Thursday, March 27, 2008

The Huffington Post's Rachel Sklar attacks the media for their lack of coverage in Iraq. Quoting the anonymous 32-year-old blogger of Inside My Broken Skull, a veteran, Sklar rests her case. His words are below. Hopefully, they put that much more meaning to my previous post: read it and demand more.

I'm starting to feel a little burnt out by the fact that it seems that no one really cares about what is going on in Iraq and Afghanistan, except for a select few and the men and women fighting over there and their families.


Seems to me that it is becoming a more and more forgotten issue and will be that way until something horrible happens, which I pray never happens.

I don't know if the American public will ever wake up and demand action or justice, seems like everyone is too pre-occupied with Britney Spears, Starbucks closing for 2 hours and American Idol then the plight of several thousand men and women of the Armed Forces.

Sometimes it makes me want to forget about trying to make a change, but I won't stop. I'll just keep on keeping on and hope that things will change. Because if they don't, we as vets are screwed.

Media Silence on Iraq

"The Rocky Mountain News in Denver and the Daily News in New York were the only papers to give their entire front pages to honoring the men and women killed in Iraq. The Los Angeles Times gave a top quarter of their front to a feature called "Stories Of The Fallen." [...] Let's take a look at just some of the major US papers that left the soldiers out of their main front page headlines. To give a small bit of credit where not much is due, I've updated that The Washington Post posted a small headline in its very bottom left corner while The New York Times had a mention in a story excerpt below the fold." - Zaleski, The Huffington Post


Tragic. Is it because American newspaper readers (those few who are left) no longer care about the war? Soldiers are still dying. The war (if you can even call it that) is still there. It's the job and the duty of journalists to present this information to the public. Make us care. Show us the truth.



Katharine Zaleski of The Huffington Post shows this "sad day" in journalism through copies of major newspapers:

"The major newspapers -- some cut above the folds -- are pasted below. No need for more words. The media's silence on Iraq is loud and clear below."


Look at them and demand more.

Friday, March 21, 2008

So they did tell us the truth...

We just didn't listen.

5 years ago at least one-third of newspapers opposed the war in Iraq and voiced their negative opinions of it (who knew?)!

Print names before charges?

The Minnesota Star Tribune has historically refused to run the names of people arrested for high crimes, like murder, until a formal accusation has been released by police. Even as local T.V. stations are spilling out the name of the person arrested, the Strib usually waits to release the names. However, a recent murder case showed that their ethical guidelines might be changing:

The Strib did print [the arrested man's] name — on buzz.mn, which it brands 'Star Tribune Communities.' There, a user named 'mplscrimewatch' posted the complete Minneapolis police media release — with the identity that newsroom professionals had redacted.


Why? Why change policy now? Two reasons...

The web's rampaging information flow [... and] competition.
Not good enough for me and others agree as there are some worries about the change.

[R]eporter Caroline Lowe says she's open to her boss's argument
but, 'My concern is you can never give back a reputation if the person is never
charged. How can we minimize the harm?'

Good question, Caroline. Maybe the Strib's list of exceptions to the old policy holds a few answers.

Assistant Managing Editor Paul Klauda, who heads up the Strib's
review, says his paper's protocol allows four basic exceptions: when there's no
doubt who committed the act, when the suspect puts himself or herself in the
limelight, when the suspect is a public figure, and perhaps the most gaping of
all, when the case has high public interest.

Not good enough for me either. Legally, this all sounds great; ethically, there's something missing. However,news director Scott Libin at WCCO-Channel 4 explains further.

Libin insists a looser policy can have moral grounding: "The
Society of Professional Journalists says [our] primary obligation is to seek the
truth and report it as fully as possible. Not seek the truth and hold it. Second
is journalistic independence, and the third is minimizing harm — but that's
third. To me, that means we don't need a good reason to report what's true, but
a good reason not to."


Brilliant. Duty over compassion - Kant would agree and so do I.

Saturday, March 15, 2008

Spitzer Ethics

With the NY Governor's scandel commanding center stage the last few weeks, the media outlets reporting on it are quite numerous. These stories are sure to gain attention, and the Wall Street Journal's Kimberly A. Strassel does just this in an op-ed piece as "she accuses the 'adoring' and 'compliant' press of acting 'as an adjunct of Spitzer power, rather than a skeptic of it.'"

However, according to Jack Shafer of Slate, Strassel's article is far from perfect and, "like most press critics who hunt with a blunderbuss, Strassel is low on specifics." He notes several inconsistencies and facts she neglicted in her article, but perhaps the most troubling is her use of anonymous sources:

"Strassel's press critique neglects to name the favorite reporters to whom he 'doled out scoops' and 'who repaid him with allegiance.' The publications that 'buried inside' the news that would embarrass the prosecutor also go unnamed. She claims that news organizations (unnamed, in the interest of consistency, I suppose) 'that dared to criticize him' found themselves 'cut off.'"

What publications? What reporters? And according to Shafer, what evidence?

"To make the case that the press serviced Spitzer, Strassel needs to do more than shake her bloody burlap bag as evidence."

Whoa. Maybe Strassel should have quickly glanced through the Kidder model before posting her piece, because there are obviously those who believe it would have failed the facts level. I'm not sure what I believe, but Shafer does make an interesting case.

**Note**
I'm currently on Spring Break and unfortunately the old computer my parents own has an older version of Safari that won't allow me to edit formating or place links, as well as spell check and more. I will fix all of this when I return to good old Simpson College tomorrow (this is due tonight at midnight). Until then, the links are posted below. Thanks!

"Wall Street Journal columnist Kimberly A. Strassel thinks the press serviced Eliot Spitzer by Jack Shafer"/ Slate Magazine:
http://www.slate.com/id/2186549/

"Spitzber's Media Enablers" / WSJ.com:
http://online.wsj.com/article_print/SB120528114453028807.html

Friday, February 29, 2008

Ethical Questioning: Media Blackout Edition

Every article published goes through a series of ethical questioning, consciously or not, to make sure everybody (the media, the people involved, and the audience) is ready for it.

The New York Times recently did this with the McCain article.

Another example?

"Why we agreed to a media blackout on Harry" by Bob Satchwell.

Quiz Me

MediaShift's Mark Glaser put together an interesting weblog , claiming that in the background of the bloggers vs. journalists argument: "mainstream media reporters have started blogging in droves, while larger blog operations have hired seasoned reporters and focused on doing traditional journalism."

To prove his point on how the lines between journalism and bloggers are blurring, he put together a quiz only Andrew Keen (and perhaps Brian Steffen) could pass (I won't tell you how badly I did on this, but I can tell you that my score would make you feel better about yourself).

1. Who won a recent Polk Award for investigative journalism, a blogger or MSM reporter?

2. Which big New York-based website has four editors and four reporters, and is looking to hire two more reporters — a blog or traditional media outlet?

3. Which site hired a young blogger fresh out of college? Blog or MSM site?

4. Which site in Silicon Valley edits 80% of stories before being published online? Blog or MSM site?

(see his article for the answers)

Interesting. Very interesting, indeed. Isn't it a great day to be both a journalist and a blogger?