The media is failing the hard locked-down communities of western Sydney with a journalism of irrelevance that privileges open-mic rants about open Bunnings stores, mask-less eastern-suburbs beaches and city curfews.
It needs an urgent pivot to a reporting that breaks through the blinkers of pre-fab narratives about lockdowns too hard, too soft, too slow, too fast to focus on the hard economics of the people who work in the industries that sustain our cities and the marginal lives that confront many families.
Right now, the western Sydney Delta outbreak is setting up as the first real-life test case of how an increasingly national news media will manage big moments in the news deserts in Australia’s suburbs. So far? It’s an F.
The moment calls for a respectful journalism that reflects the realities and information needs of the communities affected, grounded in the communities it’s reporting on.
Instead, media are parachuting in reporters for on-the-ground photo ops and vox-pop grabs as exotic seasoning for the national storyline served out of Canberra and the city-centre bases of mainstream media.
The locked-down suburbs have become a journalistic terra nullius, a click-and-collect remote storehouse for factoids that can be ordered up, picked over and hammered into the broader meta-narrative that’s frozen Australia’s COVID reporting.
The result may be entertaining theatre — but just because something’s done well, that doesn’t mean it’s worth doing in the first place. It’s largely useless for the communities affected. Worse, all that journalistic hammering seems only to bend the arc of public health into the dead end of policing and compliance.
About 2 million people live in the eight hardest-lockdown local government areas. That’s a “city” bigger than greater Perth, not much smaller than greater Brisbane. They’re not an undifferentiated suburban demographic: they’re younger, more likely to be economically disadvantaged and culturally and ethnically diverse (or “vibrant”, to apply the current code word).
That makes them communities that need a different sort of journalism that speaks to and for that complexity, not a journalism that transforms the communities into colourful backdrops for other people’s stories.
The media failure in western Sydney is part of where we are now — a disrupted business model and monopoly ownership that links once-were-local media into lookalike national franchises that dress up national storylines with the pretence of localism.
That trend saw western Sydney lose most of its once free local media in News Corp’s mass print closures in April last year and the subsequent rolling of their digital remains into the heavily pay-walled Daily Telegraph.
It’s part, too, of a decades-long failure by mainstream media to speak from, to and for the city’s diversity. The Sydney Morning Herald has always been a paper for the city’s comfortable east and north, the Tele for the established Anglo-Celtic middle-ring (despite claiming a cardboard-cut version of the west).
Commercial TV and radio broadcast into the west from high up on the North Shore ridge, with “local” stories about crime-gang shootings, drug busts and car crashes.
The ABC is more mixed: while its national programming tends to entrench exclusionary national narratives, its data work and its reporters on the ground, largely working through its state-based radio, speaks from and to the community where they are. (The two trends clashed awkwardly on Insiders this week.) Expect the ABC to get better as it shifts staff to new premises in the west.
The failures twist national stories, underplaying, for example, the deep value to these communities (often casuals or gig-workers without sick leave) of Albanese’s proposed $300 boost to vaccination. (Short odds by the way that, despite the initial huffing, Morrison appropriates the idea as soon as he works out how to make it his own — and to focus it on marginal seats.)
Reporting, too, is missing an all-too-rare political moment: a state Liberal government spending political capital in the interests of safe Labor-voting communities. Breaking with modern political orthodoxy of looking only after your own, it’s taking the heat for redirecting scarce vaccine resources from conservative voters in regional NSW to Year 12 students in the Labor-voting suburbs of the south-west.
It lit up the refusal of Labor premiers and Morrison to support the needed vaccine surge into the south-western Sydney hot spots as a triumph of state-based parochialism and political partisanship over the solidarity-based priority of need that the Labor movement claims to own.
Hear Hear! A worthwhile piece.
It appears true that of the English-speaking media, the ABC is trying hardest.
So where is even a mention of SBS? The outfit set up to further multicultural entertainment and information seems too disdainful (or too obsessed with being a sort of mini-ABC) to try anything new or adventurous that might actually help the disaster-struck South-West.
Sure, I hope and believe that its multi-language radio service is probably reaching many in that area, but TV just can’t seem to get the idea.
A post in an Auburn community Facebook page repeated the misinformation about an underlying heart condition being responsible for Alaskar’s death.
Own worst enemies.
Try this then, from a paramedic as reported in The Guardian Australia:
What started as a trickle became a flood of call-outs for Covid-positive patients needing help. It has never been like this. I’ve entered houses where all occupants are Covid positive. Some are sick, some are just scared and apologise for wasting our time. They’re not sure how bad they need to get before they should go to hospital. Some don’t speak English, or have poor health literacy, and fear there’ll be repercussions should they test positive. Fear of testing not only prolongs lockdowns, it can also prove deadly.
