Posted on 12/26/2006 9:12:01 PM PST by Valin
HH: Time to do an end of the year look at the media hour. Its pretty easy to find a lot of aging MSMers who hate the new media, and blogs in particular. But its very rare to find a young MSMer who wants to throw down against the blogs especially, but weve got one. Last week, Joseph Rago wrote, The Blog Mob: Written By Fools To Be Read By Imbeciles, in the Opinionjournal.com, and I welcome him now to the Hugh Hewitt Show. Joe, welcome. Good to have you.
JR: Thanks for the invitation, Hugh.
HH: Now did this piece also appear in the print edition of the Wall Street Journal?
JR: Yes, it did.
HH: All right. And what day was it on December 20th, correct?
JR: Thats right.
HH: Okay. Now what is your job at the Journal?
JR: Im an assistant editorial features editor.
HH: And how long have you been at it?
JR: What that basically means is I edit and commission op-ed pieces, and I write occasionally for the page.
HH: And so how long have you been doing it?
JR: About 20 months now, something like that.
HH: Okay. Before that, you were an undergrad at Dartmouth, correct?
JR: Thats right.
HH: What year did you graduate?
JR: 2005.
HH: And you were the editor of the Dartmouth Review, a student newspaper, right?
JR: I was.
HH: Are writers and editors of student newspapers journalists, Joe?
JR: Yeah, I would say they are, in a minor way. You know, they cover the campus.
HH: So theyre not paid, though.
JR: No, theyre not.
HH: And what makes them journalists then?
JR: Sorry, can you repeat the question?
HH: Sure. What makes them journalists?
JR: They I think they cover events that go on on campus. They look into it closely. They have an opinion about it.
HH: And so the definition of journalism, so we can define some terms before we go into new versus old journalism is they cover events?
JR: Well, I mean, I think the best definition of journalism is history as refracted through the prism of the unfolding present. You know, you dont
HH: Is that what you were doing at the Dartmouth Review?
JR: Yeah, I think so. You know
HH: Talent a lot better than the Crimson was in my day then, but go ahead (laughing).
JR: You know, hey, theyre amateur journalists, certainly.
HH: But journalists.
JR: Right. I dont think it takes any sort of special talent to be a journalist. Well, thats not right. I dont think you have to go to J school, or anything like that. But I think to be a journalist, you have to have a certain seriousness, a comprehensiveness of what you cover, your beat. You have to have sources, and you have to develop a certain expertise on a topic.
HH: You have to have sources?
JR: I think so, certainly.
HH: Okay. Well come back to that. Now when you were at Dartmouth, did you live abroad at all?
JR: I did.
HH: Whered you go?
JR: I lived in London for about five, six months.
HH: Okay. Do you have any foreign language skills?
JR: No, not particularly, unless Latin is a foreign language.
HH: No, there are no blogs in Latin because I was going to ask, was your criticism of blogs limited then to only English language blogs?
JR: Yeah, more or less. Thats what I read.
HH: Okay
JR: It was definitely focused on the American scene as opposed to foreign language blogs. Thats right.
HH: Okay, a few more background questions, then well get to the specifics. Do you know any active duty military personnel presently deployed to Iraq?
JR: Yes, I do. One of my close friends from school is a year ahead of me, is now in Iraq.
HH: Has he been a source for you?
JR: No, he hasnt.
HH: So you dont have any sources in Iraq?
JR: No, I dont.
HH: Any training in the law on your part?
JR: No.
HH: Do you think its necessary to be trained in the law to understand, for example, a Supreme Court opinion?
JR: I think training certainly helps you interpret it better than you would otherwise.
HH: How about medicine? Any training in medicine?
JR: No.
HH: Technology?
JR: Not particularly, no.
HH: Theology?
JR: No.
HH: Are you an athlete?
JR: I rode at school.
HH: Oh, you did? Youre crew?
JR: Yes, I was.
HH: Are there any crew blogs out there?
JR: I dont follow it that closely anymore. Im sure there are. Theres a blog on almost any topic.
HH: Yeah, theres Im going to talk about a triathaloning blog with you a little bit later, www.trigeekdreams.com. But Ill come back to that. Now, to make this easier as we go through discussing your piece, Id like to and I set it up last hour. People know what were talking about here, what you thought, so I could save time when I had you on the phone. To make this easier, Id like to get a frame of reference by establishing if we read any of the same blogs. So Im going to run through a list here.
JR: Sure.
HH: Are you familiar with the work at www.hughhewitt.com, done by me, Dean Barnett, Josh Trevino and Mary Katherine Ham?
JR: Yes, I am.
HH: Okay. How about the three guys at Powerline?
JR: Yup.
HH: Instapundit?
JR: Sure.
HH: Do you read National Reviews The Corner?
JR: Yes, I do.
HH: Do you read Jim Geraghty?
JR: No, I dont. Is that
HH: TKS, one of the blogs at www.nationalreview.com.
JR: Yeah, I dont follow that one very closely.
HH: How about the Volokh Conspiracy?
JR: Yes.
HH: You do? Okay. Professor Bainbridge?
JR: Sometimes, yes.
HH: Professor Althouse?
JR: Sometimes, yes.
HH: Theologian, writer, blogger, Mark D. Roberts?
JR: No.
HH: John Mark Reynolds, a teacher, professor and theologian?
JR: No.
HH: Last theologian on my list. Albert Mohler?
JR: No, I dont.
HH: How about Michelle Malkin?
JR: From time to time, yes.
HH: Captains Quarters?
JR: Also from time to time, yes.
HH: Are you familiar with Michael Yon?
JR: Yes.
HH: Are you familiar with Mudville Gazette?
JR: No, Im not.
