Thursday, August 2, 2007

Cloridratode Sibutramina Moniidratado

A "bad news" a little indigestible


Test The bad news French sociologist Denis Muzet is available in pocket. This little book of 140 pages we propose to analyze "how the French consume information. (...) At the omnipresent media, le "médiaconsommateur" absorbe les nouvelles au plus vite et au plus simple. Nous sommes entrés dans l'ère de la mal info ".

Le propos est découpé en petits chapitres de quelques pages. Le 11 septembre ouvre les hostilités, suivi par une analyse du JT de 20h, suivi du sentiment d'insécurité, suivi de l'installation d'un climat de menace planétaire. Ca s'enchaîne vite, témoignages en tous genres pour étayer les analyses "bateau". On devient vite impatient d'atteindre le coeur du problème, que le sociologue nous explique en quoi le "médiaconsommateur" est friand de "mal info". On y est, page 50.

Page 52, Muzet explains what needs to be constantly connected to information. "But knowledge is not understood. When you push the médiaconsommateurs in the trenches of their motives and ask them why it is important to be aware, the words oddly missing. (...) This unless you understand what's happening in the world than to be permanently connected to the stream, in the standby position. (...) Being informed is the first to be alert, vigilant against the dangers that rumble ". The approach is sociological definition. Various reports confirm that feeling (from a study conducted over several months by Muzet) and discovers also by several long statements of anonymous picorée how information here and there is not digested réexpliquée to be more or less incoherent.

After a detour to the running gag "the end of trusted media", the third and final chapter offers us out of "bad news". To distance (physics), media specialist, renew the trust (or complicity). Ok "Be your own editor" and "Be The Media" explore ways more interesting, like the development of Internet has contributed to the belief that the receiver could also become a transmitter and journalists being funny, the media in the balance of power and information liar. Muzet puts forward this strange paradox that a paper would henceforth amateur more credit than that of an information professional. According to the sociologist, this movement would symbolically born Sept. 11, when thousands of private photos and videos of attacks invade the canvas.

Muzet Denis has been very happy the day he found the concept of "bad news". Compared to junk food all that, we immediately understand, yes, well done Denis. It may have been disappointed the day he discovered that Francis had left Heinderyckx The malinformation three years earlier, including a chapter entitled "The malinformation in light of the junk food. Except that the "bad news", it sounds better, is more effective. Heynderyckx is a Belgian university on behalf complicated Muzet is a French sociologist who must love the concepts in all genres, from bohemian to metrosexuel through the X Generation. Yet the test

The malinformation tells us much more dense 94-page, concise, informative, scientific, written by a true specialist. If the press and the media you want, The malinformation is a much better choice ( analysis here) The bad news that which tells us very little, finally. A lot of blah, lots of words that linger on what is already known and unpleasant going around in circles. In short, I really should pay more attention to the presentation of the author on the back cover upon. Denis Muzet, sociologist.

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