THE MEDIA BEAT

Veteran journalist David Tereshchuk’s ongoing review of global media coverage.

New columns appear periodically on this page, below. 

SEARCH the archive of
The Media Beat columns.

Country vs City in Presidential Campaign Coverage
Quinn Fariel Quinn Fariel

Country vs City in Presidential Campaign Coverage

I’VE BEEN TAKING A HIATUS far removed from my home-base in the “Media Capital of the World,” New York City. And I have to say, rural Maine offers a perspective not always fully taken into account during mainstream media coverage of our presidential contest.

Read More
Computers for the Brain and Body
Quinn Fariel Quinn Fariel

Computers for the Brain and Body

IN MY ROLE OF MONITORING the media I inevitably have to deal with a lot of screaming. Literal screaming – as in so-called discussions on cable television’s so-called news channels. And written screaming, in headlines and text on paper and online. So I’m grateful to have a solid, dependable, and quietly-spoken news outlet like the Financial Times to turn to.

Read More
Staying Truthful in Documentaries, Even In An A.I. World

Staying Truthful in Documentaries, Even In An A.I. World

I'VE MADE TV DOCUMENTARIES MOST OF MY LIFE. A lot of them are historical. And in those that address contemporary issues, I’ve nearly always felt the need to include some historical background.  

After all, as the Mississipi-born William Faulkner wrote in 1951, “The past is never dead. It’s not even past,” which I suspect may have prompted the Harlem-born James Baldwin to take it further, with his famous 1963 insistence in Ebony magazine that “History is not the past. It is the present. We carry our history with us.” But how, just how, do you faithfully represent history in today's media?

Read More
Social Media's Harms Condemned But Not Halted

Social Media's Harms Condemned But Not Halted

THE TABLEAU IS VERY RESONANT. It echoes infamous episodes from an earlier time. Chief Executive Officers of big corporations are lined up, all being sworn in, hands raised solemnly, and then being called to account by our country’s elected representatives.

Read More
Iowa and Onward - the Oldsters Battle

Iowa and Onward - the Oldsters Battle

THE MEDIA HAVE HEADED, en masse, into Iowa. As usual in a presidential election year, it’s the first preparatory event in America’s whole unfolding primary process. And in Iowa, after a bad snowstorm that interrupted things, even the often sedate New York Times says that campaigning has now returned to “a fevered pitch”.

Read More
Views on Coverage of a Violent World from Ireland

Views on Coverage of a Violent World from Ireland

Dateline: Dublin, Ireland -- I FIND IT INVALUABLE, always, to be viewing world events via a global lens, instead of through purely American eyes. This week there’s been a powerful array of global forces at work, not least in the Middle East (left), and some good international reporting on those forces.

Read More
Close, but Contrasting, in the Medium of Fine Art

Close, but Contrasting, in the Medium of Fine Art

WE CAN REJOICE THIS FALL in a remarkable double exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. It’s been mounted jointly with the Musée D’Orsay in Paris, where it showed through Spring and early Summer before coming to New York.

Read More
Confusion Destroys Clarity on a Crucial Story

Confusion Destroys Clarity on a Crucial Story

WHAT A DIFFERENCE a night makes. Chaos reigns in the evening, but the morning can bring sanity and relief.

That’s how it was for me this week as a news consumer. Having long ago forsaken cable TV news as a hotbed of empty loud-mouthery instead of actual news, on Tuesday I picked NPR as the vector to bring me information about the latest criminal indictment of ex-President Donald Trump. As we all now know, he'll be arraigned in court (once again, this time in DC) at 4pm today.  Another big chance for the media loud-mouths, without doubt.

Read More
Losing a Powerful Broadcaster

Losing a Powerful Broadcaster

THE MEDIA BEAT HAS LOST A VOICE. Early on a Friday morning for seventeen years, Marshall Miles would talk with me to create the half-hour radio version of this column. But now Marshall has died, departing this world on June 24th, 2023.  

Marshall leaves behind a rich legacy of broadcast work, and his appreciative audiences are left bereft.

Read More
Untold Story Behind Unlikely Peace Mission

Untold Story Behind Unlikely Peace Mission

UKRAINE’S NEW AND LONG-AWAITED counteroffensive against the Russian invasion has made this a bad time to be a peacemaker.

Much of the world’s press decried the attempt to start talks, led by South African president Cyril Ramaphosa (photo-montaged, left, with warring presidents). The journalistic poohpoohing centered as much on who led the attempt as on its alleged untimeliness. It was judged inappropriate, coming just as the victim-nation has now started so valiantly (and in some small degree successfully) to strike back against the Putin empire.

Read More
Family Burdens In A Sharp Re-Telling

Family Burdens In A Sharp Re-Telling

Dateline Dublin, Ireland — THERE’S ABSOLUTELY NO REASON, of course, why a country’s national theater shouldn’t perform a classic play from a completely different nation.   It’s indeed been very heartening to see the Abbey Theatre in Dublin mounting a new version, somewhat reworked in-house, of the Norwegian Henrik Ibsen’s striking modern tragedy, Ghosts.

Read More
Press Jamboree over Trump Criminal Case – Obfuscating Detail

Press Jamboree over Trump Criminal Case – Obfuscating Detail

MY LOCAL DISTRICT ATTORNEY is the dogged Alvin Bragg. We are both boosters of our shared hometown, in our somewhat different ways. To begin the public radio edition of The Media Beat, I announce each week (part seriously and part self-mockingly) that I’m speaking from “the Media Capital of the World.” Bragg was 100% serious when he told his packed press conference this week that “New York is the Business Capital.” He went on to say, “we cannot allow New York businesses to manipulate their records to cover up criminal conduct."

Read More
The Story of Meeting Needs

The Story of Meeting Needs

Dateline AUSTIN, Texas: “THEY DON’T WANT OUR PITY.THEY WANT OUR RESPECT!” That was the message from uber-chef José Andrés, famous already for feeding people in successful restaurants and on TV shows, but now elevated to the status of global humanitarian hero-figure.

Read More