HH: Black Five?
JR: Nope.
HH: Ace of Spades?
JR: From time to time.
HH: Have you read his review of your piece?
JR: I might have, yeah.
HH: (laughing) He didnt like it much. How about Eject! Eject! Eject?
JR: No.
HH: Bill Roggios The Fourth Rail?
JR: Yes.
HH: What do you think of that?
JR: I read it regularly. Its very good.
HH: Counterterrorism Blog?
JR: From time to time, yes.
HH: Michael Totten?
JR: Ive heard of him, but I dont read him with any regularity.
HH: Okay. Yoni the Blogger?
JR: No.
HH: Iraq the Model?
JR: Absolutely.
HH: Truth Laid Bear?
JR: From time to time.
HH: All right. Now to the piece at hand, because we basically, then, I have to assume that given that we all read these same blogs, I think you only missed one or two, that when you were writing generally in your piece, you were referring generally to these bloggers.
JR: Partially, yes. But you know, it approached the topic from a fairly high level of generality.
HH: Well, that I realize. But if these 25 blogs are your blog universe with two exceptions, you dont read Totten or Geraghty, and you really should read both of them, then the criticisms you level in your piece should be understood as being criticisms leveled at them.
JR: In part, yes. Definitely.
HH: And so, if they read your piece, they should read it, knowing that you have read them, and you chose not to accept them from your conclusions?
JR: Well, I mean, as I say, its approaches the topic from a fairly high level of generality. You know, you can always find exceptions to the rule, but you know, there you go.
HH: But generally speaking, given that these are the blogs you generally read, your general conclusions had to be based in part upon your general impression of them.
JR: In part, yes.
HH: Okay. Im not bringing up the lefty blogs, because again, I want to stay in the world that I know. You write that journalism requires journalists.
JR: Right.
HH: The bloggers, for their part, produce minimal reportage.
JR: Right.
HH: Are these bloggers that weve discussed journalists?
JR: Yes, I think they are.
HH: Do they produce minimal reportage?
JR: I think they do.
HH: And how do you assess that?
JR: Well, most of the blogs you just mentioned mainly exist to purvey opinion and comment. You know, theyre interpreting the news. Thats certainly fine. But you know, the main thrust of what I wrote was not in regard to journalism. Well, (pause) excuse me, Im a little bit tongue-tied. You know, it mentions journalism right here, and then it goes on to discuss other things. If youre looking at the blogosphere as a whole, I think minimal reportage is an accurate assessment.
HH: Well, lets work from some specifics backwards, then. Lets take the NSA story leaked by the New York Times about a year ago, correct?
JR: Sure.
HH: Do you consider their publication of the existence of a state secret to be reportage?
JR: I think its reportage. I think it was despicable, though. They certainly shouldnt have published that.
HH: But it was reportage?
JR: Right.
HH: And so that journalists are defined by their reportage. Now when people came along to discuss that story, and offer analysis of it, was that reportage? Or was that commentary?
JR: I think its analysis and commentary, certainly.
HH: Now have you read the decision In Re Sealed Case from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court Appeals Court?
JR: No, I havent.
HH: Now given that when that decision came out, a number of us, me included, but bloggers at www.volokh.com, and throughout the blogosphere, began to debate whether or not the program was authorized, and called to the attention of the public things like In Re Sealed Case. Is that reportage?
JR: I think its analysis.
HH: But if you didnt know about it, and I bring to your attention In Re Sealed Case, in which a very important bit of dicta exists concerning that program, am I not reporting to you the existence of a case that you were unaware of?
JR: Well, its not that Im not aware of it. I just havent read it personally.
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HH: Lets go back, Joe, to the question on the NSA decision. Why is it not crucial, and why isnt it the best part of journalism to put the NSA program into its appropriate legal context, bring to the publics attention the crucial facts around it, and to make sure that they understand that there is a series of decisions affecting that? Why isnt that just as important as the raw announcement of a state secret?
JR: I think its just as important.
HH: So it is its journalism.
JR: Yes.
HH: And its reportage.
JR: Its opinion journalism.
HH: Well no, again, bringing to the attention of the public facts that they are unaware of is, I think whats the difference between that and the original the NSA program existed and you were unaware of it. The In Re Sealed Case decision existed and you were unaware of it. The New York Times brought the former to your attention, I and other bloggers brought In Re Sealed Case to your attention. What is the difference between those two bringing to your attentions?
JR: I dont think theres any difference besides semantics here.
HH: And so, but what Im getting at is, that was not minimal reportage for the blogosphere during that period of time, both left and right. There was an enormous amount of reportage going on, in fact, far better than that which appeared I dont recall your papers coverage, but the New York Times slanted its coverage desperately to avoid confronting the arguments in defense of the Presidents conduct of the that surveillance. So the good reporting, the comprehensive reporting, was actually going on, on the sphere, not in the MSM.
JR: Well, I mean, I really think were just talking about semantics here. You know, of course some blogs do some good things. I dont think anybody would read the piece that I wrote and come away saying that all blogs are bad, or conversely, that the MSM is always good.
HH: Well, you did write about the blogs, that posts oscillate between the uselessly brief and the uselessly logorrheic. I cant say that word very well. Complexity and complication are eschewed. Now in the case of the NSA decision, perhaps the most important bit of journalism in the last year, the complexity and complication arguments, they were made on the sphere by Constitutional scholars and experts in the world of national security surveillance. So I guess my point is didnt the blogs do a much better job than mainstream journalism on that particular issue?
JR: I mean, not having it in front of me, I cant really say who did a better job. You know, but the quote you just read, I think applies as a whole, definitely.
