Posted on 05/26/2009 3:20:24 PM PDT by abb
Heres a little game for you on this post-holiday Tuesday. See if you can identify which phrases, taken from New York Times public editor Clark Hoyts column this weekend, describe Times journalistsand which describe bloggers.
1. those outside A. bloggers B. Times journalists
2. ready to pounce on transgressions by Times journalists A. bloggers B. Times journalists
3. aflame with charges of plagiarism A. bloggers B. Times journalists
4. burned to illuminate a national crisis through his personal experience A. bloggers B. Times journalists
5. the star columnist A. bloggers B. Times journalists
6. roughed up A. bloggers B. Times journalists
7. the ethics police A. bloggers B. Times journalists
Answers: 1-A, 2-A, 3-A, 4-B, 5-B
Questions 6 and 7 arent as simple to answer, though. Question 6, because roughed up, while the surprisingly flippant phrase technically refers to Mainstream Journalist Maureen Dowd and the plagiarism controversy that swirled around her last week, is actually a dig at bloggers. And, more broadly, the Internet. (Full quote: Maureen Dowd, another star columnist, was roughed up on the Internet for using a paragraph from a blogger without attribution.)
Question 7, for its part, is murky for an entirely different reason: the ethics police ostensibly refers, in irony-laden ombudsmanese, to the bloggers who brought Times reporters ethical transgressions to light: TPM contributor Josh and The Atlantics Megan McArdle, both of whom Hoyts column treats with the soft bigotry of anonymity. And yetmurky, murkythe ethics police, as a phrase, comes courtesy of the person whos supposed to be, on behalf of the Times and its readers the ethics police. (Full quote: It has been a busy week or two for the ethics policethose within The Times trying to protect the papers integrity, and those outside, ready to pounce on transgressions by Times journalists.)
Lets leave aside the fact that Hoyts column vastly underplays the transgressions in question within itMoDowds, in particular. (After a quick, he-said/she-said summary of the scandal, Hoyt declares: I do not think Dowd plagiarized, but I also do not think what she did was right. And then he moves on.) Because, to my mind, theres an even bigger problem in Hoyts column than the particularities of its conclusions: its assumptionand, thus, its enforcementof an oppositional relationship between bloggers and the Times. (Blogosphere? Aflame with charges of plagiarism. Times reporter? Burned to illuminate a national crisis through his personal experience. Talk about fire in a crowded theater.)
The public editor is engaging, in this, in a peculiar brand of institutional defensiveness. One that plays itself out via divisivenessby establishing a false dichotomy that aggrandizes Times reporters and dismisses everyone else. In particular, those nagging, nattering bloggers. And he does so right in his lede: there are those within the Times, trying to protect the papers integrity and then there are those outside it, ready to pounce on transgressions by Times journalists.
Well, well. Clark Hoyt, meet John Milton. (How conveniently good-versus-evil! How delightfully Paradise Lost!) Out of the realm of possibility, of course, in Hoyts rather ridiculously reductive binary, is the chance that those outside might be ready to pounce precisely because theyre trying to protect the papers integrity.
It should go without sayingbut apparently, it needs saying nonethelessthat the strain of weirdly defensive, us-versus-them thinking that permeates Hoyts column this weekend helps nobodyleast of all, the Times itself. On the contrary: such thinking represents all too well the protective, entitled, wagon-circling attitude that so many people resent about the Timesand about mainstream journalism more generally.
More to the point, such thinking represents a distortion, rather than a reflection, of journalistic reality. As Bob Garfield and James Fallows noted in this weekends On the Mediawhile discussing the misleading TNR article now widely believed to have brought down the Clinton administrations health care planthe blogosphere plays a valuable and essential role in fact-checking and otherwise truth-squadding the journalism produced by the MSM:
GARFIELD: So I guess what it comes down to is this, Jim: 15 years ago there was no blogosphere, there was talking points memo to go over the health care proposal line by line. Can you Swift boat a policy issue in 2009 in the way that they were able to pull off during the Clinton Administration?
FALLOWS: You can probably do it in some way, but I think that particular form of misinformation is a lot harder now.
Thus, another point that should go without saying: the fact that there is now a community of people on the Web who hold the work of Times reporters and their counterparts accountablewhich is to say, who care about the Timess quality and reputation enough to critique it in the first placeis to be celebrated. It is not to be resistedor, worse, dismissively, defensively, glibly decried. The bloggers in question in Hoyts columnthose outside, as it werewere doing the precise work that Hoyt himself is charged with: acting as the readers broad representative, and policing journalists to ensure that the journalism they produce reflects the best interests of their audiences. The Times, in the cases the public editor described this weekend, met its match. And that, Mr. Hoyt, is a good thing.
ping
This is only the beginning, NYT!
In my “to read” shelf in my bookcase.
http://www.randomhouse.com/kvpa/talese/books/kingdom.html
The Kingdom and the Power
Back when it was “how it used to be.”
Benicio Del Toro is ugly. Katie Couric is perhaps one of the million or so most beautiful people in the world, but never one of the top 50. Sorta besmirches the cover girl.
Either *that*, or, *someone* at the CJR just happened to notice there's water quickly rising up to their window, have decided to bolt for the first available lifeboat.
Think of the motive here, abb.
Columbia's one of hundreds of JSchools who're by and large responsible for the situation the Slimes & all others are facing, today.
Now, they're being critical?
HA!!
Who ever wanted to be associated with a proved and known loser?
~Hey, PINCH!?!?!
Ever hear the one on how a person can measure a true *friend*??
Yea, baby!
Put one of your crack reporters right on it, Pinchy. :o)
Does anyone still care what the Times says? If there’s anyone left in that club, be sure to turn off the lights on your way out.
Thanks for the ping.
Hoyt's met his match.
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