SB

30 posts

SB

SB

@junterest

Fortune Favours the Bold

Katılım Nisan 2020
5.3K Takip Edilen18 Takipçiler
SB
SB@junterest·
@KaiUzama These Kitchener Landlords are wilding. You are better off moving. Asked for a rent review after seeing your tweets, mine gave me a $75 discount lol
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SB@junterest·
I’m sorry Canada but two people just died. This is a ridiculous fight to pick with the CEO of Air Canada apple.news/Anz7KO6rKR0eE8…
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SB@junterest·
The title of the show is literally “Head to Head”, the problem with Nigeria is Egbons like this, who have no moral ground to stand, no conviction whatsoever.
Segun(🦁)Showunmi (PhD)@SegunShowunmi

Hostility Is Not Journalism. Mehdi Hassan Take Note. There is a clear difference between tough journalism and outright hostility. One serves the public interest. The other serves the ego of the interviewer. Unfortunately, the recent exchange between @mehdirhasan and presidential spokesperson @BwalaDaniel fell squarely into the latter category. What viewers witnessed was not a serious interview. It was an attempted public ambush. From the outset, the tone was aggressively confrontational. Questions were framed less as inquiries into governance and more as prosecutorial traps. Responses were repeatedly interrupted before they could develop. Clarifications were brushed aside. The atmosphere was unmistakable: this was not a conversation designed to inform viewers but a spectacle designed to embarrass the guest. Serious journalism does not operate this way. The craft of interviewing demands discipline. It requires the ability to ask difficult questions while still allowing the guest to articulate answers. It requires intellectual confidence strong enough to permit disagreement without descending into open hostility. Above all, it requires a commitment to substance over theatrics. That commitment was glaringly absent. Nigeria is currently grappling with a range of serious national challenges economic restructuring, security threats, governance reforms, and the complex work of stabilizing a large and dynamic democracy. A responsible interviewer would have used the opportunity to interrogate the administration’s policies on these matters: What strategies are being deployed? What reforms are underway? What outcomes should citizens expect? Instead, viewers were treated to an exercise in selective outrage and repetitive interruption. Even more troubling was the insinuation that political realignment is somehow illegitimate. Democratic politics is built on shifting alliances. Individuals and movements evolve. Former opponents become partners when national circumstances demand cooperation. This is neither shocking nor dishonorable; it is one of the defining characteristics of democratic political life. History provides countless examples. Leaders across the world have entered alliances with former adversaries when the demands of governance required it. To pretend otherwise is either intellectual dishonesty or a deliberate attempt to create sensationalism where none exists. But the deeper problem in the interview was tone. A journalist who openly ridicules or repeatedly attempts to humiliate a guest crosses an important professional boundary. The role of the interviewer is to hold power accountable not to behave like a courtroom prosecutor seeking a viral “gotcha” moment. When the pursuit of humiliation replaces the pursuit of insight, journalism loses its credibility. Audiences deserve better than that. They deserve interviews that illuminate policy, probe governance, and help citizens understand how leaders intend to confront the pressing challenges of the day. What they do not need is a theatrical performance in which hostility is mistaken for intellectual rigor. Respectful engagement does not weaken journalism; it strengthens it. Firm questioning does not require contempt. Professionalism does not require aggression. If global media wishes to retain its claim to moral authority as a watchdog of democracy, it must remember a basic principle: the goal of journalism is to inform the public, not to stage spectacles at the expense of civility and substance. The interview in question did neither. It was not a demonstration of fearless journalism. It was a demonstration of how easily the craft can slide into something far less admirable when provocation becomes the objective and professionalism is abandoned. Otunba Segun Showunmi The Alternative

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SB@junterest·
He probably just changed and set the precedent for generations of how US leaders will govern. The world has changed, no more status quo
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SB@junterest·
Hate trump all you want, but he will probably end up as one of the most consequential US president of our lifetime
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SB@junterest·
Ozzy right now sleeping
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SB@junterest·
Time is really a gentleman
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SB@junterest·
The only reason Minister Wike is staying put in PDP, is so he can say “he was only been in one party all his life” Nothing more smh
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SB@junterest·
Michael Ajifowoke@RotimiAji

@0x @imoteda Thanks for clarifying that, I am, quite frankly, exhausted by the digital dramaturges who curate epistemologically vacuous click enticements, yet remain the algorithm’s most egregiously anointed beneficiaries.

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