Jurriaan Kamp , Ode's co-founder and editor-in-chief, sifts through the bad news that too often obscures our view of the stories from around the world that offer inspiration and hope.


Good News

I would like to briefly speak with you about news. Because that’s what Ode Magazine is about. And that’s where we present a different perspective.

We are made to believe that news is whatever is presented to us on the daily front pages and what makes the headlines on television. Media pride themselves about their objectivity. But one can hardly argue that the media present us with an objective picture of whatever goes on in our world. We only learn about the mistakes and the problems. About fraud and violence. We only learn about whatever goes wrong. And then we are supposed to believe that that is our reality.

Of course it is not. On every day in most lives, more goes right than wrong. There are 53 countries on the African continent. Only 6 regularly make the news. The reports about these 6 countries that face enormous challenges, completely distort the public perception of the complete continent. We tend to believe that Africa is a place of continuous disaster. In reality the per capita income of the vast majority of African countries is much higher than the per capita income of the new economic superpower: India.

We don’t know that because we read the papers and we watch television. I think that is wrong and at Ode we want to change that. We believe that media have the obligation to report what happens in the world, not just what goes wrong.

It is an unfortunate trend. Recently a research group analyzed the front pages of British newspapers during a two-week period. It was exactly the same kind of research that had been done 30 years ago. The research group was looking for the ratio between positive and negative stories on the front pages. In the Seventies – at the height of the cold war - there was one positive story against 3 negative stories. Thirty years later there was only one positive story against 17 negative stories.

If I look at these numbers, I think that I have been living on a different planet these past 3 decades. I have seen major progress. I have witnessed positive change. Despite the threat of terrorism, we live in a much more secure world than we did 30 years ago.

At Ode we always look for the possible. We are optimists. We have remained optimists. Because, don’t forget, that’s the way we all begin our lives. I have yet to meet a pessimistic baby.

We know that there are problems. Of course, we don’t close our eyes to misery. But we really differ in our mission: we want to help, we want to solve problems, meet challenges and that’s why we look for possible solutions. We believe in opportunities. In the creativity of humankind. In everyone’s longing to make a positive contribution.

It is a bit strange that our focus on the news is so unique. But let’s look closely at that word: news. It’s about the new. Do we really think that the next bomb explosion in Baghdad is news? Isn’t that just the next sad and very unfortunate event? There is hardly anything new about such an event.

Here’s some Ode news that you may look forward to in the coming months. We believe it is news when in the suburbs of Paris one man is turning immigrant troublemakers into successful entrepreneurs. We believe it is news when thousands of cotton farmers in India turn organic, providing themselves with a better income and making the planet healthier. We believe it is news when a Nigerian doctor is able to operate a full service, state of the art heart hospital in a third world country at 10 percent of the costs of such a hospital in the West.

These are the stories we are finding, because we are looking for them. Please join our search. We are sure you know many more promising examples of people and initiatives that are making the world a better place. Let’s celebrate them. Let’s sing praise to them. Let’s bring an ode to them.

Comments (10)

www.classifiedcircles.org

I am sorry I have to make it short but I hope you will visit the site and look around...I love to hear from you!

Carolyn

posted by CarolynG on 8/ 1/2007 1:00 pm

Jurriaan, I like you am addicted to possibilities. The Centre for Public Integrity in the U.S. says that America is at it's lowest level of trust in government and the corporate sector since the 1930's. The defintion of insanity is to continue to do the same things with the same results. The media continues to show us the ugly underbelly of America; fraud, deceit, lies, and aggressive military action.

When John Q public turns on the 6:00 news, he continues to see everything that's wrong and he has two options; don't turn it on, or get so frustrated and angry that he goes out and buys a gun and shoots up the local post office. It is the loss of hope that fuels frustration, despair ans feelings of disenfranchisement. Ode Magazine gives us hope. Let me be the first to volunteer my services to creating a new media outlet for Ode. Instead of CNN (Constant Negative News) we need the GNN (Good News Network).

