Did you know that yesterday was World Press Freedom Day? You must have read it somewhere. But if we did not protest because we certainly do not have a voice, as long as we are ranked 84th in the World Media Freedom Index, on the other hand, ironically, we have a kind of terrible debauchery when it comes to ?serious journalism. * s ". The same online media, some of the most respected in the country, which on a typical day is supposed to deal with social-political-economic problems and a host of other phenomena, follow articles with seemingly bombastic titles, but which are really just terrible.
To put the topic on a more concrete level, a few days ago, Mirela Kumbaro, while giving a speech in the Assembly, took off her shirt and found what? Mirela Kumbaro - who is a woman, heyy - had breasts. In addition, there were recipes. "Mirela Kumbaro's shirt unbuttoned during her speech in the Assembly", "Video / embarrassing moment, Mirela Kumbaro's shirt unbuttoned" were some of the headlines, accompanied by photos with arrows and sieges as if they made the discovery of the XXI century. On the same day, another incident occurred with the Minister of Infrastructure and Energy, Belinda Balluku, and all that followed was just ugly sentences such as "Kumbaro's live shirt exploded, Balluku forgot to put on his [recipes]."
Such "bombastic" titles - which Pope Francis has rightly called sin - are systematic violence against girls and women, whether known or not, because history has shown that this disgusting phenomenon does not spare anyone. . It is enough to look for phrases like "provokes from bed", "sex assets", "does not leave room for imagination", "sets the network on fire", "sex appears", etc., to understand how much nudity and sexism are used in the media. The search engine displays over 300,000 results and this is unfortunate, because it starts on portals that no one knows and ends up in media that enjoy status as "serious".
Some of you may rightly say, "As long as people click, what's wrong with portals?", But if the purpose of the media is not to offer people what they want, but what they need. Some of you may rightly also say that "there are bigger problems with online media" and I understand that as long as it is not free, it is certainly difficult to have credibility and quality in content, but that is not the case. justifies the use and promotion of nudity as bait for a few more clicks. The media is not really free and it should definitely protest, but on the other hand, it should do its homework well. Until then, let's just say that the only thing I know how to do better is compete with pornography.