Taiwan’s media organizations’ failure to provide sufficient high-quality international news could be a result of their lack of vision, as news outlets focus only on trivial and sensational stories to attract high ratings, media insiders said.
“There is demand for serious global news coverage in Taiwan, but the media do not want to make the investment,” said Feng Chien-san (馮建三), a journalism professor at National Chengchi University.
Feng’s comments echoed a survey conducted by the National Communications Commission last year, which found that 56.9 percent of respondents thought the nation’s media outlets carried far too little international news coverage.
Feng said both the quality and quantity of foreign news coverage are poor because Taiwan’s media outlets do not put enough time and resources into its production, and the choice of content broadcast is often “bizarre.”
Having good-quality international news coverage is expensive, and local media are often too lazy to explore the market and often resort to broadcasting “superficial” news stories to boost ratings, said Lin Yuan-huei (林元輝), head of the university’s journalism department.
“When all media providers are like street vendors chasing a small but rapid turnover, no investment will be made in self-improvement,” Lin said.
The government has also failed to formulate a media policy that grants the necessary incentives or stipulates that news providers must produce good-quality foreign news coverage, Lin added.
Even some representatives of national media organizations have said the country’s substandard media environment should be held responsible for its poor international news production.
TV stations are “too lazy to make events happening far away from Taiwan relevant and interesting to people’s lives,” said Jane Lee (李珍), an International Community Radio Taipei (ICRT) journalist, who worked at Taiwan Television for 15 years.
Feng Hsiao-lung, news manager of the Broadcasting Corp of China, said TV ratings are used by the media as the only standard when deciding what to broadcast.
“They are very near-sighted,” he said.
This view is shared by Jason Ho (何吉森), director of the commission’s Department of Content Affairs, who said the main factor holding TV channels back from showing more international news is TV ratings.
However, Ho also said that Taiwan is a democratic country which enjoys wide media freedom, so the government cannot demand that media outlets show more international news.
However, he added that TV channels that have recently applied for license renewals have nevertheless promised to improve the quantity and quality of their international news coverage.
Others blamed the lack of good international news coverage on the tastes of viewers and readers.
Many Taiwanese are used to reading tabloid-style political newspapers as the country is highly politically divergent, a practice that has affected consumption of foreign news as well, said Julia Lin, a correspondent at Hong Kong’s Phoenix Television.
To adapt to such habits, global news coverage is often aired during off-peak slots or published on less important pages, which only leads to further marginalization, she said.
“Compared with people in Hong Kong, most Taiwanese are much less demanding of the news content they receive daily,” Lin said.
Michael Yu, deputy director of the news department at the Public Television Service, attributed the situation to Taiwan’s limited international presence, adding that Taiwan’s lack of representation in on the global stage could also be a reason for its media’s indifference to foreign news.
However, Yu said that with the younger generation getting more access to the global community through travel, overseas study and the Internet, demand for foreign news is likely to increase.
Liu Hui-wen (劉慧雯), an assistant professor of journalism at National Chengchi University, said the nation’s weak public broadcasting system is another reason for excessive commercial intervention in news production, which results in inadequate foreign news coverage.
A well-operated public broadcasting service should safeguard news quality and provide the public with serious information, she said.
“The public should be better informed about why they need an independent media,” she added.
Taiwan does not put enough emphasis on media education, Liu said, adding that poor media literacy has led to a relatively disadvantaged audience that is less critical of news coverage.
Actor Darren Wang (王大陸) was questioned by prosecutors for allegedly orchestrating an attack on a taxi driver after he was allegedly driven on a longer than necessary route in a car he disliked. The questioning at the New Taipei City District Prosecutors’ Office was ongoing as of press time last night. Police have recommended charges of attempted murder. The legally embattled actor — known for his role in the coming-of-age film Our Times (我的少女時代) — is under a separate investigation for allegedly using fake medical documents to evade mandatory military service. According to local media reports, police said Wang earlier last year ordered a
A man in Tainan has been cleared on charges of public insult after giving the middle finger during a road rage incident, as judges deemed the gesture was made “briefly to express negative feelings.” In last week’s ruling at the High Court’s Tainan branch, judges acquitted a driver, surnamed Cheng (程), for an incident along Tainan’s Nanmen Road in September 2023, when Cheng had spotted a place to park his car in an adjacent lane. Cheng slowed down his vehicle to go into reverse, to back into the parking spot, but the car behind followed too closely, as its driver thought Cheng
CAUTION: Based on intelligence from the nation’s security agencies, MOFA has cautioned Taiwanese travelers about heightened safety risks in China-friendly countries The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) yesterday urged Taiwanese to be aware of their safety when traveling abroad, especially in countries that are friendly to China. China in June last year issued 22 guidelines that allow its courts to try in absentia and sentence to death so-called “diehard” Taiwanese independence activists, even though Chinese courts have no jurisdiction in Taiwan. Late last month, a senior Chinese official gave closed-door instructions to state security units to implement the guidelines in countries friendly to China, a government memo and a senior Taiwan security official said, based on information gathered by Taiwan’s intelligence agency. The
President William Lai (賴清德) should protect Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC), and stop supporting domestic strife and discord, former president Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) wrote on Facebook yesterday. US President Donald Trump and TSMC on Monday jointly announced that the company would invest an additional US$100 billion over the next few years to expand its semiconductor manufacturing operations in the US. The TSMC plans have promoted concern in Taiwan that it would effectively lead to the chipmaking giant becoming Americanized. The Lai administration lacks tangible policies to address concerns that Taiwan might follow in Ukraine’s footsteps, Ma wrote. Instead, it seems to think it could