Objectivity

Jeff Alworth

[Note: post updated below.]

"This newspaper is dedicated to keeping our readers informed so they are better able to promote and preserve mankind's inherent freedom.  We believe in the supremacy of individual rights and responsibilities as expressed in the Declaration of Independence, the Golden Rule, and the Ten Commandments."

--message from Freedom Communications, owner of the Yuma Sun newspaper

For five mornings beginning on Thanksgiving, I enjoyed my morning cup of coffee under sunnier skies--in Southern Arizona.  My morning read was a little different, too.  The Yuma Sun newspaper features a decidedly red-state perspective on the news--it makes the Oregonian look like the Socialist Worker.  (Actually, the little daily doesn't have many reporters--most of the news comes off the wire--but the editorials...whoo!) 

Then this morning, under my usual cloudy skies, I noted two interesting articles in my usual Oregonian.  In one, Edward Walsh gives a big fat wet kiss to Karen Minnis.  It's half of a two-piece discussion of leadership in the Oregon legislature.  In another, Maxine Bernstein writes about settlements from the City of Portland to protesters injured in 2002.  And in the contrast I found something ... unusual.

Blogs get dinged all the time for failing to be sufficiently objective.  Our own little blog has been so dinged.  Well, if promoting mankind's inherent freedom can be considered the basis of an objective enterprise, maybe it's time to revisit the topic.

First question: what's objective?

Let's have a look at those two Oregonian articles.  In the first, the Oregonian is doing a bit of good-guy journalism.  We're about to embark on what may be a bloody legislative season, and they've run two soft-ball articles on leaders of the House (Minnis) and Senate (Courtney).  In neither article is controversy fomented.  Minnis, one of the most divisive politicians to gavel in a session of the House, is described by Portland liberal Kate Brown as:  "warm ... friendly ... caring."  She comes off as a jolly mom, likely to appear bearing cookies and milk. 

In the other article, the Oregonian goes for textbook newspaper objectivity.  The article slug reads like this: "Portland is preparing to pay 12 people who say they were injured during dissent against President Bush and the Iraq war" (emphasis mine).  This accords with the standard practice of using "alleged" to describe unconvicted crime suspects, no matter how guilty the circumstances make them appear.  But the article goes on to describe incidents which demonstrate that the protesters were injured and that the City agreed--thus the settlement. 

So which article is objective?  I'd argue the Minnis piece is actually more objective--although the facts are clearly stacked, the paper's aim is to give both leaders a positive platform from which to lead.  The second article, however, is worse.  Although it slavishly adheres to journalism's standards, it actually misrepresents the thrust of the settlement by implying the protesters may be less than truthful in their claims. 

Second question: does having an editorial position fatally undermine objectivity?

The Yuma Sun has an editorial position, and a rather bizarre one.  It wishes, somehow, to convert its readers into promoters of "mankind's inherent freedom."  BlueOregon also has an editorial position--less bizarre, but perhaps more cocky.  Our position will not only be progressive, but smart and funny (among other things).  (Question 2a: are you laughing yet?  Grinning wryly?  Damn.)  But does holding these objectives prevent us from presenting facts in an "objective" light?  Are our posts forever doomed to be biased if they're funny?

It's a question that begs an answer, but maybe for the moment it's better left tantalizingly rhetorical.  Something to consider whilst we sip our coffee, under skies cloudy and clear.

[Update (12/01 9:20 am):  It looks as if bias may well have seeped into the reporting on that story about the City's settlement with protesters.  On today's editorial page, the O opines: "But city taxpayers can't be faulted for wishing that protesters would behave more lawfully, that police would respond more adroitly and that this $300,000 would be going to parks and potholes, not the pockets of lawyers and litigious protesters."  Whether or not the editorial page tinkered with that slugline in yesterday's article, this is exactly the bias I tried to identify.  It gives, at the very least, the appearance of editorial overstepping.

biX also had some rather trenchant comments to this post here; he also points to a useful guide about journalistic ethics here.]

  • (Show?)

    No such thing as "objective," there's always a lens, theory, background philosophy, or frame of reference.

    A good news outlet should at least try to present both sides of the story, particularly if they claim to be impartial or objective. Blogs, like diaries, are only one side of the story and they're very clear about that: seems like blogs shouldn't get dinged for being less than objective when they don't make the claim to be objective.

    Speaking of less-than-objective, imagine my shock and awe when I went to visit my sister and found that the Sunday Atlanta Journal-Constitution has a special section on Faith. That week, there was a theme of editorials from various area preachers on whether homosexuality was a choice or a punishment. I'm not kidding.

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    Oh you young postmodernists. There may always have been a lens, but it certainly hasn't always been acknowledged. While the fields of history and biology and even physics have had to contend with the postmodern critique, journalism yet clings blithely to the notion of "objectivity." It's not their worst crime.

    Readers also believe news should be objective--which is why they reliably decry "the media" when polled about it.

