"Judging by the climate coverage to date, most of the US news media still don't get grasp the seriousness of this issue. This journalistic failure has given rise to a calamitous public ignorance, which in turn has enabled politicians and corporations to avoid action."
This is what a jointly authored article from The Nation and the Columbia Journalism Review noted earlier this year.
It reinforces what Media Matters recently reported about the five major Sunday morning political television shows that featured "only a combined total of two segments that included at least a substantial reference to climate change" after a record-breaking heatwave afflicted much of the Midwest and East Coast this summer, killing at least six people.
Media Matters also revealed that from August 28th to September 5th, the week Hurricane Dorian hit, major TV networks ran 216 segments about Dorian, but only one mentioned climate change.
A recent Public Citizen study found that of the 363 articles the leading print publications devoted to Hurricane Dorian, only nine mentioned climate change.
Fewer than one-half of the 50 largest newspapers in the country covered the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)'s dire report predicting a window of only 10 to 12 years to halt coal consumption and slash carbon dioxide emissions to prevent mass food shortages, climate-induced homelessness, mass migrations, failing infrastructure, and more catastrophic weather that could climb into the billions annually.
The corporate media's virtual silence on the most urgent crisis facing humanity has kept people in the dark for far too long.
But according to a CBS News poll, more than a quarter of Americans understand climate change's urgency and want to see immediate action to address it--despite the media's efforts to ignore it.
As clinical psychologist and founder of the Climate Mobilization Project, Margaret Klein Salamon, stated:
"Americans are finally beginning waking up to the existential threat that the climate emergency poses to our society."
She added:
"It's young people that have been primarily responsible for that."
So more than 250 media outlets around the world are joining The Nation and the Columbia Journalism Review's major new project--"Covering Climate Now"--to improve climate crisis coverage ahead of next week's U.N. Climate Action Summit.
One of "Covering Climate Now" co-founders, Mark Hertsgaard, co-author of "A New Beginning for Climate Reporting" and environment correspondent and investigative editor for The Nation, stated during an interview this week on Democracy Now!:
"I've been reporting on climate change since the 1990s, and I spent a lot of that decade traveling around the world. And it's been clear ever since then that the U.S. media is about 10 years behind the media in Europe and Asia in reporting the climate crisis. First of all, we don't mention it, as you just talked about. And when we do do the climate story, we often get it wrong...For many years we had this false balance, where we felt that if we had on a real NASA scientist talking about climate science, that somehow, to be fair to the audience, we also had to have on somebody who said the climate science was bunk. And that person was usually just a paid propagandist for the fossil fuel industry. So, there is not a proud history here on the part of the media."
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