11월 162007 0 Responses

Spin (from Wikipedia) 수정 | 삭제

Spin (from Wikipedia)
수정 | 삭제
Spin

In public relations, spin is a sometimes pejorative term signifying a heavily biased portrayal in one’s own favor of an event or situation. While traditional public relations may also rely on creative presentation of the facts, “spin” often, though not always, implies disingenuous, deceptive and/or highly manipulative tactics. Politicians are often accused of spin by commentators and political opponents, when they produce a counter argument or position.

The term is borrowed from ball sports such as cricket, where a spin bowler may impart spin on the ball during a delivery so that it will curve through the air or bounce in an advantageous manner.

The techniques of “spin” include:

  • Selectively presenting facts and quotes that support one’s position (cherry picking)
  • Non-denial denial
  • Phrasing in a way that assumes unproven truths
  • Euphemisms to disguise or promote one’s agenda
  • Ambiguity
  • Skirting
  • Rejecting the validity of hypotheticals
  • Appealing to internal policies

Another spin technique involves careful choice of timing in the release of certain news so it can take advantage of prominent events in the news. A famous reference to this practice occurred when British Government press officer Jo Moore used the phrase It’s now a very good day to get out anything we want to bury, (widely paraphrased or misquoted as “It’s a good day to bury bad news”), in an email sent on September 11, 2001. The furor caused when this email was reported in the press eventually caused her to resign.

[edit] Spin doctor

Skilled practitioners of spin are sometimes called “spin doctors”, though probably not to their faces unless it is said facetiously. It is the PR equivalent of calling a writer a “hack“. Perhaps the most well-known person in the UK often described as a “spin doctor” is Alastair Campbell, who was involved with Tony Blair‘s public relations between 1994 and 2003, and also played a controversial role as press relations officer to the British and Irish Lions rugby side during their 2005 tour of New Zealand.

The American radio and television talk-show host Bill O’Reilly has called his television show The O’Reilly Factor “The No Spin Zone”, emphasizing his own purported dislike of the phenomenon. Some other American talk and radio-show hosts and commentators, such as Keith Olbermann, who maintains an on-going “feud with Bill O’Reilly”, and who himself has been tagged with being more liberal in his views, mock O’Reilly’s epithet “no spin zone” suggesting his own avoidance of “spin” to be just another instance of spin from “the other side”. (Olbermann frequently labels O’Reilly as “The Worst Person in the World” in one of his segments on his own show Countdown, which airs at the same time as The O’Reilly Factor on rival cable network MSNBC.) Such commentators on politics, despite their prominent roles in mainstream-media journalism, which purports to maintain objectivity, at times and sometimes even often seem engaged in the very phenomenon of spin that they deride. Many such commentators and their featured on-air media consultants, commonly termed “talking heads” or pundits, come to programs on radio, television, and in publishing from prior professional careers in public relations and politics, sometimes even as former political campaign directors or speech writers for political figures; for those who do, mastering the “art” of spin has already been an important part of their past work experience, and it may lead not only to their acute understanding and critique of the phenomenon but also to their supreme ability to continue practicing it in ever-more subtle ways.

State-run media in many countries also engage in spin by selectively allowing news stories that are favorable to the government while censoring anything that could be considered critical. They may also use propaganda to indoctrinate or actively influence citizens’ opinions.

by 우마미 | 2007/08/07 17:10 | 새글들(2007) | 트랙백 | 덧글(0)

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