CBC Exec Acknowledges #GamerGate Media Slant, States Ethics Are Important

GamerGate: It's About Ethics by Jm Hubber

An executive producer for the CBC nightly news program, The National, has responded to a concerned viewer who wrote in to complain about the lopsided coverage of #GamerGate on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation’s premier nightly news program. Thankfully, the executive producer acknowledges that the portrayal of #GamerGate may have been mischaracterized on media platforms.

After four months of battling against a very uneven and misleading assault on video game culture at the hands of games media and mainstream media, one individual at the top of the chain has at least acknowledged that the coverage deserves a more even hand.

One Canadian native wrote in to the CBC’s ombudsman after various hit pieces were published about #GamerGate. Going by the Twitter handle Lunar Archivist, he  published an e-mail response from The National’s executive producer, Mark Harrison. According to Harrison…

“#GamerGate has multiple aspects, I understand that, but two main topics: Ethics in games journalism and the treatment of women in gaming. I also understand that it is the subject of continuing controversy, if not contention among gamers and others. But as interesting as the issues it raises are – and they are very interesting – this report wasn’t really about #GamerGate at all, although it was mentioned at one point almost as an aside.”

“While this report merely touched on the subject, we are continuing to follow the #GamerGate story
closely, especially its concern with journalistic ethics, and will watch for an opportunity to carry more on it in the coming weeks.”

I found Harrison’s one statement about the report not being about #GamerGate to be in complete contrast with how the segment on The National was actually conveyed to the general public.

If you visit the official CBC page [backup] that carries the piece, you’ll notice that the headline for the segment is titled: “Gamergate” sparks conversation on gaming culture.

If the report wasn’t about #GamerGate then why was the report titled after the hashtag?

I decided to reach out to Harrison to get an explanation as to why #GamerGate was part of the headline if the consumer revolt surrounding a scandal in games media wasn’t the focus of the report. According to Harrison, the report should have focused more on harassment and abuse and not #GamerGate…

“It would have been best if the emphasis had been placed on the conversation about harassment and sexism in the industry.”

It’s true, the report could have been done without any mention of #GamerGate. Unfortunately, the conversation about harassment and sexism in the industry became an adjunct of #GamerGate due to the media spin; a large part of that spin comes from groups like the Game Journo Pros pushing the narrative until it reached mainstream press.

The hashtag itself actually represents a consumer revolt spawned from a scandal that started over various forms of impropriety and indiscretions carried out by games media  [learn more about the media’s corruption via the GamerGate Wiki]. Sadly, some of those same problems have also surfaced from mainstream media outlets as well.

Nevertheless, Harrison further acknowledged the media slant on #GamerGate and the importance of discussing the issue of ethics in journalism, stating…

“As I have written to some of our viewers, I fully understand that gamers are angry and frustrated at media coverage that too often appears to misunderstand #GamerGate, tarnishing what they feel should be seen as a noble cause with allegations of abuse and harassment.”

The unfortunate reality behind a lot of the coverage is that proof of #GamerGate being a harassment campaign has never been provided, something that’s addressed in articles like the one by the Daily Caller. Worse yet is that many of the prominent individuals pushing #GamerGate forward are actually women; a number of women are also involved with the #GamerGate harassment patrol, which was responsible for finding and reporting Anita Sarkeesian’s death and rape-threat sender.

Dr. Christina Hoff Sommers has also been one of the more prominent figures speaking on behalf of #GamerGate, but journalists either refuses to acknowledge that she does not support the radical  movements pervasive in today’s media circles, or they attack Dr. Sommers with politicized commentary.

Consumers didn’t turn #GamerGate into a divisive issue; it turned divisive by those engineering sociopolitical agendas.

However, Harrison further acknowledges that the treatment of women is an issue, but also that #GamerGate is about ethics in games journalism…

“The thing is, while it may have started as a well-defined topic, as with most hashtags, this one too has morphed and changed. #GamerGate now has multiple aspects, among them, certainly, ethics in game journalism. The treatment of women in gaming is another. Both are important.“

While some may still see a conflation between harassment and #GamerGate in Harrison’s comments, the reality is that an executive producer for a major television network has come to terms with the major goal of the movement: it’s about reforming a broken and distrustful sector of the gaming industry, it’s about cleaning up ethics in journalism.

Acknowledgment from the opposition that the goals of #GamerGate are legitimate – an issue that was once contested as non-existent – is a major step forward in changing the disruptive narrative being peddled by various factions of the media.

(Main image courtesy of Jhubs)

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Billy has been rustling Jimmies for years. The GJP cried and their tears became his milkshake. Contact.

  • Miglet32

    All I can say is about fucking time.

    But I’m not going to hold my breath for the more even-handed coverage he spoke of.

  • Knightwing19

    As a Canadian I just want to say thanks for your support and work to make the CBC, a tax payer owned company, accountable for their horrible slant towards #GamerGate.