    And many, like you--I heard Wonkette mention it on CNN a couple days ago--believe blogs are constitutionally one-sided. I'm not so sure. Presenting both sides is tantamount to presenting a single side if one of the sides is baldly lying. There's nothing objective about that. And presenting only "one" side--in this case news that interests liberals--doesn't mean it doesn't represent both sides in that story accurately. Does it?

  • Georgia (unverified)
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    I don't think there can be true objectivity. But I think that journalists must strive to be objective. The closer they can be to that goal, the better. They are supposed to ask questions of both sides. I don't think going away from objectivity, or the claims of it, would do us any good at all.

    I just don't hold the belief that journalists are trying to portray one side as good, one as bad. I think most are just trying to do a good job telling the story. . . . inherently, people can't help but see certain sides to a story given their personal bent.

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    The goal of journalism should not be objectivity, but transparency, because it's transparency that leads to udnerstanding, not so-called objectivity.

    To take a cue from an above comment: Journalism based upon transparency would make it abundantly clear that one side of a dispute is simply lying out its ass. Journalism based upon objectivity would simply say that Side A says X and Side B says Y, and maybe add that members of Side A says that Side B is lying when they say Y. And they'd simply leave it at that.

    Show me, then, how "objectivity" gives us anything useful.

  • Georgia (unverified)
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    I think you take objectivity to mean turning off your brain. That is a misrepresentation of what objectivity means. It doens't mean just reporting what side A and side B say. It means keeping an open mind, listening to both arguments and reporting relevant facts. Sure what each reporter deems as relevant and which sources he or she uses to obtain "facts" can color reporting. But following those guidelines and trying to keep opinion out of the news is definitely important in my view. I am sick of pundits and opinion all the time. I like news to just be news sometimes. I like reporters to gather facts . . not to tell me what to think. And I really honestly believe that most reporters are trying to do just that - - - report news.

    My argument is this: Journalists should seek to report the truth. They should seek to serve the readers' best interests. When they have these goals in their hearts and minds while working on a story, they are more likely to do a good job.

    Transparancy is fine in its place, but I think you could easily go too far with it. I think a reporter starting off a story with a predetermined public opinion is a mistake. I a journalist says "I'm a progressive. I'm doing a story about how wonderful urban planning is." That is exactly what they will find. By outright stating support for a cause, you kind of cement that idea and belief within yourself. Whereas, if he hasn't committed, he is more likely to LISTEN to those around him, listen to the story, the sources and learn about the community and the issue. Being open and listening are the keys to good journalism. And I'm not going to give up on that just because objectivity screwed us in the Iraq War debate.

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    That is a misrepresentation of what objectivity means. It doens't mean just reporting what side A and side B say.

    My mistake, I suppose, for using the definition "objectivity" the way it's come to be defined by the way modern-day journalism practices it.

    But more importantly, here is what journalists should aspire to, and it has nothign to do with the fluffy non-notion of objectivity.

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    Hey Bix, you're a pretty sharp guy. Ever consider blogging?

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    I think journalists get in trouble when they think of "objectivity" as "presenting both sides."

    Are there really "two sides"? Does the journalist attempt to verify the facts? Reporting that consists only of "he said/she said" reflects laziness, not objectivity.

    We could get into a long discussion about the nature of reality but outside a philosophy classroom most people understand the concept at the level of everyday life at least well enough to have a meaningful debate over what does and doesn't qualify.

    I don't ask more than that of journalists--just provide us with reliable fodder for the debate. If a reporter quotes someone, I want to be able to assume that the quote hasn't been taken out of context to fit a preconceived story line or changed just a little to make it more sensational. I want to know that a statement presented as fact has been checked and I want to be provided with enough information for the fact to be independently verified.

    What I want in a journalist is someone who will strive above all else to report measurements, facts, opinions, observations, evidence etc. as accurately as is humanly possible. I want journalists who are committed to honesty, whose personal moral, religious or spiritual values do not require them to ignore or stretch the truth as they find it to fit some preconceived notion of how things work. (Yes, I know that reflects my Western, secular, humanist values and my scientific training.)

    I think conventional journalism may put too much emphasis on reporters not expressing opinions. Between highly opinionated reporters whose first commitment is to reporting reality as they can best determine it over reporters who don't have an opinion about the subject but who aren't careful about the facts, I'll take the opinionated ones every time.

    In my opinion, b!X at Portland Communique produces generally better journalism than, for example, most local TV newscasts. Both b!X and TV news need to entertain to some degree to keep an audience.

    b!X tries to present the facts accurately and entertains with his opinions. It's always clear to me which is which. I learn from his posts even when I disagree with him. He provides source material and a mechanism for people to respond if they think he's misrepresented something. In my experience, he's a reliable source of information.

