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Don't Blame It on Jayson Blair
Time

Posted on 06/02/2003 9:13:32 PM PDT by Cathryn Crawford

When the New York Times's Jayson Blair was busted for plagiarism and fabrications — and then its star writer Rick Bragg was suspended and quit after claiming an intern's reporting as his own — the media lit up like the switchboard of a gossipy small town. Reporters investigated reporters. The Times newsroom erupted in finger pointing. Journalism professors raised themselves up on their suede elbow patches to tsk-tsk. Newspapers worriedly reviewed their policies. Collectively, we agonized: Will the public ever trust us again?

Don't sweat it! the public replied. We didn't trust you in the first place! That's the message, anyway, of a USA Today/CNN/Gallup poll released last week. It found that only 36% of those polled believe the media generally "get the facts straight." But that number had not plummeted since the Blair scandal; in February, it was 39%, and in December 2000 it was 32%. In fact, only one-third of the people surveyed had even followed the Blair story.

The numbers may help explain why so few people had complained after Blair made up stuff about them — they assumed that that is just what reporters do. And the figures hint at why journalists are more fascinated by perfidy among our own than civilians are. Villains like Blair and their cut-and-dried crimes — lies bad, truth good! — are easier to deal with than the systemic problems with journalism that people really care about.

Journalists are nerdily literal-minded folk. When we say, "Does the public trust us?", we mean, "Do they think we're accurate?" The public has a more sophisticated definition of trust: Do the media respect me? Do they know how people like me live? Do they put news principles over the bottom line? Are they elitists, poseurs, sell-outs? Journalists think trust equals accuracy. But it's about much more: passion, genuineness, integrity.

In March, Gallup asked Americans to rate coverage of the Iraq war; 79% said it was good or excellent. But 38% said it was often inaccurate. Which means a fair chunk of the audience thought the media did a good, but inaccurate, job. Maybe they liked the media's wartime flag waving, were happy to see the media focus on a serious issue or understood that facts are always hard to pin down in war. Either way, the message is that truth is about more than facts. If people hate the media, it's not because Blair invented a tobacco field by Private First Class Jessica Lynch's house.

Why, then? Take your pick. There are the perennial charges of bias, which grow louder the more bitterly split the electorate gets. But there's also the problem that many big-media journalists are now cautious, well-paid conformists distant from their audiences and more responsive to urban elites, powerful people and megacorporations — especially the ones they work for. Hence the bland news anchors who verge on self-parody; magazines so commercial they're practically catalogs; timid pack journalism (We love dotcoms too! I mean, we never believed in them either!); local newscasts shilling for their corporate parents ("Up next: the hottest Survivor finale parties! Plus, the rest of the news!"); saturation coverage of trials-of-the-minute and movies we know will be lousy but will have big opening weekends. Yes, people watch and buy all this stuff. That doesn't mean they respect it. They see a profession that acts excited about a lot — Laci Peterson, The Matrix Reloaded, political horse races — but cares about nothing.

So it's not surprising that we've seen the runaway success of Fox News, which cares with a vengeance. Fox too is a big corporate entity that commits plenty of the above sins. But love it or hate it, Fox News also shows a passion for its job. Its pugilism and its high-decibel hosts' badly masked rightward leanings are journalistically incorrect, but they're not marketing (well, not just marketing). If Fox's political convictions often override its journalistic ones, at least it has convictions. Whereas when MSNBC slapped the flag onscreen and CNN hired Connie Chung for a shot of Fox-y tabloidism, it looked like the insincere opportunism that it was. Ironically, CNN brands itself the "most trusted name in news," and it has a deeper news bench than Fox. But CNN isn't the most watched name in news, perhaps because its definition of trust — "trust us to get accurate scoops" — is not the public's only priority.

The same goes for all of us. We can root out every error, every plagiarist, every bias — but it won't do any good if we replace them with a gutless inoffensiveness. We've spent a month being worried that our readers and viewers hate us because they think we're liars. Relax, brethren; they don't. They hate us because they think we're phonies.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Extended News; Front Page News; Government; News/Current Events; Philosophy; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: falsification; howellraines; jaysonblair; mediabias; mediafraud; medialies; newyorktimes; nyt; plagiarism; schadenfreude; thenewyorktimes

1 posted on 06/02/2003 9:13:32 PM PDT by Cathryn Crawford
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To: Cathryn Crawford
CNN, the most trusted name in news???? CNN the former employer of Peter Arnett, trusted???? Right.
2 posted on 06/02/2003 9:17:27 PM PDT by Eva
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To: DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet
Here's something interesting!
3 posted on 06/02/2003 9:17:45 PM PDT by Cathryn Crawford (Save your breath. You'll need it to blow up your date.)
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To: Cathryn Crawford
no, guys, we hate you because we know you're liars.
4 posted on 06/02/2003 9:21:14 PM PDT by Cosmo (Liberalism is for girls)
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To: Timesink
Sake-of-completeness PING
5 posted on 06/02/2003 9:23:17 PM PDT by martin_fierro (A v v n c v l v s M a x i m v s)
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To: Cathryn Crawford
Time magazine ALMOST got it right. The last sentence of this essay is correct, as far as it goes. Thanks for posting this.

