>>5189
>inoculation
Except for those subjects in possession of the "TV is an opinion-molding device" and "anti-'suspended disbelief'" memes (such as myself).
Sure, it may create an initial bias against our memes in the average normie. However, there's a meme that has long existed which says "Bad press is better than no press." Remember how Ron Paul was smothered to death in 2008 and 2012 by *NO MEDIA*? Trump is winning because such a squelch is impossible on a billionaire with the weight of personality of a neutron star. The news media rayping Trump left and right on TV has been a literal endorsement in the eyes of most of the populous, because of the lack of trust.
Now most importantly of all in memetics: any news is better than no news. Even if it's in a negative light, the fear of unknown (a strong fear IMO) is ablated at each presentation. More important than spinning our memes positively is simply just getting them out in front of eyeballs.
Remember, the mind will reconstruct any properly constructed physical artifact back into its memetic structure in the mind (so long as the requisite structures exist in the mind previous to exposure). It is a matter of ensuring our memes adhere best to reality. We'll never convince 100%; however, information wars are wars of attrition: the side which can keep its energy, output, and influence high will likely come out on top.