You did not include enough detail for me to understand what you’re trying to say. I asked for clarification. You don’t have to provide it, but please don’t insinuate that I’m playing obtuse to make a point.
You said, “the media is not to be trusted.” I’m trying to figure out who you’re talking about when you say, “the media.” You’ve clarified now by saying, “the mainstream media,” but I’m still not sure who that is. Is ABC the “mainstream media” when all their sitcoms do the obligatory
”very special field trip to Disneyland” episodes? I haven’t seen any of those depict Splash Mountain in a negative light.
Or maybe you mean “news media“ (which I asked about previously). But if that’s the case, you might expect that a journalist’s job isn’t to post positive PR for a company like Disney, but to post the things Disney might have interest in NOT promoting. When something that’s of public interest happens, that’s news.
Disney’s announcement was news. But a balanced news report would explore every angle of the story, like
this one from “mainstream media” CNN, which includes direct quotes from Disney’s one press release but also notes the coincidence of the announcement with BLM protests and the change.org petition.
And because the “mainstream media” posts directly to social media platforms, I’m not sure how you separate them in your understanding of how influence happens or news spreads.