Give me a news break

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It wasn’t exactly breaking news back in June, but it did stir interest among journalists when CNN’s new boss, Chris Licht, conceded, “Something I have heard from both people inside and outside the organization is complaints we overuse the ‘Breaking News’ banner.” The term, he told his staff, “has become such a fixture on every channel and network that its impact has become lost on the audience.”

Three months later CNN appears to have made modest progress in cutting back, but its three main broadcast competitors have gone dramatically in the other direction. Picking a recent Tuesday evening at random, I found that ABC’s “World News Tonight” had the phrase on-screen for more than five minutes in its scheduled 21-minute newscast; “The CBS Evening News” used it for over six minutes, and NBC’s “Nightly News” logged a ridiculous 10 minutes and 45 seconds.

Some would argue that all news is by definition breaking, otherwise it wouldn’t qualify as news.

A fellow named Stu Paterson tweeted the other day: “The term should only be used on a story such as ‘Putin shot in head.’” While pondering that I received a flash from the showbiz paper Variety—“Breaking News: Catherine Deneuve Is Not Ready to Retire and Has No Regrets.”

NBC’s efforts have become so extreme—and undisciplined—that on the night cited above, it used the “Breaking News” banner in an attempt to cover a portion of video with the words “CNN Exclusive.”

The Associated Press gets credit for recognizing way back in 1906 that not all news is created equal. It coined the term “Flash” to signal clients that something really important was happening. In years to follow, news services used words like “Urgent” and “Bulletin” to flag the biggest stories. I used to get chills in the ABC newsroom on rare occasions when Reuters sent the designation, “Snap.”

Cable-TV and the internet share blame for crying “Breaking”—or in Fox’s case, “Alert”—whenever news seems remotely new or mildly important. With their 24-hour cycles it became necessary to notify viewers that news was, well, happening. It’s an odd and unfortunate twist that the legacy broadcast networks feel the need to compete by suggesting that almost everything they report each evening, no matter how stale, is “Breaking News.”

ABC, meanwhile, has decided that even better balderdash for conveying urgency is the word “tonight.” In the broadcast cited above, David Muir and colleagues invoked the term “tonight” an incredible 64 times — an average of once every 19 seconds.

Of course, not all news happens at night and, despite what garish graphics say, most news isn’t breaking. Coverage, however, does seem to be broken.

Copyright 2022 Peter Funt distributed by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate.

Peter Funt’s new memoir, “Self-Amused,” is now available at CandidCamera.com.

In print and on television, Peter Funt continues the Funt Family tradition of making people smile – while examining the human condition.

After 15 years hosting the landmark TV series “Candid Camera,” Peter writes frequent op-eds for The Boston Globe and The Wall Street Journal.

Peter is a frequent speaker before business groups and on college campuses, using the vast “Candid Camera” library to bring his points to life. His newest presentation for corporate audiences, “The Candid You,” draws upon decades of people-watching to identify factors that promote better communication and productivity.

In addition to his hidden-camera work, Peter Funt has produced and hosted TV specials on the Arts & Entertainment and Lifetime cable networks. He also spent five years as an editor and reporter with ABC News in New York.

Earlier in his career, Peter wrote dozens of articles for The New York Times and TV Guide about television and film. He was editor and publisher of the television magazine On Cable. And he authored the book "Gotcha!" for Grosset & Dunlap on the lost art of practical joking.