I’ve turned up to a house to find every member symptomatic, and none had been tested. We found a patient unconscious and not breathing and commenced CPR. Chest compressions aren’t like the movies, they’re brutal. CPR is also physically demanding, particularly in restrictive PPE. Trying to keep calm while out of breath under a mask, sweating under a layer of plastic while trying to insert an artificial airway, get a cannula in a vein, evaluate a cardiac rhythm on a monitor to determine whether to deliver a shock isn’t a walk in the park.
The pandemic has proved the lie of migration. I’m degree educated and progressive. I wanted to believe the story that migration added so much to Australia. I wanted to believe the story everyone was highly skilled and filling needed jobs. Then I became a minimum wage worker. I started to get an inkling that the story wasn’t true. Foreign workers were there to drag down wages.
The media refused to tell the truth, calling such scab labor ‘victims’. I know plenty of people from overseas in low wage jobs. They knew they weren’t going to be paid properly or they weren’t going to adhere to the conditions fo their visa. They deliberately do it. Yet they are portrayed as victims, a person who willingly chose to come to this country to undercut decades (more?) or hard won labor rights. I’m a multi generation Australian suffering under cheap foreign labor but I am not the victim in the story. I can’t even get a hearing at Fair Work, who openly prioritise migrant cases over local ones.
I moved from upper class anglo neighbourhoods to low wage ethnic ones like Western Sydney. My question was – why is everyone so poor and driving for Uber? Why does the progressive media keep insisting it’s all high skilled migration? Where? Who? Who is high skilled but a handful.
The pandemic has brought to the surface. If migrants are all so highly skilled, successful and rich why are they living in some of the most disadvantaged neighbourhoods in large numbers? Might it be because the truth is they are cheap labor for low wage jobs? Why when the public towers were lockdown were some of the residents revealed as having lived there for 30 years and had 7 children? Is that success?
I want to believe. I really do. I want to see a diverse and growing Australia. I want to give a home to people around the world who don’t live in great countries. I really do. I wanted to be a good progressive and to believe. It’s just not true. Our migration program is mostly simply low wage labor who stay poor, to the detriment of low wage born citizens who want to raise standards. I wish it weren’t true, I really do.
Rubbish. FWC don’t prioritise migrant cases over Anglo. And some of the staunchest unionists in our country right now, who are joining unions and taking strike action and negotiating their wages up, are the migrant communities you slag off who work in essential food industries like Horticulture Poultry and Meatworks. Governments and Business have worked together to pus wages and conditions and workers from overseas are a convenient scapegoat. But in my experience migrants care about dignity and fairness just as much as anglos.
Fair Work themselves say they are prioritising migrant cases. If you’re a young local uni student and you call Fair Work they are more likely to tell you to resolve it yourself than if you are migrant. They triage their cases. They say so themselves.
Migrants come here just to undercut decades of our hard won labor rights? You really are looking for anyone to blame, aren’t you?
I don’t think she’s blaming anyone. It’s a sad fact of this unequal world, that it makes good economic sense for someone from a poor country to come to a rich country and work for a while in appalling conditions with the hope of either sharing the benefits of living in a rich country, or the chance to send money home. Who could blame them?
What do you make of cases where someone gets a ‘student visa’ and comes to work for $15 an hour and lives 8 to a house? What are we to say? They’re the victim? They chose that. They chose to come and drag down the conditions in that industry. They have committed fraud on their visa. They knew the pay rates when they came. They know they are working for less.
Obviously the bosses are at most fault here, but I don’t understand how someone can come here and deliberately breach their visa and deliberately work for less and somehow they have no responsibility for what they’re doing to the rest of us. You try working for minimum wage in an industry where fraudulent foreigners come and work for $10 an hour less and see how you like it.
Did you miss the memo?
People are not responsible for their own actions – it’s always someone else’s fault.
If ‘someone’ is asked the response will be “I’m just following orders” which takes us back to responsibility for one’s actions.
It may seem like a closed circle but it is not.
It’s an inward spiral.
I hope the south western suburbs peple vote as a block to kick out the LNP.
In the 2019 NSW state election Cabramatta’s independent candidate, Vietnamese Dai Le was the biggest challenger to Labor
LaborNick Lalich23,61649.88−10.01
IndependentDai Le12,25025.88+25.87
LiberalAustin Le7,01814.82−13.42
GreensChristopher James2,3845.04−0.13
IndependentPhuoc Vo2,0754.38+4.38
In the 2019 NSW state election Cabramatta’s independent candidate, Vietnamese Dai Le was the biggest challenger to Labor
LaborNick Lalich 23,61649.88 −10.01
IndependentDai Le 12,25025.88 +25.87
LiberalAustin Le 7,01814.82 −13.42
GreensChristopher James 2,3845.04 −0.13
IndependentPhuoc Vo 2,0754.38 +4.38
Dai Le was/is a Liberal councillor. She’s twice run as the Liberal Party candidate for this seat, so she had name recognition.
Good example of how media is neither covering suburbs nor regions well, if at all, versus common wall to wall messaging of legacy media to mostly support the LNP, no matter what.