Four Channels

A Lifetime of Learning Who to Trust
94 Seiten, Taschenbuch
€ 16,70
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Kurzbeschreibung des Verlags

You grew up being told the news was the truth. The newspaper said it. The television confirmed it. And because there was nothing else - no alternative source, no second opinion, no way of knowing what had been left out - you believed it. Most of us did.Four Channels is the story of what happens when that trust starts to crack.Growing up in South London in the 1980s with only four television channels and a corner shop newspaper, Sunil Sajjan absorbed the world the way everyone did - through the filter of a small number of institutions that shaped not just what people knew, but how they felt about it. The racial framing in crime reporting that he noticed as a child before he had words for it. The political identity installed in him before he was old enough to choose one. The people he dismissed as conspiracy theorists, without ever checking whether their questions deserved an answer.This book traces the slow, uncomfortable journey from that unquestioning trust to something harder and more honest - examining how language is used to frame events before facts are even presented, how the same donor class funds both sides of a political divide that exists partly to keep the public arguing with each other, how algorithms now do what editors once did but faster, at greater scale, and with no accountability at all. And what it means to navigate all of this in an age where artificial intelligence hasn't yet reached its full potential - and the question of whether we will ever truly know what is real is becoming harder to answer by the day.Four Channels is not a conspiracy theory. It is not an argument for any political party or position. It is an honest account of what one person noticed, over a lifetime, about the gap between what we are told and what is actually happening - and what it might mean to start looking at that gap more carefully.