce?" the minister asked.

She added that the media can get together to focus more on climate as the UAE is set to host COP28 next year, and urged participan­ts to let their imaginatio­ns run wild during the conference. “If you come up with a ground-breaking and novel idea, you will see it materialis­ing in the UAE sooner than you realise.”

They want a media from which they can borrow real-life experience­s and risk-free rehearsals of life. They don’t want an algorithm that confirms what they already believe”k Shamma Al Mazrui

Minister of State for Youth Affairs

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 ?? ?? Indian businessma­n Yusuff Ali MA (above) interacts with people at the Global Media Congress, and (below) visitors check out Khaleej Times’ publicatio­ns at the newspaper’s stand in the event being held at Adnec.
Indian businessma­n Yusuff Ali MA (above) interacts with people at the Global Media Congress, and (below) visitors check out Khaleej Times’ publicatio­ns at the newspaper’s stand in the event being held at Adnec.
 ?? ?? The Khaleej Times stand at the Global Media Congress, which got under way at the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre (Adnec) on Tuesday. — photos rahul gajjar
The Khaleej Times stand at the Global Media Congress, which got under way at the Abu Dhabi National Exhibition Centre (Adnec) on Tuesday. — photos rahul gajjar
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