Media and Predictions
There is an old adage in fundraising – urgency above everything.
Consider the following pitch:
Indigenous tribes in Papua New Guinea
are going through a rough time. Freshwater supplies are being compromised by
tribal land wars. While many will survive, a portion will be without water come
December. Can you help?
The problem is apparent, but the urgency is lacking. Assuming
we’re months away from December, the donor has time, and 9 times out of 10, he
or she will wait.
If we switched it up however and said:
Indigenous tribes are dying day by day
in Papua New Guinea. Freshwater has been severely compromised, and the only
hope is to increase supply and water delivery today. We need your help
immediately.
This is not necessarily a lie. Death is occurring (a nasty
secret, death takes place everywhere, every day). Perhaps it’s not at the rate
that’s insinuated, but happening nonetheless.
This puts the potential donor in a rough spot. You might not
have heard of Papua New Guinea, but clearly, without freshwater (and your
help), people’s lives are on the line.
Another industry that adopts this same tactic is the media.
“Urgency above everything” likely emanated from successful news outlets as
opposed to fundraising gurus. People are curious, social, and tribal. News that
brings to light a threat to the “tribe” will be absorbed at much higher rates
than news that is agnostic or non-threatening.
We are currently living through an excellent example of this.
The media is on a tear. Comparisons to the Great Wars, 9/11, the frail rotting
away while the rest of us ride out the quarantine with Netflix and a glass (or
three) of a fine Argentinean Malbec. I don’t know about you, but this notion
that we all suddenly have endless hours of free time on our hands seems to have
passed my house by. Perhaps Fred and Marjorie three doors down can wake up at
10, enjoy a leisurely lunch, and binge watch Ozark while their children autonomously connect to their online
classes and remain quiet as church mice. My sense is this isn’t occurring
anywhere, but the media could give a crap. That doesn’t coincide with the
narrative.
Again, “urgency above everything” depends on a clear and present
danger. We must urgently hunker down and do nothing or else …
Barry Glassner wrote an enlightening book a decade ago – “The Culture of Fear: Why Americans Fear the Wrong Things.”
From a sociological standpoint, there might not be a more important book you
could read right now. In fact, right now is the perfect time. You’ve got the
time, right?
The main takeaway – the media fuels itself on scares. Everything
from road rage to teenage suicide, workplace violence, and the most insidious
of them all – “granny dumping.” Have you callously dumped your grandparents? If
not, rest assured your neighbor has (perhaps it was Fred and Marjorie). In
fact, these are all widespread issues in America and why we are a decadent
society doomed for failure and ruin!
We’re all guilty of tuning in, be it traditional, primetime
television, cable news, or Youtube. It’s the classic car crash scenario, you
see it coming and swear you won’t be like the rest of the sheep and slow down
to stare, but what do you do – slow down and stare.
Jim Cramer is another fascinating one. He makes a living yelling
at you to buy, hold, or sell a stock. With a bunch of computers surrounding
him, a spacious work area, and a disheveled tie (meant to indicate he’s been
hard at work crunching numbers and working on behalf of your portfolio), Cramer
is supposed to come off as passionate. This all equates to the perfect person
to place the future of your 401K with. Yet, has anyone ever followed up on Mr.
Cramer’s advice? What’s his positive hit rate?
Cramer is akin to Nostradamus. The guy never predicted the
economy would level off and sustain average growth rates of 1.9% for four
years. That’s boring and who cares if it comes true. But he obviously predicted
9/11 when he wrote:
“The sky will burn at forty-five
degrees, fire approaches the great New City. Immediately a huge scattered flame
leaps up.”
And lest we forget the great fire of London:
“The blood of the just will be demanded
of London burnt by fire in three times twenty plus six.”
I wish Nostradamus had opined on my Vegas trip in 1991 when I
lost a king’s ransom at the craps table. Had I known ahead of time, I might
have kept driving and hit Santa Monica for a long weekend.
We’re living in an era where news could not be more prevalent.
The problem is, our notion of the word “news” (wrongly) assumes an underlying
premise that there is a fact (truth) attached to said news. Perhaps this was
the case 80 years ago, but no longer. A tweet is not news, despite it being
framed as such.
The survivors to emerge from all this won’t come from a specific
sector. Instead, it will be those who can absorb the news (noise), digest it,
segment it, and rationally reason which pieces are the likeliest to be closest
to the truth. This skill is vital for financial, social, and emotional
security. The people that entertain or presume to inform us do not have our
best interests at heart. Rather, advertisers pay them handsomely and we consume
it like a Kardashian episode.
Think strategically, act rationally, and keep Fred and Marjorie
in your prayers.
No comments:
Post a Comment