HH: But again, I think that level of generality is important to be backed up. Im giving you a specific where the complexity and complication were eschewed by the mainstream media, but were in fact produced in great measure by the bloggers. And is that not at least possible?
JR: Its certainly possible.
HH: All right. Now Porkbusters are you familiar with Porkbusters?
JR: Yeah.
HH: And with earmarks?
JR: Right.
HH: Generally speaking, who was it that brought to the publics attention the trafficking in earmarks, and brought about the earmark reform that came to be?
JR: I think its been the conservative media as a whole, including blogs, including the Wall Street Journal Opinion Page, National Review, Weekly Standard I mean, its been all over the place.
HH: I actually think most of the credit would go to the Porkbusters coalition, of which I am not a member, but begun by Instapundit and Truth Laid Bear, and that they kept up the incessant pounding, pounding, pounding that actually led to the reform. But at least, you would have to agree with me, Joe, that they were at least as thorough in their reporting as was mainstream media of that particular issue, correct?
JR: Yes, definitely.
HH: All right. In the nomination of Justices Alito and Scalia, also one of the most dramatic developments in this country in the last 18 months, who took the lead in reporting on
JR: Alito and Scalia?
HH: Excuse me, Alito and Roberts.
JR: Right.
HH: Who took the lead in reporting on who they were, what they had done, and the dynamics of their confirmation?
JR: I mean, it was a huge story. Everybody was covering it.
HH: But were bloggers bringing reporting to that process?
JR: Yes, definitely.
HH: And was that reporting as good as that which you found in the mainstream media?
JR: In some cases yes. In some cases, much worse.
HH: Are you familiar with Ed Whelan at National Review?
JR: Yes, I am.
HH: How about the blog www.confirmthem.com?
JR: It rings a bell, but I cant say Ive looked at it recently.
HH: Okay, its a matter of, I think, undeniable fact that the most comprehensive coverage of the actual legal issues raised by the committee, and by the witnesses, was done on the blogosphere, because of questions of space. You know, you guys are limited by column inches, and the blogosphere isnt. And they just outshined tremendously there. Do you disagree?
JR: I mean, I dont think I disagree, but I do think that again, I do think that there are some good elements to the blogosphere, but theres also a lot of negative. And it seems a little bit silly to sort of have this triumphalism about the blogosphere at the expense of what everyone calls the mainstream media, without looking at any of the consequences.
HH: Well, thus far, Ive identified the NSA story as being representative of the mainstream media, and Porkbusters and coverage of Supreme Court justices as being representative of new media, and I think new media is winning that run down. Do you want to put forward other than Katrina, although Im not sure youd want to put forward Katrina, any major story on which the mainstream media has dominated in terms of reporting and analysis over the blogosphere?
JR: Well, the one I said in my article, I think, certainly is Iraq. I think theyve done a much better job in that regard.
HH: Lets jump, then, to Bill Roggio, Michael Yon and Michael Totten.
JR: Sure.
HH: Those three bloggers have, this year alone, Roggio spent three months in the country, Michael Yon brought news from Mosul of the Gates of Fire series of posts, Michael Totten has been in and out of Kurdistan and Lebanon reporting on the Cedar Revolution. Do you wish to set them up as inferior to any three mainstream media journalists?
JR: No, certainly not.
HH: So if those three represent one aspect of media, then weve got a tie.
JR: Well, I dont think three people adds up to a tie. You know, a Baghdad bureau is extraordinarily expensive, reporters going in and out for the mainstream media. And I just dont think its comparable to find isolated incidents you know, three people, and compare it to the entire apparatus.
HH: But if those three people are doing good reporting, and mainstream media is by and large doing bad reporting out of Iraq, doesnt that mean the sphere is doing better reporting?
JR: Well, I mean, I dont think that the mainstream media is doing all that bad reporting out of Iraq. You know, the pessimistic, glass half-full reporting theyve done has held up much better than the commentary in the blogosphere.
HH: Are you aware of who Lt. General James Mattis is?
JR: No, Im not.
HH: He is the commanding general of Camp Pendletons First Marine Expeditionary Force. Hes commander of U.S. Marine Force at Central Command. And at Hughhewitt.com today, I linked to an interview he gave with a small newspaper in Northern San Diego County. And he says this well, well come back to it.
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HH: Joe, before we went to break, I wanted to read you this from General Mattis. I was talking to a lieutenant in Haditha, he told the San Diego County reporter, He told me that because they are now all connected nowadays, and theyre FOBs, he could read stories about Haditha. He said, I guarantee you there has not been a reporter in Haditha in my last two and a half months here. We are seeing, the general continued, I think, an unwitting passing of the enemys message, a critical, unwitting passing of the enemys message, because the enemy has successfully denied the Western media access to the battlefields. Im not sure what Lloyds of London is charging now. I think its over $5,000 dollars a month insurance for a reporter or photographer to go in. But the murder, the kidnapping, the intimidation means that in many cases, we have media folks who are relying on stringers who are Iraqi. Now you can have any kind of complaint about the American media or Western media you want, but there is at least a nod, an effort, towards objectivity. The stringers who are being brought in, who are bringing in these stories, are not bringing in the same degree of objectivity. So on the one hand, our enemy is denying our media access to the battlefield, where anything, perhaps, that I say as a general is subject to any number of interpretations, challenges, questions. But the enemys story, basically, gets out there without that, because our media is unable to challenge them. Its unwitting, but at the same time, it can promote the enemys agenda, simply because there is an apparent attempt at objectivity. Now Joe, without debating the specifics of what the generals saying here, he is putting forward the proposition that in fact, mainstream media is terribly broken because theyre giving the appearance of covering whats going on in Iraq, when in fact theyre relying on Iraqi stringers.
