Why the Media Failed During Covid
by David Southwell, journalist at Daily Mail Australia
Insider perspective from a mainstream journalist.
When the Albanese government’s expert panel on Australia’s Covid response delivered its report late last year, the verdict was damning.
The panel found that harsh Covid measures were imposed often without any actual basis of evidence, which caused deep and widespread harm as well as loss of confidence in government.
The media, which I am a very small but picturesque part of, gleefully jumped on this finding.
The Australian Financial Review’s headline was fairly typical: “Heavy-handed COVID restrictions have destroyed trust in government.”
Noticeably missing, however, was any self-awareness of the media’s collective failure to hold maniacal governments to account during the Covid period, a failure which was near total and is largely ongoing.
At the start of the pandemic, I was not working in the media but in comms. From the vantage point of a news consumer I saw a deep, depressing and even bewildering abdication of the Fourth Estate’s supposed role to question and challenge those in power.
Instead of questioning draconian lockdowns at press conferences, I heard journalists cheering them and asking why they weren’t longer and harsher.
An example of the howling hysteria media outlets descended to was when two teen girls facing petty criminal charges broke lockdown travel restrictions, prompting News Ltd tabloids to print photos of the pair on their front pages with the headline “Enemies of the state.”
Image of the Courier Mail “Enemies of the State” front cover, featured by SBS News.
When The Age ran an article about a hospital intensive care unit overflowing with the unvaccinated, who the journo breathlessly told us were victims of the “scourge of disinformation”, I grew increasingly uncomfortable.
“Others come to the realisation too late that the deadly virus is real, begging for a vaccine before being hooked up to a ventilator,” the author Melissa Cunningham wrote, in a sentence that I was startled to realise could be nominated for the propagandist’s hall of fame.
When then federal Health Minister Greg Hunt and former Victorian Chief Medical Officer Brett Sutton praised the story as “powerful” and “important” on Twitter, I knew there was something seriously wrong, because the media’s job is not to push the government’s message.
At least that shouldn’t be its job — governments have very big budgets to do their own propaganda, which is why just about every second ad you see on commercial media and online is publicly funded.
If journalism has a public policy role beyond mere description or stenography, it should be to relentlessly question what governments, authorities and, yes, even “experts” are saying and doing.
The bias of journalism should not be towards the right or left, but towards scepticism, and towards seeking out the voices and views that may be getting drowned out.
To quote the old axiom, journalism’s role is to “speak truth to power.”
However, during Covid, the media often decided to “speak power to truth.”
When I joined the Daily Mail as a reporter around May 2022, the publication, to its credit, was pushing back against some of the more insane pandemic measures, particularly the nightmarishly interminable lockdowns in Victoria and the ridiculous border closures of WA.
However, it previously had been an enthusiastic barracker for many over-the-top government actions.
Also, the efficacy and safety of the Covid vaccines remained pretty well quarantined from any questioning.
As a lowly reporter, I am largely insulated from the decision-making.
However, I asked around to find out why the Mail, as with most Australian media, fell into line during the pandemic.
Here are five factors as described to me by insiders, and also at times observed by me:
- There was overt government pressure. I have been told that Mr Hunt or other federal and state health officials rang editors directly to harangue them directly that they were “putting lives in danger’. In what was being billed as once-in-a-century emergency this pressure could be hard to resist. The other reason traditional outlets want to keep governments onside is they need a champion against social media destroying their business model by giving away their content for free. Australian governments have obliged in this regard by making the likes of Facebook pay traditional outlets for their content.
- Social media platforms punished any deviation from the official Covid narrative. Digital news sites rely on social media exposure for most of their traffic, so any drop-off threatens their bottom line. Outlets that did not promulgate the approved narrative risked getting a strike or being downgraded by algorithms to keep their stories submerged online. Mark Zuckerberg recently told Joe Rogan that the Biden administration put pressure on Facebook to remove even factual posts that conflicted with the message authorities were selling. That also happened in Australia. It remains unclear to what extent the social media giants censored by their own volition and how much was “self-censorship” to keep governments happy.
- Media outlet owners gave directions to their publications. The Daily Mail is the Australian online version of a mass-circulation British tabloid owned by a family of press lords in the UK. I do not know whether orders came out of London about how Covid was to be covered, but head office must at least approve of what the Aussie offshoot is doing.
- The mood of the readership, as expressed in clicks, social media shares, and comments, will ultimately prevail in any commercially driven news. Commercial outlets cannot stay out of step with their readers for long. During the Covid period, I was told the Mail audience was readily enthusiastic about imposing and enforcing restrictions and mandates. I find this depressing.
- Editors believed what authorities told us. As I have been a dissenter on nearly all Covid matters, I have experienced the sincerity of that belief expressed to me quite bluntly. I have pitched stories that were rejected as “anti-vaxxer’. I have had major arguments about the way my stories have been edited and sometimes accepted edits I did not like to get a story published.
The media’s conformity also likely acts as a reinforcing feedback loop.
Journalists move as a pack, rather like seagulls squalling over chips. Former Queensland Joh Bjelke Peterson made this observation when he labelled his press conferences as “feeding the chooks”.
All outlets obsessively keep a close eye on their competitors to make sure they haven’t missed important or high-rating stories and to check the details and developments they have against each other.
