Thursday, November 26, 2015

#SomeoneTellFoxNews: How International Media Covered Pope in Kenya

#SomeoneTellFoxNews: How International Media Covered Pope in Kenya
By MUSYOKA NGUI
Fox News has been criticised byKenyans for its approach to African issues which exposed warped camera lens under which it views Africa. The stereotype comes close on the heels of US President Barack Obama who a CNN commentator called Kenya a “hotbed of terror”.
Fox headlined “Pope Visits War-Torn Africa” despite Kenya being a peaceful state which has largely healed from the disputed 2007/8 post-election violence. The Pope himself brought messages of hope and reconciliation.
Fox News was whipped by Kenyans on Twitter for biased reporting on Pope Francis in Africa

#SomeoneTellFoxNews for its stereotyped news coverage. The popularity of the topic was only rivalled with #PapalMass which topped the trends.
BBC covered up to the minute with live feeds from Twitter. It quoted Pope’s address to the guests and Catholic congregation numbering a million at the University of Nairobi. The British broadcaster remained the most professional international press with a special focus on Africa in a fair manner.
Nairobi Trends during Pope's visit. Photo/BBC.

The local media did a great job too eclipsing the international press by dedicating acres of newspaper space and TV airtime to the Pope’s maiden visit to Africa. Africans need to tell their stories to the world. The African narrative must get out because it is worth telling since it is not all gloom and doom in the continent.
The Fox News Trends on Twitter remain scathing. See below:
#SomeoneTellFoxNews they should air documentaries on how foxes coexist and leave our continent out of their BS!
#SomeoneTellFoxNews cnn tried and failed
#SomeoneTellFoxNews that even white cars ride on black tyres...#SayNoToRacism
#Someonetellfoxnews: KOT Attack Fox News For Biased Reporting
#SomeoneTellFoxNews #KOT ruthlessly hit at FOX News for “War-Torn Africa label #PapalMass http://goo.gl/azKCi0 
#SomeoneTellFoxNews the last time we had war, it was on twitter with CNN. Their VP had to personally apologize to our President @UKenyatta
it was not war. It was a 21 Gun Salute.


Immortal legacy of my professors beyond campus

Immortal legacy of my professors beyond campus
My lecturer Dr. Samson Raiji and I. He is a media and public relations don.

By MUSYOKA NGUI
It was the last act in a journey that started four years ago thirteen days today. The graduation, having been postponed indefinitely, threw preparations into disarray. Comrades who were updating statuses with academic invites fizzled out just as a flat drink does. Just like that an ad was placed on national dailies and university website.
The frustration exposed the fatigue and weariness of job hunters and creators who expressed displeasure in missed opportunities. Others said were it not for the graduation they would have been employed long ago. More even attributed their broke pockets to the delayed graduation. As if sleaze and thievery had not descended on top echelons of the government making opportunities only reserved for cronies, clans and cliques.
Fast forward, having been granted the power to read after two long holidays (combined six months) I know the value of friendships. A lecturer used to tell us the only true best friends we will ever have are from campus. Perhaps it is because we have so much in common hence the understanding.
Uplifting and unsung stories abound. The journalism club we started is still going strong. Joseph tells me they had to change leadership. The ones we left in place did not work. Neighbours considered noise our mock radio. Marto the Technician readily gave us keys to fetch the speakers, mics, mixers and cables. That is when I realized Kalung’e had a beautiful radio voice that should have been in our leading airwaves like from second year. Yet we were there struggling to operationalise an unused frequency, stock media lab and manage blogs for the victims of writing bugs. It bit me and like a malignant cancer  I passed the pen to the club.
These days I don’t hear much about Theatre and Arts Club. The flamboyant T1 cast who begged the county council of Chuka to lend them a stage in their Town Hall and the mayor flatly refused as if it was his mother’s?
It is as if when we left  with some of the most prized possessions of the prophetic university. While working in Meru for County Review I was told I will not return to graduate with the only Faculty of Arts and Humanities Dean I know: Dr. George Ngugi King’ara. I did not accept or move on when he left for KU without witnessing the class he taught every lecturer punctually and without fail.
Just midway through campus Ms. Rose Nyakio Kimani secured a scholarship to Germany. She stole a visit and as soon as word went round she was around mobs of media students curiously crowded her corridors to say hi and know when she will be returning to teach them. She taught History of Mass Communication, Radio, Microphones and she was the one who exceptionally listened to every student talk. She did not interrupt whether your idea was silly or sharp. Maybe she will be back.
Now that you know my earlier campus lecturers, the other trio were (are) Raiji, Papa(Nabea) and Ms. Ann. Though I spent most of my time in college disagreeing with Raiji and openly differing with him, we kissed and made up after attachment. His news writing emphasis came out clearly and although he never showed up for my KNA assessment, he paid for our drinks and rode us back to hostels  in his car after what came to be known as Last Supper at Hotel Godka. He still is a friend I consult on media matters. Real issues and man talk.
I’d say Papa remains the most social and firm. He was as contrasting as photojournalism photos he taught.  A gym instructor no less, Papa nearly drowned my name by evoking stereotype when he repeatedly called me Mutua. He made colleagues think I was from Makueni and living in Machakos. They got it much later.
Papa, he of the famous “if you so remember what we were working on during our last session”, is the only lecturer who gave me a D and an A yet we remained cordial. He could have had his own standard of measuring exams. Some of these things vindicate him when his students shine.
Ms. Ann joined us latter. That notwithstanding, she left a mark that marches the elders who saw us grow from teens to beards and bulging baby bumps. The stunning beauty was a stickler to respect. She would not talk until all chairs stop screeching. I took it in stride when she said me and Kalung’e were fixed- minded when we did not seem to buy her argument that digital migration had stolen fan base from the three ugly sisters (read KTN, NTV and Citizen TV). She held that K24 and KBC had amassed followers during the 14 days of television blackout.
Ann taught gender with passion and I saw her fire through the gaze she shed to the girls. I would say she was their advocate for gender equality and she embodied the far a woman can go if she believes in herself. But right there laid the trouble. She seemed overly feministic and radical, kinda blaming men for all that are wrong with women. Surely is that fair? To the point of telling girls to reject a small screen cinema that passes for laptop entertainment and demand from their boyfriends a flick, an IMAX.
Matundura, Kobia,  Mugambi, Muthengi, Mwathi, Mueni and Doreen had  brief stints. Some were part timers and others from line departments related to media. Computer, law, Kiswahili, sociology, psychology etc. All played their part in the Friday 13th.
I took the perspective of teachers because it is from the view of a student you know the legacy of the professor.



