They highlight the unusual, rather than the worst. That's why one nurse slaughtering babies gets massive coverage and thousands giving loving care doesn't. But equally a cure for cancer being discovered, not the worst event, would get wall to wall coverage.towny44 wrote: 21 Aug 2023, 19:18But we all know that the media always highlight the worst events, if they were to give the best events the same airtime then the worst events would only be aired once or twice a year, and everyone would be bored to death and stop watching the news or reading papers.Mervyn and Trish wrote: 21 Aug 2023, 11:53Seems a little irrelevant. I haven't been inside a football stadium for 30 years but I see the news and know football hooligans, although a small minority, are still a problem and are spoiling it for the rest.
However, the fact there are any reports at all does rather go against the theory that football hooliganism doesn't happen. It may be rare but it's head in the sand to pretend it's gone away.