Jurriaan, I offer you my extensive background in producing and hosting syndicated radio and television programs to start the ball rolling. Ode to the people---long live the revolution!

posted by holender on 7/26/2007 2:16 pm

hoi jur, hier s'ace ...

i read you on india ...

are you familiar to www.wmgd.net/symposium ?

if you are interested may we can project on that mission?

remember the treaty and "generation binding" germinator ;-)

we are edging the humility as power esteem ...

thanks for the opportunitY here !

posted by sYace on 7/23/2007 3:57 pm

Here's the good news of the decade from a planetary perspective.

The Blue Moon butterfly of Somoa has done a quantum evolutionary leap, and we humans are in the midst of a leap of our own!

The male Blue Moon went from virtual extinction (down to 1%) up to 40% in less than one year. Scientists baffled; say it typically takes hundreds or thousands of years for evolution like this to happen. (recent news story)

If a butterfly can do it, so can we. And we are! Bet you can feel it happening, eh?

posted by Davolite on 7/17/2007 6:54 pm

AGREE. Let us celebrate the news about breakthrough solutions and not just the problems for sensationalism that benefit who want to bring down optimism and "can do" attitude in people to divert progress.

I am one with ODE to sing the hymns of praise and optimism in the FREE SPIRIT OF PEOPLE to drumbeat the UNWAVERING ATTITUDE that DRIVES GOOD AND PURPOSEFUL ACTION. It begins with COMPASSION... it is the passion with a compass that points to the true north: THE TRUTH.

posted by grace.bakunawa on 7/14/2007 3:31 pm

I have taught my students for years that one very effective way to improve one's daily life is to go on a news fast. I have spent as much as 6 months without once seeing the "news" in print, radio, television or internet. The interesting thing is that the programming runs so deep in our shared mind that I always seem to know what the major headlines are anyway. As you said -- it ain't nothin' new. Even PBS news is still often focused on the worst hurt and suffering in the world today.

After all the persecution, violence and repression of the 60's and 70's, maybe it's a very wonderful thing that peace takes over us quietly. They cannot hurt or defend against that which they cannot see.

posted by goldenskyhook on 7/10/2007 11:08 am

It's universal, BAD news sells. That is what the media mogols demand of their reporters. I once worked for a small local paper writing a "good news" upbeat column each week about my community at the Jersey shore. After a while a woman from NY bought the paper.

She was a first time newspaper owner. and apparently had some ideas she thought people wanted to read about in the paper. She told me she didn't want me to write for the paper any longer because she said my good news articles were "fluff" and not news at all. She told me she may consider putting in some articles of mine if I began to write some "real" hard news. When I asked her what she meant by that she said, "like this article about the man who shot his friend over a drug deal." I said, "Someone else can write that, it's not for me."

So I decided to show her she made a mistake, I went to two other local papers and they took my "good news" articles, which I continued to write for another 10 years. Goes to show you that good news is really welcomed by most people if given the choice. Keep giving us the choice! Thank you.

posted by dorothy on 7/10/2007 9:37 am

I second that emotion!

posted by bridgeymah on 7/ 8/2007 7:45 pm

I love good news!

posted by brenda50 on 7/ 2/2007 8:05 am

I too am tired of hearing about our worlds problems. How can anyone be inspired when we keep getting bombarded by stories of bombs, poverty, sickness and fear. Where can we go from that when it 'seems' like it keeps happening around us.

After reading your blog, I checked for myself. The front page of my local newspaper had 1 good article out of 12 bad ones. All the other headlines had words such as bomb, risk, fear, man dies, police shot, heavy traffic, more rain falling, etc. In comparison, take a look at the latest issue of Ode and you get words like empowers, beautiful, beyond, fight disease, bright ideas, shaping future.

What a breath of fresh air! Thanks for your magazine and all that you do. This is definitely a step in the right direction.

posted by katiek on 6/29/2007 12:45 pm

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