ReviewEssays.com - Term Papers, Book Reports, Research Papers and College Essays
Search

Smog: The Big Story

Essay by   •  September 6, 2010  •  Term Paper  •  1,859 Words (8 Pages)  •  2,032 Views

Essay Preview: Smog: The Big Story

Report this essay
Page 1 of 8

Mardy Ying Assignment #4

WRIT 140

Rajamannar

November 10, 1999

Smog: The Big Story

The beautiful mountain ranges surrounding the Los Angeles region make a magnificent view, but unfortunately the smog problem in Los Angeles prevents everyone from enjoying this. Smog is a large environmental problem that needs to be concentrated on to find solutions. The media, which includes television, newspaper, magazines, and organizations, is delivering messages to inform the public concerning smog, but are these messages expressing the true environmental issues about smog? In the present day world, the media does not adequately explain any environmental issue. Obviously, the media's main objective is to get the best story; and sometimes the media would do anything to achieve that goal, even if it means to alter the truth and perception. Although the truth is Los Angeles has always been known for its severe smog problem, the media has recently began to hype this problem to the extent of positioning it as disastrous, because the media is constantly on the look out for dramatic news stories.

The smog problem in Los Angeles has been portrayed as being disastrous as the media dramatizes the harmful health effects of smog. The severity of health effects depends on the smog's intensity and the amount of smog exposure. For susceptible people with asthma or other lung disorder, any weak level of smog could affect their health. As for healthy individuals, a medium level of smog will be enough to affect them. Smog reduces normal lung function on an individual by inflaming the walls of the lung, and therefore causing chest pains and coughs. This description of smog would be a true news story for the media to cover, but based on today's media standard, this would not be considered a "story". From the media's view, a "story" is any dramatizing, heart-pounding, or shocking news that would grab the public's attention. By warning people to stay indoors and avoid outdoor activities when there is a smog alert is more of an exciting "story" than simply stating the facts about smog. Reporting of an increase in hospital visits for lung disorder caused by smog is also a "story" that is worth covering.

The media greatly publicizes stories about smog causing harmful health effects on children. Children are a symbol of innocence, so a story about them being threatened by smog is unfortunately more of an exciting story than one about children protected from the harmful effects of smog. Recently, the media reported on a big study of 3,600 Southland school kids who had wheezing attacks that are related to nitrogen dioxide found in smog (Cone B1). Smog is now seen as life threatening as it was blamed for the death of a 14 year-old brother of Maggie Perales, a Bell Gardens resident, who died from cancer. The brother attended Suva Elementary School in the city of Bell Gardens that is next to chrome-plating plants emitting high level of toxic chemicals into the air (Cone B1). It is this constant exposure to these chemicals that have caused the cancer found in Perales's brother. There are many more identical stories about children dying from highly toxic chemicals found in smog, because they either live or attend school near polluting factories. Such a death-related story only personifies smog to be like a murderer as it "contaminate our communities and kill our children" as Maggie Perales reacted upon the smog's deadly force.

The media has hyped the smog problem by distorting people's view about smog according to Dr. John Peters, Professor of Preventing Medicine at USC School of Medicine. He said, "I've heard people say that living in L.A. is like smoking a pack a day--clearly, that's nonsense. Whether it's like smoking one cigarette a day, half a cigarette a day, a tenth a day--we don't know." That misconception is an example of how the media has hyped the smog problem made by displaying dramatic news stories that alters a person's perception on smog.

As our society has grown to hate cigarettes through campaigns, lawsuits, and those bulletin boards ridiculing cigarettes, Los Angeles is also on the same kind of path dealing with smog. The hatred towards cigarettes is a result of the media constantly delivering messages saying how cigarettes are killers, and how the cigarette companies have no sympathy for the cigarette-related deaths. This same trend is now seen with smog as being a killer, causing the deaths of innocent children. As a result, it is now a war to fight the smog problem in Los Angeles.

Agencies and businesses willing to contribute to programs to help fight the smog war is the kind of story the media wants. The hyped-up media coverage on smog has influenced agencies and businesses to get involve with the fight, because they know that their name of the agency or business will be on the news. The South Coast Air Quality Management District holds annual Clean Air Awards to reward agencies and businesses in their work to fight this problem. Companies like Costco Wholesale, GTE, and Long Beach Bike Station received big awards in this year's Clean Air Award in their contribution in helping to clean the air. A large collaboration of 29 different companies has started a program called Quick Charge L.A., a $3.5 million project that will be installing 200 charging stations for electric vehicles throughout the entire city. The media recognized that such stories about funded programs like Quick Charge is a "story" to show that there are people willing to fight for better air.

In the early fall of 1999, the exciting news about Los Angeles being no longer the Smog Capital of the U.S. has changed what the media has been covering about smog. The media, with all of its hyped stories, has made smog so disastrous that this exciting news was seen as a huge victory for Los Angeles. There was so much media attention on this story that the media began dramatizing how all the hard work and efforts into air quality control have paid off. The way the media presented the news to the public was as if Los Angeles had won the smog war, and Los Angeles no longer has to worry about it.

This was another example of a misconception the media plays on the public, what the media left out was the fact

...

...

Download as:   txt (10.4 Kb)   pdf (126.2 Kb)   docx (12.8 Kb)  
Continue for 7 more pages »
Only available on ReviewEssays.com
Citation Generator

(2010, 09). Smog: The Big Story. ReviewEssays.com. Retrieved 09, 2010, from https://www.reviewessays.com/essay/Smog-The-Big-Story/1417.html

"Smog: The Big Story" ReviewEssays.com. 09 2010. 2010. 09 2010 <https://www.reviewessays.com/essay/Smog-The-Big-Story/1417.html>.

"Smog: The Big Story." ReviewEssays.com. ReviewEssays.com, 09 2010. Web. 09 2010. <https://www.reviewessays.com/essay/Smog-The-Big-Story/1417.html>.

"Smog: The Big Story." ReviewEssays.com. 09, 2010. Accessed 09, 2010. https://www.reviewessays.com/essay/Smog-The-Big-Story/1417.html.