Congressman Billybob

Latest column, now up on UPI and FR (the title is not a misprint), "Memorial Day 2033."

6 posted on 06/02/2003 9:24:41 PM PDT by Congressman Billybob ("Saddam has left the building. Heck, the building has left the building.")
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To: Cathryn Crawford
Last two sentences are wrong. We hate them because they are BOTH liars AND phonies.
7 posted on 06/02/2003 9:33:46 PM PDT by Malesherbes
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To: Cathryn Crawford
Veeeeery interesting ... but is it practical?
8 posted on 06/02/2003 9:35:20 PM PDT by MHGinTN (If you can read this, you've had life support from someone. Promote Life Support for others.)
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To: Cathryn Crawford
I was JUST talking to a woman about the media today. Her daughter ended up being part of a national news story, and she had absolutely NOTHING good to say about anyone her family came in contact with during the experience.

Also, I once had a friend whose husband had a nervous breakdown and actually stabbed some people (after he had boiled his hand in a pot of scalding milk, and had written on the wall in his own blood); the two of us went to lunch after a period of time, and she said to me, "When you watch the news, from now on, believe NONE of it."

And on a smaller scale, I once had a boyfriend who was quoted in an article on race relations in the music business, written by a Seattle Times (or possibly Post-Intelligencer) reporter. He specifically told the reporter he would only reveal information if he could remain anonymous; the reporter agreed, and turned around and included his name when the story came out in print.

I don't believe I know anyone who has had a good experience with them.
9 posted on 06/02/2003 9:38:28 PM PDT by DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet (So you're a feminist. Isn't that cute!)
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To: Cathryn Crawford
There are the perennial charges of bias,

And despite the overwhelming evidence...perennial denials from the perpetrators.

10 posted on 06/02/2003 9:38:34 PM PDT by Drango (A liberal's compassion is limited only by the size of someone else's wallet.)
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To: Drango
Love your tagline ... a Daschle/Harkin mantra if ever I've seen one!
11 posted on 06/02/2003 9:44:05 PM PDT by MHGinTN (If you can read this, you've had life support from someone. Promote Life Support for others.)
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To: DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet
The examples you give are good, and illustrate one of the main things that the media refuses, by and large to admit: we know they lie.

I have often had this discussion with people and have found something similar to the following line of though to be extremely enlightening to many...

If you ask someone to think back upon any event that became, in some way, a media story of any import. Have them try to recall what they thought about the reporting. Was it accurate? Did the media focus at all on what was actually important about the event, or did they find some superficial thing to focus upon? Many people respond that in any way that matters, the media completely misreported the event.

If a person can't really recall such an incident, I ask them what one thing there is in the entire world that they are most knowledgable about. (Even the most moronic of individuals knows at least one subject fairly well.) Once we establish what this thing is, (incidently it is an extremely powerful thing to personalize it in this manner), I ask them to recall any media reportage on the subject from any source. Thinking of that reporting, I ask them, was it accurate? Was it completely wrong? (this is the case more often than not) Was the reporting misleading or focusing on the trivial (i.e., the celebrity aspect) at the expense of the truth or what is actually important?

Zeugma moves in for the kill

Then I ask, "given how absolutely poorly they covered (topic x), why would you think that they don't report every bit as poorly on anything/everything else as well that you aren't as knowledgable about?"

I've found conversations similar to this to have been one of the most effective tools I've ever seen to quickly make someone go "hmmmm"

12 posted on 06/02/2003 10:48:32 PM PDT by zeugma (Hate pop-up ads? Here's the fix: http://www.mozilla.org/)
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To: DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet
I've had opportunity to be at the scene of at least 3 news stories over the years. ditto your don't believe none of it comment.

The stories were almost but not quite entirely unlike the events they were supposed to document.
13 posted on 06/02/2003 10:55:14 PM PDT by festus
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To: DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet
"I don't believe I know anyone who has had a good experience with them."

What's incredible is that they can -- and will -- get the simplest of stories wrong. E.g., "Man Bites Dog" will almost certainly turn out to involve a cat as one of the principals...

14 posted on 06/02/2003 10:57:50 PM PDT by okie01 (The Mainstream Media: IGNORANCE ON PARADE.)
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To: Cathryn Crawford
BTTT
15 posted on 06/02/2003 11:04:09 PM PDT by mrustow (no tag)
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To: Cathryn Crawford
bttt
16 posted on 06/03/2003 12:27:39 AM PDT by lainde
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