R&B Talks
Journalism's "objectivity era" wasn't a baseline that got corrupted. It was a brief professional performance that lasted exactly one human lifetime — built on specific regulatory, economic, and ideological conditions that no longer exist. Part 1 of two walks the hundred-year structural story: how it was built, why it was never clean, and how every pillar got rewritten in a single twelve-month window in 1996. KEY TOPICS: - Tyndale, Wycliffe, and the long pre-history of information control - The Gallup trust collapse (68% in 1972 → 28% in 2025) and what it actually measures - Lippmann vs. Dewey — the debate that built the modern profession - Edward Bernays, the manufacture of consent, and the 1954 Guatemala coup - The Hutchins Commission, Henry Luce, and "social responsibility journalism" - Operation Mockingbird, the Church Committee, and Bernstein's 400 journalists - The Fairness Doctrine repeal (1987) and the Telecommunications Act (1996) - Sinclair Broadcast Group, the Trusted News Initiative, and the Twitter Files SCRIPTURE: Acts 17:11; Matthew 21:12-13 PRIMARY SOURCES MENTIONED: - Licensing of the Press Act 1662 - Lippmann, Public Opinion (1922); Dewey, The Public and Its Problems (1927); Bernays, Propaganda (1928) - Hutchins Commission, A Free and Responsible Press (1947) - Church Committee Final Report (1976); Bernstein, Rolling Stone (Oct 20, 1977) - Trusted News Initiative — BBC press release, March 2019 - Twitter Files (December 2022) — R&B Talks: 2 Guys. 2 Chairs. Real Christ-Centered Conversation.
130 episodios
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