Thursday, November 19, 2015

Yes, We Listen to Sexy Radio Talk Shows But it does not make us cheat-Research



 Yes, We listen to Sexy Radio Talk Show But it does not make us cheat-Research
I researched the popular breakfast talk show by Maina Kageni and Daniel Ndambuki (Churchill) ; here are the findings.

Talk shows are popular in Kenya’s Frequency Modulation (FM) airwaves. The morning talk shows take place between 6am and 10 am on weekdays. Classic 105’s Morning Breakfast Show is one of the most commonly listened radio shows in Kenya.  The purpose of this study was to find out the social effects which the listeners of Classic 105 FM encounter after listening to the morning show. The researcher used case studies as the preferred research design since it gives a holistic approach. It also exemplifies the phenomena under study to boost the understanding and appreciation of the research problem under investigation. Classic 105 is a contemporary radio station that is listened in both rural and urban areas. As such, the researcher conducted his study at Chuka Township in Tharaka Nithi County in Kenya. The sample population consisted of 20 respondents. Each gender was equally represented. The researcher administered the questionnaires himself. He did not encounter illiteracy challenges since he was dealing with working middle class youths with 18 and 35 age bracket in who work in the town. The researcher used SPSS (Statistical Package of Social Sciences) version 17.0 to analyze data obtained from the field. The data was analyzed in bar graphs, pie charts and histograms and percentages were used where necessary. The study unearthed that Classic 105 morning talk show indeed socially affect the listeners as an overwhelming majority of 95 per cent said that money factor played a significant role in romantic relationships as portrayed in the show. The respondents admitted that explicit sexual content affected their social behaviour although they ironically contended that they are not encouraged to cheat by the show hosts. The researcher (Musyoka Ngui) recommended that the owner of the station, Radio Africa Group Ltd should moderate the language with regard to the age of the listeners who may not be the target audience but tune in to the shows. The station utilised technology to interact with its audience.