    While I completely agree acknowledgement of the real issues of #GamerGate is a huge step forward but the fact that they still say the movement has various aspects one of them being harassment of women says we still have a ways to go.
    The only people saying #GamerGate is about harassment are those crying wolf in order to cover up their corruption, collusion or money making schemes. There has never been any proof provided (or asked for by mainstream media) that proves any harassment by #GamerGate.
    Once that conversation starts with the mainstream media then we know we on our way to the finish line.

  • Eric

    I received pretty much the same email the other day and while I had initially felt as though it did not satisfactorily justify the use of the Gamergate hashtag in the piece, the clarification that you obtained from Mr. Harrison does make it seem as though CBC’s intent was not malicious when they misrepresented #Gamergate. It does however show that their reporting was lazy and complacent, as they mostly repeated several common and oft-refuted fallacies.

    I do not believe that the mainstream media’s perception of #Gamergate will change anytime soon due to the radical ideological pressure that is omnipresent in our North American society, but I would be foolish to outright dismiss CBC’s claim that they wish to cover both sides. Unlike extremists’, my opinion is subject to change based on the facts that come to light, just as it should be for any rational human being.

    As an aside, I would like to reiterate my enjoyment of your work, Mr. Usher. Although I no longer support the #Gamergate movement, you, as an individual, have proven time and time again your dévouement and passion to your craft, which you’ve practiced in an utter irreproachable impartiality in my opinion. And for that, I salute you!

    • I do not believe that the mainstream media’s perception of #Gamergate
      will change anytime soon due to the radical ideological pressure that is
      omnipresent in our North American society, but I would be foolish to
      outright dismiss CBC’s claim that they wish to cover both sides.

      Yup, wholeheartedly agree. It’s just nice to see some kind of acknowledgment in all of this. It’s a heck of a lot better than the dismissive tone and censorship that was occurring early on back in August and September.

      I truly hope the CBC sticks to their word, especially now that it’s on record that they want to portray both sides of the fence, per The National’s own executive producer.

    • lunararchivist

      “The clarification that you obtained from Mr. Harrison does make it seem
      as though CBC’s intent was not malicious when they misrepresented
      #Gamergate.”

      I already sent a request to the CBC ombudsman to review this matter. While I tried to be polite to Mr. Harrison in my response, I did essentially call them out on their BS. While misrepresenting GamerGate once or twice might have been understandable, as Usher has pointed out in his previous articles on CBC’s coverage of GamerGate, they’ve chosen to focus on the “harassment of women” angle on FIVE SEPARATE OCCASIONS, they put Jennifer Dawe’s pro-GamerGate interview on ice, and their own journalists and reporters were caught mocking GamerGate’s supporters on Twitter. After this much crap has gone down, I can no longer give the CBC the benefit of the doubt and buy their excuse that they made an honest mistake. This looks more like deliberate pushing of an ideological narrative and sociopolitical agenda to me.

      In any case, while Americans joke about MSNBC and Fox News being the propaganda branches of the left and right wings, respectively, Canada is in a unique situation because the CBC is a crown corporation (i.e. state/federally funded). This means that, in the absolute worst case scenario, I can send the freakin’ Canadian government after them if I want to raise hell.

      • Anon

        > This means that, in the absolute worst case scenario, I can send the
        freakin’ Canadian government after them if I want to raise hell.

        You mean _they_ can send the Canadian Government after _you_, in the worst case scenario, don’t you?

      • lunararchivist

        No, I mean I can send the government after them by complaining to my local Member of Parliament. Funding a corporation to slander me and others with our own taxpayer dollars makes no sense.

      • Eric

        Fair enough. From Mr. Harrison’s email’s tone, I felt as though it wasn’t so much malice that guided their actions, but rather laziness: deadlines are pervasive in media and whoever wrote the report could very well have transcribed a select few “juicy” lines of the first piece out of Google onto the script just to get it over with ASAP. The axing of Ms. Dawe’s piece does indeed seem more troublesome, as do the actions of the CBC’s employees on Twitter, but I would hope that enough individuals with integrity remain within the CBC’s power structure to correct these shortcomings without us having to rain the Canadian government down on them, so to speak.

        Personally I am willing to give them the benefit of the doubt, at least for the time being. We were promised evenhanded reporting in the coming weeks and I will be waiting for it with baited breath. Rest assured, I will not hesitate to re-file a complaint if their next piece is even a tad biased.

      • lunararchivist

        While I’m personally inclined to think that Mr. Harrison may indeed be sincere, I can’t say the same for the CBC as a whole. The problem here is that it’s impossible to look at his stated opinion about GamerGate in the e-mail I received, the statements made about GamerGate “The National” news segment and other CBC reports, and the actions of other journalists and reporters at the CBC towards GamerGate and find anything that ISN’T consistent with the organization as an entity pushing a particular narrative or bias.