Added to this professional incentive to watch your competitors is the fact that the Australian media industry is a small ecosystem,where peer pressure can be pronounced.
Fear Factor
Being in the information business, media professionals are particularly sensitive about the risk of being saddled with weaponised terms such as ‘conspiracy theorist’, ‘anti-vaxxer’ and ‘cooker.’
We can see the visceral fear that terms like this inspire for a veteran journalist in a recently published article, where despite trying to deny it half the time, veteran journalist Brendan Foster is forced to conclude the Covid vaccines could be killing him and others of his acquaintance.
Brendan Foster. Image: Supplied to The Sydney Morning Herald.
The headline encapsulates his ultra-defensiveness: “I kept getting sicker. But you won’t catch me reaching for a tin foil hat.”
Even as he grudgingly compiles strong evidence the vaccine is taking his health and potentially his life, the author seems mostly worried that we might think he is expressing “some crazed, anti-vax conspiracy theory.”
It seems the closer he gets to his death the more he adores his probable executioner as “one of the greatest achievements in medical science.” Like George Orwell’s Winston from the dystopian classic 1984, he learns to “love Big Brother.”
I suspect such veneration of “experts” has become more pronounced in journalism as the profession has become more tertiary educated.
In the days of yore, a school leaver could join a media outlet as a copy boy or cadet and basically do an on-the-job apprenticeship to learn journalism, which is the appropriate training for what essentially is a trade rather than academic discipline.
Now, a university degree is pretty much mandatory to even get a job interview, and increasingly, post-graduate degrees are expected.
People who come out of university (like myself) are indoctrinated at some level to revere “expertise” because that’s the validation of academic knowledge.
However, veneration of authority is fatal to good, or even “real”, journalism.
The “real” reporting on Covid has largely come from independent journalists such as the author of this Substack or others equally forensic and fearless including Maryanne Demasi, PhD and Alison Bevege.
While the mainstream media jeered that confidence in government had taken a nosedive after the pandemic, they appeared not to notice that so too did the public’s trust in them.
“The media (which included social media) continued to be the most distrusted institution in Australia. Only 38 per cent of survey respondents said they trusted its institutions, a fall of five points,” a survey by global communications firm Edelman found last year.
I’d suggest one way for the traditional media to regain trust is to show more distrust of what is fed to us by governments, authorities and experts even in, or especially during, “emergencies”.
In other words, the media should simply do their job.
___
David Southwell is a reporter for Daily Mail Australia. He has over 20 years’ experience in media and communication and has worked on local papers, for wire service AAP and for News Ltd newspapers and websites. His best (self-appointed) job was Morning Tea Correspondent for the Balmain Village Voice. Follow David on X @SubinthePub
Republished with thanks to Dystopian Down Under. Image courtesy of Adobe.
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Thank you for your article. It was interesting to read.
I liked this comment: “The bias of journalism should not be towards the right or left, but towards scepticism, and towards seeking out the voices and views that may be getting drowned out.”
As an ‘oldie’, that was what I hoped to see from the media during Covid, but was very disappointed. My trust is gone and I really don’t know how it can be won back. Even if I saw the mainstream media being more sceptical and rational for a while, I would not trust them in another emergency.
I would not trust the general population either, as you say most of them seemed to be cheering the government on to even more extreme erosion of everyone’s freedoms!
Yes, we can’t trust the general population who seem to be screaming for more govt. control of our lives. Will they never learn that that is the way to ” 1984 “, ie Totalitarianism. Brendan Foster has “Stockholm Syndrome “. I have been seriously ill since my rMNDA vaccine. Happened within 7 to 10 days afterwards. I went from feeling fantastic to rash, brain fog , barely able to stand, etc. My life ruined ! I now do not trust media, doctors or govt. Media + Politicians = Lowest of the Low !
Mr Southwell has some salient points to make on media complicity with governments in the control of the masses during the so-called “Covid 19 Pandemic”. I recall looking up the Australian Government Media Report website to discover that Channels7,9 and 10 were paid collectively $91 million in tax relief over a 12 month period to push the Covid narrative on both city and country regional/rural areas. This effectively pushed up the fear levels throughout the Australian community. I find this absolutely reprehensible. It was always about power and control over the people. It is really bad also, to find oneself considering our National Carrier, the ABC, as the Jospeh Goebbels propaganda machine (this view is not limited to the Covid propaganisation over the airwaves).
As a retired nurse, I viewed with horror the whole mismanagement of the health sector, health practices, lack of sound scientific approach and investigation, the weaponisation of language against anyone who thought more broadly than the narrative spewed out night after night, and day after day, on our media outlets, the numbers of people actually harmed by the mRNA “therapy” and psychological trauma inflicted (especially here in Victoria), the slandering of perfectly good and cheap medicines such as Ivermectin and other useful drugs in favour of the expensive so called “vaccines”. It was an outrageous abuse of power, and I consider the legacy media to be deeply complicit in this abuse of power. May it never happen again.
Well said. The media pushed the government’s covid propaganda because they were paid to do it, and paid handsomely.
Documented here.
https://gregoryno6.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/relief-for-australian-media-during-covid-19.pdf