JR: You know, Im certainly not going to argue with the general who is on the ground and has all the facts. And again, my general argument is in terms of opinion and comment. If you look at the analysis of the Iraqi situation, I think what youll find in the mainstream media has largely been more realistic, and more rigorous, than what youll find in the blogs.
HH: Well, actually, again, I have to disagree with you, because Mudville Gazette spent a year in country as a sergeant there, a number of mil-bloggers are over there from chaplains to generals. For example, I interviewed John Abizaid at length, put it all up on the blog, got his message out there without the filter that you folks tend to put in the way, you folks being mainstream media people. And in fact, Michael Yon, Roggio, the rest of them, they run circles around your folks. And Bill Roggio just spent embedded with the Iraqi army, for goodness sake, in Fallujah. Thats after a tour in Afghanistan, another tour in Iraq this year. I think maybe there are some isolated instances of good reporting coming out of Iraq by mainstream media people, but I think unless you can come up with three people who have done the same kind of ground-breaking work, or four people that Ive just cited, I actually think youre wrong. Are you open to the prospect that youre wrong on that?
JR: Im always open to the prospect that Im wrong. I just dont see an argument supported by three or four people versus the entire apparatus of the mainstream media. And I guess the other point is, I dont think that anybody would read my article and come away saying that the mainstream media is infallible, or that it even always does a good job, or even sometimes does a good job. The point, rather, was that the institution, the way that they filter things, tends to increase seriousness and expertise in the purveying of opinion and comment, and I just dont see that on the internet.
HH: Well, it sounds to me like youre making the argument that because the mainstream media spends a lot of money maintaining bureaus in Iraq, they must therefore be doing good work.
JR: No, I dont think thats it at all. Im saying that they have an institutional support which vastly increases the professional reporting.
HH: But again, I dont think thats by any means at all evident. If youve got Roggio running around Fallujah, typing up his notes every night, where youve got Michael Yon in Mosul, or youve got Totten running around Kurdistan or Lebanon, typing up their notes and putting it out there, the fact that youve got a thousand journalists in the Green Zone doesnt negate the comparable quality of both of those things. I trust the three Americans who are out in the combat land, and I trust military bloggers, of whom there are legions, much, much more than Green Zone bound journalists. Do you?
JR: I certainly think you have to take both into perspective. You know, I am certainly not going to disparage military bloggers, or disparage Bill Roggio, or anything like that. And again, Im making a general argument here.
HH: Heres part of your argument on that. Blogs pursue second order distractions, John Kerry always providing useful material, while leaving unexamined more fundamental issues, say, Iraq. Joe, well go to break and well come back. But was John Kerrys assertion that hed been to Cambodia on Christmas Eve a second order distraction?
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HH: Joe, as I said going into the break, you wrote in your piece from last week, Blogs pursue second order distractions, John Kerry always providing useful material, while leaving unexamined more fundamental issues, say, Iraq. When John Kerry made the assertion that hed spent Christmas Eve in Cambodia, was that a second order distraction for the blogs to go out and conclusively prove that he hadnt?
JR: No, I dont think so. What I was referring to in that remark was that John Kerrys comments before the election, you know, that if youre stupid, youll get stuck in Iraq. You know, that comment.
HH: And do you think that, for example, a more fundamental issue like whether or not Iran goes critical with nukes, is that being better covered by the internet bloggers or by the mainstream media?
JR: I think its being covered very well by experts. You know, theyre the people we run on the editorial page, theyre people in academia, theyre people in the government. And I think theyre doing a much better job than a blogger.
HH: So are you familiar with Regime Change Iran?
JR: Im not.
HH: It works comprehensively to bring news from all around the world concerning Iran, including the best in commentary and analysis. Are you familiar with Victor Davis Hanson?
JR: Of course.
HH: How about Michael Ledeen at AEI?
JR: Sure.
HH: Both of these men are bloggers. They blog prolifically, in fact, and they both have their own blogs. Are they doing a better job? Or are you actually saying that the same thing is being done in both media?
JR: Im saying the same thing is done in both media. And you know, when you have someone like Victor Davis Hanson, Michael Ledeen, Michael Barone has a blog now, the Becker-Pozner blog, theyre experts who are using technology in new and innovative ways. And theyre doing a very good job of it. I dont anyone would disagree. But I dont see that level of quality in the blogosphere as a whole.
HH: But again, when we talk about level of quality, you want to stand up the best of the mainstream media against the worst of the blogosphere. That does not seem to be the argument.
JR: No, I dont. I think the mainstream media has some very real failings. But talking about the blogs as the solution to everything, I think, is pretty silly.
HH: Well, I dont think anyones done that. Were talking about whether or not theres a quality difference between the best of the blogs and the best of the mainstream media. My argument is that theres not, and in fact, the best of the blogs do a better job than the best of the mainstream media, because the mainstream media is generally not educated enough to tackle complex issues such as, for example, Supreme Court nominations, Court decisions, porkbusting details, or technology advances or whatever expertise might be. That if you match up the best blogger in a field against the best journalist in a field, the best blogger will almost always win. Let me give you an example. You do read Professor Bainbridge?
JR: Sure.
HH: Do you think theres anyone in the media, mainstream media, who has any clue as to the security laws of the United States, their application in high profile cases like Martha Stewart, or their evolution through Congressional committee, or through their application by the Securities and Exchange Commission, than Stephen Bainbridge?
JR: Eric Pozner, I think, at the University of Chicago is very good.
HH: No, but Im talking about in the media. There are other bloggers who are as good as Stephen, because theyre law professors who know what theyre doing. But there isnt a single reporter out there who understands this stuff to that level.