        As for sending the Canadian government after them, I don’t want that either. I just want the CBC to do its job by presenting the best arguments and flaws from both sides and let the viewers decide what to think about all this. I simply find it infuriatingly frustrating that I’ve had to go this far, because it shouldn’t be this hard to get people who’re supposed to be neutral and unbiased by nature of their profession to be neutral and unbiased.

        Add to that the fact that the CBC is probably our last, best chance at breaking through the mainstream media’s information embargo. MSNBC is a lost cause, CNN got it half right, most newspapers and magazines don’t give a damn. GamerGate’s supporters have no leverage over any of them, though, because getting them to admit wrongdoing at this point would require either legal action or getting one of the other mainstream media news networks like CBS, ABC, or *shudder* Fox News to actually do the research. But, unlike any of the others, the CBC is answerable to the government and we have a hell of a lot more leverage by comparison.

  • Linda M

    Their explanation seems rather circular. The focus has been on harassment of women, so that’s what they focused on? How about the harassment of everyone instead?

    I’d like to ask the CBC to review their coverage of male and female victims, to see whether it is balanced and representative of actual incidence rates.

  • King of Zeroes

    SocJus landwhales tend to throw their weight around a lot to get shit done.

    But no whale can stop the tide. There’s a storm brewing on the horizon, and it’s coming to sink this shitty fukken narrative. Bring the thunder, GamerGate.

  • ZettaZettaZetta

    “The thing is, while it may have started as a well-defined topic,
    as with most hashtags, this one too has morphed and changed. #GamerGate
    now has multiple aspects, among them, certainly, ethics in game
    journalism. The treatment of women in gaming is another. Both are
    important.“

    Does he realize why it is? Because other people said that to deflect the issue, since there are very guilty of egregious ethics violations that are undeniable at this point. If the CBC did some journalistic investigation into this to provide the truth (i.e. what taxpayers pay them for), they would find this out.

    By that logic, I believe the CBC has morphed into an organization for child trafficking instead of being a well-defined, publically funded broadcasting organization. What’s that, CBC? You’re providing evidence that you are what you say you are wholly, and there’s no proof that you’re trafficking children?

    Too late. While the CBC may have started as a well-defined organization, as with most organizations, this one too has morphed and changed. The CBC now has multiple aspects, among them, certainly, being a publicly funded broadcasting organization. The child trafficking ring that you run is another. Both are important.

    See how ridiculous this logic is?

    • Knightwing19

      That’s what I got too. I’m going to reply but I want to do it right so I’m going to take the weekend to think about it.

  • Mesonoxian_Methuselah

    While I appreciate the acknowledgement, the assurances are hollow when they’re relegated to conversations between those that already know the score. The only way that the CBC can make amends is to actually go forward with more even coverage and inform those that “learned” about what #GamerGate “about” was through their original report. In contrast to sensationalistic reporting, actual investigative journalism takes time, so I’ll be patient for a while. But I’m still not expecting anything beyond this contained apology that has no consequences in and of itself, beyond the fact that news organizations are aware that they’re pushing a false narrative. If anything, this awareness just makes them more adversarial that I had originally made them out to be, when I assumed them to simply be ignorant and misinformed. I can only hope that the tide is turning now, but I wouldn’t bet on it.

  • Den

    The problem with fear propaganda is that it creates a self-fulfilling prophecy: by constantly claiming that gaming culture is toxic, more and more outsiders will refuse to enter and engage the community despite this claim having no evidence to back it up. There is a story about how there are two wolves that define us, one good and one evil, and that the one who wins is the one we feed. In this scenario, we need to create an environment with open discussion, a place where an us vs. them mentality is broadened into the free market of ideas.

    I commend CBC for acknowledging that #GamerGate is in some way about ethics in video game journalism, and hope that more neutral coverage is presented when covering the controversy in the future; after all, we have built too many walls, and not enough bridges to connect people with.

  • Erthwjim

    #GamerGate now has multiple aspects, among them, certainly, ethics in game journalism. The treatment of women in gaming is another.

    Ok multiple aspects, I’m glad he acknowledges that, but he puts too much emphasis on the 2nd one. 99% of people are there for ethics in journalism, which can have several meanings from not attacking your readers to not being biased, but 1% (and that’s stretching it) are in gamergate to harass women. But since they go against the other 99%, I’d say they don’t truly represent gamergate. So for this CBC exec to include harassment of women as one of the two main things gamergate is about, is dishonest at best.

  • David Gray

    It is frankly better than the tripe I received as a reply from the BBC, which was limited to weasel words claiming that actually they were totally fair in their coverage.
    Even more annoying, the TV licence just got taken out of my account for a home I no longer live in. Because the BBC are also fucking thieves apparently.

  • Wonderkarp
  • Black Magic

    this is good news. At least Canada can get SOME of its pride back now.

  • ragething

    need more like this guy

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