There were two points of views on objectivity that were discussed in class during the presentations; conflicting expectations and the need for change in focus. Basically what was meant by this was that old ideas hindered and limited journalists to reactive reporting. This meant that journalists became reliant on sources for information and not fulfilling the 'duty' of a journalist which was to seek out information and check the facts according to what was said or done. Also, "traditional news objectivity disallows interpretation in reports" (Ward, 1999), meaning that all the news presented has to be factual and straight to the point and not for people for infer from. Objectivity in itself, is subjective and in being objective, you don't necessarily get the entire truth either.
I have also realised that bias and subjectivity is inevitable and that truthful may not be equivalent to objectivity. In some ways, by suppressing subjectivity, people and audiences are deprived of what they need to know. The three types of reporting (reflective, reactive and analytical) and the descriptions of each discussed in the tutorial put things into perspective for me. What I took away with Sya's presentation was that "journalists need to remember that they are no longer the main source of news" and that thought mirrored by own perceptions and understandings. The world has proceeded at such a rapid pace at a rate that media outlets are constantly having to come up with newer means of enticing their audiences. And they also have to compete with PR agencies that are the 'creators' of news.