JR: Well, again
HH: I mean, they can get a good 10th grade I mean, 16th grade, college education but they cant do this stuff.
JR: Right, which is why you rely on experts, A) in reportage, and B) when were talking about the again, the main thrust of my article, when youre talking about analysis and interpretation, when an issue comes up, you can write an op-ed about it. You can make your views known. To me, this seems much better than relying on bloggers.
HH: Well, again, I think thats silly, Joe, because when you say Professor Bainbridge can write an op-ed, the op-ed isnt going to change by the fact that it appears in print in your newspaper, which hes written for. In fact, youre going to be able to get more and deeper analysis and perspective, ask him questions, you get comments back at www.professorbainbridge.com. The blog is a much better vehicle for exploring a complex issue than a newspaper, and when you add in mainstream media agenda journalism and bias, it becomes obviously so. I want to go to the key paragraph in your piece. The blogs are not as significant as their self-endeared curators would like to think. Journalism requires journalists, who are at least fitfully confronting the digital age. The bloggers, for their part, produce minimal reportage. I already think Ive thrown that into some doubt. Instead, they ride along with the MSM, like remora fish on the bellies of sharks, picking up the scraps. In the case of Rathergate, who was the remora fish, and who was the shark there?
JR: Well, Rathergate, I think, is one instance of where the blogs had an actual effect.
HH: So they were not remora fish?
JR: Another one might be the blogs calling into question the reporting of the Associated Press in the case of Jamil Hussein.
HH: But lets stop for a moment and stick on Rathergate, because people are familiar with it. Who in your analogy, whos the remora fish there?
JR: I mean, the story was pushed mainly by the blogs, entirely by the blogs.
HH: But CBS was the remora fish, wasnt it? CBS was the one who went along for the ride.
JR: I mean, I dont want to defend CBS here, and I think it was very admirable what the blogs did in that case with Powerline. But instances like that are relatively few in number. You know, I just dont see the transformative power of the blogs unfold
HH: Can you tell me but again, relatively few in number. At what what do you have by comparable importance or significance, I use Rathergate because its familiar to everyone, but I can bring up other ones, of any kind of significant attempt to subvert the political process, which were those forged documents, that the mainstream media discovered and fleshed out? Do any come to mind?
JR: Im sorry, I dont understand the question.
HH: Well, since Ive just put forward Rathergate as an example of the new medias power and ability to go out and find stuff. Would you give me something of comparable significance and truthfulness thats come out the mainstream media in the last year?
JR: I mean, off the top of my head, I cant think of anything besides the daily push of stories that the media covers.
HH: Okay.
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HH: Joe, thanks for the time you spent with me today. Ill carry you over into the next hour, but I dont want to monopolize your time. I said a half hour, but Ill keep going, but let me get a couple more in. Why is Eason Jordan no longer at CNN?
JR: It was the remarks he made at Davos.
HH: And who reported those?
JR: Well, it was reported mainly by the blogs. But in that case, the comments seemed, at least from what I heard, from one of the members of our editorial board, and now a columnist for the Wall Street Journal, is that these comments, it was just an off-hand remark, it wasnt that big of a deal, and I think thats exactly an example of a second order distraction blown out of proportion by the blogs at the expense of more serious issues.
HH: Well now, Brets been a guest on this program many, many times, so Ill let him speak for himself. You may want to check with him on that. I dont believe he would agree with that characterization of his opinion of it. But hes not there, because he made a speech that was picked up by the blogs. They wouldnt release the transcript, and under growing pressure, he left rather than have CNN cave on that. Now whether or not you consider that a second order distraction is in fact an editorial decision, isnt it, that you would have made to suppress that story, or give it what? Less play than Green Zone reporting?
JR: It is an editorial distinction, and thats what the blogosphere mainly lacks, is that it doesnt have an apparatus in place that screens for, editorially, for seriousness. Its chaos and entropy. And it doesnt work very well in criticism, and in terms of serious views.
HH: Iraq the Model doesnt work very well?
JR: Certainly, Iraq the Model does. As I say, there are all sorts of blogs that you can point to for an isolated incident.
HH: Well, which of these 25 that we went through, dont work very well? Because I went through the biggest 25 I could come up with. Youre unfamiliar with the theological blogs, and I understand that for whatever reason. But the law blogs work extraordinarily well, the political analysis and original reporting done at places like The Corner, www.townhall.com, my blog, Powerline, is first-rate and superior to everyone. We back and forth with the best in the business for a reason. Which ones dont work well, other than Fraters Libertas? Ill give you that.
JR: The point is that the entire system as a whole doesnt work well. You can find factions and interests here and there that have high quality, the same as you can find in the mainstream media, of good reporting and bad reporting, serious analysis and frivolous analysis. But on the whole, I think that youll find much better analysis and commentary in a print publication versus one that you find entirely on the internet.
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HH: We go back to what you said just before the break, that the quality of commentary and analysis is better in mainstream media than it is in new media. Are you familiar with the work of Eugene Robinson at the Washington Post?
JR: Yes, I am.
HH: Do you think its serious?
JR: No, I dont.
HH: Are you familiar with the economic analysis of Paul Krugman at the New York Times?
JR: I am.
HH: Do you think its serious?
JR: And you know, you can run through
HH: Im going to (laughing)
JR: You can tick off Maureen Dowd and you can tick off all sorts of people at the New York Times
HH: I think well agree that David Brooks does a good job, right?
JR: Sure.
HH: And Nicholas Kristoff does great reporting from Sudan when hes there, right?
JR: Right.
HH: But do you think E.J. Dionne is a serious analysis of American politics?
JR: I dont always agree with him, but I would say yes, hes serious.
