If our governing bodies had the money, I'd expect them to have a couple of people monitoring media coverage of them/shooting in general and intervening behind the scenes - be that writing to editors, preparing counter-statements, proactively leading coverage by inviting journalists to come and see what we do and take part. By that I don't mean a hand-holding open day where they get ten rounds down at 100yds with grandees guffawing in the background, I mean having a look at a club on a fullbore range day or popping down to the indoor range for an evening. Give them trigger time by all means, but put them in the butts (working the targets, not strapped to them - as pleasing a notion as that might be) and sit them behind the firing point to chat to ordinary shooters.TJC wrote:I recognise we can complain but I would like to see the BASC and NRA join forces to undertake this on behalf of all sporting shooters. We have shooting bodies that we are members of and they should represent our interests.
Am I being unreasonable to expect them to stand up to idiotic articles like this ??? BTW an AR wasn't even used in the CT shootings !
You can't stage-manage what the news media sees, you need to take them to it, show its positive side to them and let them form a positive impression based on what they can observe for themselves. And if that involves asking potentially awkward questions, so be it.
Of course, the real problem is the documentary/drama media types, who carry a very specific set of prejudices and don't work in an environment like the news media where accuracy is checked daily. They're the ones who really shape pop culture.