Tuesday, November 10, 2015

#FreeNgirachu: Arrested Journalist tops Twitter trends

#FreeNgirachu: Arrested Journalist tops Twitter trends
“Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter”.-Thomas Jefferson, 3rd President of the United States
A senior reporter has been arrested over a story he did regarding interior ministry spending.
By MUSYOKA NGUI
The Nation’s parliamentary editor John Ngirachu was arrested at the precincts of the National Assembly for exposing procurement expenditure incurred by the Ministry of Interior and Coordination of National Government.
A journalist protests against infringed media freedom. Photo/The Guardian

Interior Cabinet Secretary Major General (Rtd) Joseph Nkaiserry said that the respected reporter will be released after revealing the names of the sources of his story. Journalists are ethically entitled to guard the identities of confidential sources and blowing off the cover may expose the sources to danger including injury and death. Others may have to bear with condemnation and reprimanding from their seniors and colleagues.
Nation Media Group which owns the Daily Nation is the largest media stable in the entire East and Central Africa.
Nkaiserry reacted to the expose by the editor saying that it could jeopardize national security. He added that his ministry officials had presented information to the Public Accounts Committee of the August House in camera as per the law.
On the other hand, the public the right to know. The arrest presents a controversy over freedom of the media and the right of the public to demand accountability from their leaders on the one hand and the right of the secret code for the government to conceal confidential information for the preservation of national security. The primary mandate of any government is to protect its citizens.
On Twitter, Kenyans have expressed mixed reactions regarding the arrest of the journalist. #FreeNgirachu is trending right now on top of Nairobi Trends.
The arrest comes days in the wake of increased scrutiny of government spending in the Planning and Devolution ministry which has put Jubilee Government’s commitment to fighting corruption under the microscope.

A quick review of the #Free Ngirachu tweets is here.
Hannintgon Otieno Retweeted The Standard Digital
Looks like Jubilee don't need votes from media sector too. Puking on everyones shoes they R @gathara #FreeNgirachu
Retweeted Nanjira (@NiNanjira): So yeah, #FreeNgirachu, but once he's free, let's not lose the momentum.
Nkaissery should not crush down our mirrors @dailynation #FreeNgirachu
Journalism is printing what someone else does not want printed. Everything else is public relations.- George Orwell. #FreeNgirachu
What rubbish!Are the sources y'll are demanding from @JohnNgirachu a threat to national security? #FreeNgirachu
@HonKaniniKega @InteriorKE you need to know media is interested in revenue generation by cooking false stories for pple to buy their papers. As a PAC member I am disturbed by the gross misrepresentation of facts by the the media on the spending of 3.8B by @InteriorKE.
Be the judge. Read the full story by clicking the link below and keep the conversation going:



Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Graft and conspicuous consumption at the centre of inflation and debt

Graft and conspicuous consumption at the centre of inflation and debt
T
he government has embarked in grandiose consumption in huge projects which do not make sense to wananchi. A demoralised society and an arrogant government with can’t pay won’t pay attitude only breeds economic turmoil and rises poverty levels.
A Twitter grab trending under #Waiguru where Kenyans On Twitter  condemned the rampant sleaze in the Devolution and Planning Ministry

By MUSYOKA NGUI
The rising cost of living occasioned by skyrocketing interest rates and grand corruption in the Jubilee government is worrying.
The opaque transactions that surround Eurobond debt saga and National Youth Service within the government, while no heads seem to roll makes for a disturbing lack of integrity and accountability in management of public funds.
Commercial banks have raised interest rates in response to government raiding local markets to plug yawning budget holes. Small businesses and even established corporates are feeling the cash crunch. As a result businesses are likely to lay off staff and register limited profits.
The government has embarked in grandiose consumption in huge projects which do not make sense to wananchi. Why build a railway next to another one? Does the still born laptop project make economic sense when the teachers are not paid their salaries despite a court order to that effect? A demoralised society and an arrogant government with can’t pay won’t pay attitude only breeds economic turmoil and rises poverty levels.
The populist claim by Deputy President William Ruto that interest rates will come down in 60 days cannot be believed by anyone. Tell me why then did the interest rates climb up even after the much touted Eurobond that was billed as the cure for inflation. Of suspicion is the unconstitutional transactions effected by the government without the approval of Eurobond money by Agnes Odhiambo who is the Controller of Budget.
Counties have not helped matters as they have localised corruption and wastage.  As we approach electioneering period in 2017 the political class seem to be bent on causing political and ethnic hatred by their poisonous tongues. The investors will withhold their disposable incomes when faced with such volatile uncertainties. The result is a depressed economic growth in the remaining term of President Kenyatta.
It does not help matters that constitutional commissions are being subjected to political interference. The Office of Director of Public Prosecutions, Ethics and Anti-Corruption Commission are all fighting off external forces from the Parliament and the Executive.
In order to rescue our country from further crises, leaders should be seen to be in charge. Those cited in corruption investigations should step aside as they await for completion of investigation from courts and the police prosecutors.  The government must live within its means because in the final analysis the taxpayers are the ones hardest hit by inflation.