HH: Okay, how about anyone at the Los Angeles Times? Name me anyone at all out there who is serious.
JR: Max Boot.
HH: Max is not he writes a syndicated column. He writes a column that gets picked up there, but I mean a staff columnist.
JR: I cant think of one.
HH: There arent any. In fact, theyre the worst major newspaper in America for a reason that theyve worked hard to empty themselves of all discernible talent. If you live in California, then, Joe, are you better served by reading and getting your news from the internet and the blogosphere than by taking the L.A. Times?
JR: Well, you know, I dont live in California, so I cant tell you. But the point that I was trying to make is that even if the standards of the mainstream media failed, it doesnt seem to me to be an argument against just throwing out all standards in favor of the chaos of the internet.
HH: Well, again, the chaos of the internet lets take another controversy from this year, the cartoons depicting Mohammed.
JR: Sure.
HH: Did any mainstream media outlet publish them?
JR: No, they didnt.
HH: Were they published on the blogosphere?
JR: Yes.
HH: Who did the better job of providing information to the public?
JR: Well, the reason a lot of newspapers didnt publish them is because they were in poor taste. And thats an editorial judgment, of which you can agree or disagree.
HH: But the fact that none no one in the mainstream media published them by the way, I did not think it was wise to publish them, so I share the judgment of the mainstream media there. But the judgment of the mainstream media was uniform. Whats that tell you about it? Its not journalism, Joe. Its a club.
JR: (laughing) I mean, I dont know what to say.
HH: Obviously (laughing). Let me ask you about Benedicts speech on Islam, because I think what you got down to, you gave it away in the first hour, is that you think the serious stuff is covered by the mainstream media, and the frivolous stuff is dealt with by the bloggers. Its exactly the opposite. The blogs Little Green Footballs, do you read that?
JR: Yeah.
HH: What do you think of it?
JR: I think its fairly well done.
HH: Every single day, it wrestles with the most difficult issues. What about the idea that when Benedict gave his speech that excited so much controversy, did the mainstream media do a good job of covering that?
JR: I think yes, I do.
HH: You did? Did you see it reprinted anywhere in its context?
JR: I cant recall, no.
HH: No, it was not. I spent a lot of time on that, looking for any media coverage of give me the speech, give me a translation of the speech. In fact, on my blog, we had Father Fessio, his student, explain it. We had Albert Mohler on his blog going into the theology of it. We had John Mark Reynolds and Mark Roberts and a whole bunch of people examining it at length, and in detail, what he said and what he intended to say, by theologians examining a theologians argument. Theres nothing like that in the mainstream media, Joe, is there?
JR: There is. First of all, you know, you have a whole apparatus of conservative opinion journals that do the kind of thing that you just talked about. But to go back to what you said about reprinting the speech, you know, the New York Times used to reprint every major speech that was done. They dont do that anymore. That, to me, seems to be a failing of the standards of the mainstream media. What I would like to see is trying to create an institutional culture such as the mainstream media, that has restored the debate standards that theyve had. I mean, I dont think that anybody could read the article that I wrote and come away thinking that Im in favor of everything the mainstream media does, or even that they do a particularly tremendous job. I think theres been a major failing all over the place, and I wrote the article, I thought, as a useful corrective for some of the claims that are made on behalf of the blogosphere against the mainstream media.
HH: Well, you did write in here that the technology of ink on paper is highly advanced, and has over centuries accumulated a major institutional culture that screens editorially for originality, expertise, and seriousness.
JR: Right.
HH: But I think Ive given you example after example where they are not original, they are not expert, and they certainly arent serious on many of these thing, and that what they are is biased, left-wing pastry shops for the Democratic Party. And while the Wall Street Journal stands apart from that tradition, in large part, the attempt to defend mainstream media at the expense of the blogs is, I think, very diverting, and I think hurts your business, in many respects, because they still dont get it. I dont think, Joe let me ask you this. This is a hard question to answer. Youre 24? 22? 23?
JR: 23.
HH: Okay, youre 23 years old. The Wall Street Journal allows you to set forth with a piece of writing that was mocked, in large part, across the blogosphere, for its many inaccuracies, satirized by people like Tigerhawk and Ace of Spades, and yet youre defending mainstream medias accumulated institutional culture that screens for originality, expertise and seriousness. Does your piece represent that tradition?
JR: Yes, I think it does.
HH: And so, what was original in your piece?
JR: I mean, what was original is that everyone is you know, Time Magazine says the person of the year is everyone. What was original was that everyone seems to have acquiesced to the idea that technology and blogs are going to sort of revolutionize media and make it completely new, and I just dont see the evidence for it.
HH: And whats your expertise in blogs?
JR: The expertise, in this case, is criticism. Its the exercise of judgment and taste.
HH: Joe, youre 23.
JR: Sure.
HH: Can you be expert in anything? And Im serious here.
JR: I think I can write a thoughtful article, even though Im 23.
HH: That wasnt the question is, can you be expert in anything at 23?
JR: No, I dont think so.
HH: And seriousness you managed to slander, in large part, the 25 blogs about which we specifically discussed your familiarity with, because you didnt follow the rule of exception, which is by the way, let me except out this and this and this
JR: Whoa, whoa, whoa. What do you mean, I didnt follow the rule of exception? Throughout, everythings qualified.
HH: Where do you mention one blog in a specific complimentary fashion?
JR: I didnt mention any in a specific complimentary fashion.
HH: But yet you often mention them all in a critical fashion. For example, Because political blogs are predictable, they are excruciatingly boring. Those are all political blogs, and there is no exception.
JR: By the time you get to that point in the article, its obvious that Im talking in a general sense. You know, it seems ridiculous to say you know, you can disparage the MSM. Thats looking at it all as a whole. And you have to qualify that every time you mention MSM? Oh, its typical MSM behavior, except for sometimes when the MSM does good work?
HH: Well, we just had a conversation where we were talking about the New York Times, and I excepted out David Brooks, and occasionally Nicholas Kristoff. Thats the rule of exception, because I dont want anyone to think that all of the columnists are buffoons at the New York Times when David Brooks works there, Nicholas Kristoff occasionally does good work. You didnt practice that, and so that it has caught up with you, I dont think you should object to that. When you write that with irony present only in its conspicuous absence, do you really believe theres no irony on the internet? On the blogs?
JR: (laughing) Again, anybody who reads this piece will realize that its a general argument.
HH: Do you read Lileks?
JR: From time to time.
HH: Is his humor cringe making?
JR: I mean, were having a semantic argument here.
HH: No, were having an argument about youth, actually.
- - - - -
HH: Joe, do you regret writing this piece?
JR: No, I dont.
HH: Do you know who Joseph Epstein is?
JR: I do.
HH: Do you admire his work?
JR: Absolutely.
HH: You see, if Joseph Epstein were to write a piece like this, which I cant imagine him doing it, it would give me pause. But I also know that he would take the time to be very specific in his criticisms, and very especially careful to except out that which he did not intend to strike at. But you did nothing of that.
JR: After we get off the phone, Ill send you a Joseph Epstein opinion on the blogs. He actually published it with the Wall Street Journal.
HH: And what did he say?
JR: I cant think of it altogether, but one of his main points was that the word blog sounds exactly like a French word pronounced the same way, which just sort of means tediousness and irrelevancy, something on that order. Again, I dont have it in front of me.
HH: And are you aware of what he said about newspapers?
JR: Absolutely. Hes very down on them.
HH: He does not read them, except for the obituaries. And so, I think what youve just concluded, is that were at the same place in Joseph Epsteins estimate. He doesnt like journalism, but its all journalism. Its all just text, Joe, but I want you to be able to make the argument what is it about this vast collection of pensions, and time servers, and tenured editorialists, and beat reporters covering car crashes, that makes it better than the blogosphere?
JR: Im sorry, Im not following the question.
HH: What is journalism, in your eye, that blogosphere isnt? Whats so great about the mainstream media?
JR: I think its people who are devoting their lives to covering the news, to interpreting the news, to bring expertise to people, and looking at the idea of standards and merit, which is I really dont think that on the whole, you get that on the blogs. You just have chaos.
HH: How many journalists do you know, outside of the Wall Street Journal?
JR: You know, I would say ten, fifteen.
HH: Again, the pronouncements just dont add up it should be more cautious than that. Let me close with a little tiny example. I mentioned www.trigeekdreams.com. Its a blog for triathletes.
JR: Okay.
HH: Do you think he, or a sporting news reporter, is going to cover a race better?
JR: I would probably say the triathlete.
HH: Yes, especially since hes one of the better L.A. Times journalists going. So the fact that hes a journalist who was also writing about his avocation on the web, doesnt that show you how thin your argument is? Its just the blogosphere is nothing except a technology. Its like a printing press. All that matters is whos working on it.
JR: Well, I mean, I dont think its like a printing press, you know, because a printing press not just anyone can get a printing press and go out there. And its the same with the blogs.
HH: Well, who gave you your printing press at the Wall Street Journal?
JR: I mean, Im not going to go into how I was hired.
HH: But I mean, an editor did.
JR: Certainly.
HH: So someone made a choice that you were worth reading, or you were worth hiring as a journalist. That persons choice is what? Informed by fifty years in a culture thats now gone?
JR: Well, first of all, I dont think its gone, and I think its much more valuable than you say it is. And I really do think that trying to restore these institutions is more important than just sort of everybody wins.
HH: How did your piece advance the restoration of those institutions, without its particularity, its specificity with its generalized insult?
JR: I think it was a useful corrective to some of the triumphalism that we hear about blogs every day.
HH: Do you think it corrected anything?
JR: I think it did for a lot of people, yes.
HH: Evidence?
JR: I mean, I would rather not go into my personal correspondence of the feedback I got. I got a lot of positive notes, and a lot that were
HH: Did Tim Rutten write you?
JR: Sorry?
HH: Did Tim Rutten write you?
JR: No.
HH: Mark Halperin?
JR: No.
HH: I just some of the old MSMers who hate the blogs they probably want to hire you immediately. But in retrospect, if you wrote it again today, would you change anything?
JR: I dont think I would, no. I might qualify it a little bit more.
HH: Well, that would be a start. And do you want to finish off by saying any blogs in particular you admire and look forward to reading every morning?
JR: Sure. I think Ross Douthat at the American Scene, he writes for the Atlantic Monthly. I think hes very good, consistently thoughtful. Michael Barone I like, Greg Manhew (sp), you know, the bloggers at the New Republic and the New Criterion, and a lot of the ones you mentioned, certainly.
HH: Who did you vote for, for president?
JR: I voted for Bush.
HH: And was that the first time you voted?
JR: No, it wasnt.
HH: Did you vote for Bush versus Gore?
JR: I wasnt 18 in 2000.
HH: And so generally speaking, youre a conservative.
JR: Certainly, yes.
HH: And you believe that mainstream media is in pretty good shape right now?
JR: No, I dont think its in good shape at all. I just dont think that we should abandon it in favor of blogs, to just sort of throw out all standards and
HH: Well, whos suggesting that?
JR: just sort of pick from whatever we find on the internet. Its silly.
HH: Again, now Ive got to keep you over. Who is suggesting that? Who is suggesting that you pick, that you openly, randomly browse to Technorati, and read as gospel there? I mean, I read a list of Powerline, Hughhewitt.com, Instapundit, the Volokh Conspiracy, National Review, Bainbridge, Althouse, Roberts, Reynolds, Mohler, Malkin, Captains Quarters, Yon, Gazette, Black Five, Ace of Spades, Eject! Eject! Eject!, Fourth Rail, Counterterrorism Blog, Michael Totten, Yoni the Blogger, Iraq the Model, and Truth Laid Bear. Thats not random. Thats a collection of people whove been, each one of whom, I guess, will have lapped you a couple of times in the business of journalism.
JR: Yes, certainly. Im just starting out. Im not trying to make a claim on behalf of myself, certainly. But just to I think people should think seriously about the direction that our media is going in.
HH: And what do you want them to do? Stop reading the blogs?
JR: No, certainly not.
HH: So they should read the blogs?
JR: Yes.
HH: Because theres value there.
JR: I would like to see a level of quality increased everywhere.
HH: At these blogs that I mentioned?
JR: No, those are perfectly fine blogs, Mr. Hewitt. And thats not my argument. Im saying that on the whole, that the blogosphere is chaos, and that we should try to introduce some sort of order, or checks and balances
HH: What? Through centralized planning of the blogosphere?
JR: No, certainly not. But I think the institutions of the mainstream media, as its described, have a valuable role to play, and I would like to see those institutions rescued, as opposed to just turning everything over to everyone.
HH: All right. Joe Rago, youve been very generous with your time. Continued good fortune to you, and a Happy New Year, and I look forward to having you back again sometime.
End of interview.
JR: No, those are perfectly fine blogs, Mr. Hewitt. And thats not my argument. Im saying that on the whole, that the blogosphere is chaos, and that we should try to introduce some sort of order, or checks and balances
Freedom of speech is such a MESSY thing!
Yeah....from a 23 yr old kid....who wants to CONTROL the internet world.....the little narcissist
Well they are attacking the wrong people. They better start attacking the press of India -- there's more and more talk of outsourcing their jobs to India -- and let me say that years ago after being introduced to the quality of the press available in India I was among the first to suggest that we needed to outsource as much as possible.
Mean while as for the blogs I remember a time when cities had several newspapers. That was before TV network began to dominate in the 1960s.
Different points of view were represented. It's called a free press.
We got a free press again and it's worth defending with blood against those who would take it away -- our free press, their blood!
The discussion is well done and interesting, but it fails to make a key point. While the 'sphere does not have a centralized hierarchical editorial team, it IS, in fact, the its own editorial team. Just as the free market in goods weeds out marginal players through competition and letting competitors comment on each others products, so the same is true in the 'sphere as a free market in ideas - eveyone is an editor and capable of poking holes where they exist.
But But, he's been to Dartmouth!
That and $1.25 will buy you a cup of coffee.
They are scared
And with good reason.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1758683/posts
Reply 33
The coming collapse and rebirth of newspaper journalism
Circulation revenue at newspapers has also been falling in recent years due to price cuts and competition, further squeezing margins.
...
Digg.com, with less than 20 employees, has more Web traffic than The New York Times, according to Alexa.com. Other popular mainstream publications are even farther behind.
...
So here's where the spiral begins. Newspapers' profitable classified advertising business will be all but gone in 10 years, a victim of the vastly superior results and economics of search-driven online advertising. Display advertising will be under intense pressure from alternative media, including not just Web sites but an emerging class of small print publications and supermarket advertisers that serve local audiences (print publishing is getting cheaper, too). The department stores and cell phone companies that sustain newspapers' display advertising business will apply intense pressure on papers to bring down their prices.
Newspapers will be forced to lay off staff in order to maintain margins. Cuts in services will lead to cuts in editorial coverage, making papers less relevant to subscribers. As circulation declines, advertising rates will have to come down to remain competitive. This will put more pressure on margins, leading to more layoffs, more cost cuts, more circulation declines and more pressure on margins. Once this spiral begins, it will accelerate with breathtaking speed. And it has already begun.
Thanks for the post.
HH certainly has come a long way from his
'Mornin' Glory' days.
"HH: Can you be expert in anything? And Im serious here.
JR: I think I can write a thoughtful article, even though Im 23.
HH: That wasnt
the question is, can you be expert in anything at 23?
JR: No, I dont think so"
Indeed. Like the checks and balances in MSM. Oh, wait. There aren't any. No prosecution checks against publishing national secrets. As for balance, we all know what the political mindset of virtually all the press is. And it ain't balanced.
OTOH he being 23 there's a chance that he will learn from this.
the 1st lesson is don't go on the Hugh Hewitt show after you've done something stupid.
He is my favorite.
"OTOH he being 23 there's a chance that he will learn from this. "
There is hope. :)
All I needed to know upon listening to the Hewitt show to discount everything Ragoo said was to find out he is 24 YEARS OLD!!!
He can have NO informed opinion on ANYTHING at that age!
He can have NO informed opinion on ANYTHING at that age!
Oh I don't know. I had a great number of informed opinions at that age, of course most of them were wrong.
They are losing advertising, including classified ads. I had forgotten about that.
Jobs won't be going to India, they will just be going.
bttt
I see the MSM as an important component of our civilization's "operating system." Like computer application programs the new media are applications that depend upon that OS.
The new media depend upon it to provide the BIOS ---- not bias!! -- and to perform common tasks such as gathering input and organizing output in "buffers."
As with all operating systems the new media are not always happy with it.
Sometimes the new media have to patch in corrections and often they have to augment the OS's input and do some reorganizing of output -- and try as hard as the new media can it is damn near impossible to get OS bugs fixed. But it (mostly) works.
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