    In their attempts to entertain, TV newspeople routinely distort and sensationalize--sometimes even to the point of outright lying. (See the discussion of KOIN News shenanigans in the Communique archives.) For me, TV news has long since ceased to be a source of information unless I want to see video of volcanic eruptions, floods or snowstorms. They do that pretty well.

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    Reporting that consists only of "he said/she said" reflects laziness, not objectivity.

    This is true. My suspicion is that one reason why the media has come to pass off "he said/she said" as "objectivity" is that the righteous wing's bullying about the so-called liberal media pushed the media into reducing itself to lazy "he said/she said" in order to appear to be somehow more fair.

  • allehseya (unverified)
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    Quoting point 3 regarding the essence of journalism

    “Journalists rely on a professional discipline for verifying information. When the concept of objectivity originally evolved, it did not imply that journalists are free of bias. It called, rather, for a consistent method of testing information--a transparent approach to evidence--precisely so that personal and cultural biases would not undermine the accuracy of their work. The method is objective, not the journalist. Seeking out multiple witnesses, disclosing as much as possible about sources, or asking various sides for comment, all signal such standards. This discipline of verification is what separates journalism from other modes of communication, such as propaganda, fiction or entertainment.”

    Method = objectivity Approach = transparency

    (one does not exclude the other)

  • allehseya (unverified)
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    disclaimer: regarding media -- it's the verification I look for in media 'standards' regarding the W's and H's surrounding an issue.

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    (one does not exclude the other)

    Of course not. But it's also important to remember that part of the context for this conversation is that the media itself has a habit of not subscribing to the method you quote, but to the comparately-newly-minted bastardization of "objectivity".

  • LT (unverified)
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    Actually, although a very flattering portrait the Minnis article was objective in that it reported what other people said about Minnis. (Actually, I thought the Courtney article was closer to reality--more like the actual person.)

    There were things lacking (like the way she treats ordinary citizens as opposed to those who work in the building) but it was a point of view profile. We could do worse (and the coverage of Wu's college life as relevant to 2004 was certainly worse).

    But viewpoint and objectivity are really like that workshop I went to in college. It was in an auditorium where the the seats were in a semicircle. The speaker held up a large paper cup on its side. The people in the middle saw the side of the cup, the people on one side saw the bottom of the cup, and the people on the other side saw the opening in the top of the cup. The speaker called on people in various parts of the auditorium and asked them what they saw. And then "But how could you see an opening when the woman over there saw the side of the cup?". The point was that wars had started with such a disagreement--where you stand depends on where you sit sort of thing.

  • allehseya (unverified)
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    b!X states:

    “Of course not. But it's also important to remember that part of the context for this conversation is that the media itself has a habit of not subscribing to the method you quote, but to the comparately-newly-minted bastardization of "objectivity".”

    I agree with you wholeheartedly that media has a habit of not subscribing to the quote I used (and what I refer to as ‘standards’ in journalism). I also agree with you that the * he-said / she-said * is a bastardization of ‘objectivity’ (and therefore a loss of media standards).

    This is precisely the premise for my critique in the Greg Walden Update thread.

    (I only bring this up as Jeff referenced it in his original post and for the purpose of illustration / explanation.)

    In that thread, I stressed that if we were discussing holding ourselves accountable to standards lost by media – that we should not stop at the mere “she-said” quote obtained by Torrid Joe in our research – for the purposes of this argument -- nor should we have accepted or confused it with ‘objectivity’ in journalism as it was the beginning of journalistic research, not its conclusion. (or to borrow from LT -- an incomplete view of the cup even from one perspective)

    While I do commend the conscious effort to obtain and report information that Torrid Joe and the other bloggers demonstrated regarding Walden’s stance – I did not find it sufficient enough to warrant the praise of meeting the larger issue of media’s lost standards. If anything – our acceptance of the ‘she-said’ quote with partial / incomplete information surrounding the details and contexts of the issue / quotes -- actually mimics the media practices we are critiquing.

    Again -- none of this matters as we are not, in this forum, held to such media standards. I just think that we shouldnt claim that we are holding up to those standards when we're not.

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    Well, to address the Walden episode, I beg to differ yet again. Heh.

    What the Torrid Joe report represented was one element to the story. In a more traditional media environment -- say, the newspaper at a daily paper -- there would be more conversation and several more steps before anything was published.

    In the world of weblogs, that conversation and those steps take place out in the open, within a given weblog or between/amongst more than one weblog. The process is comparable, it's just that it happens out in the open.

    Part of the problem here is that both writers and readers are still learning the new literacy required to understand how news is published via weblogs.

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    Actually, I may have made this remark before on this site, but it's relevant again: Much like they say you don't want to see how either sausage or legislation is made, to some extent what's going on in media today is that we're all getting to see how journalism is made, because bloggers are engaging in the entire process publicly, rather than within the walls of the newsroom. All the steps are published along the way, and as media-consuming creatures, we haven't yet all acclimated to the new way of consuming news that requires.

  • allehseya (unverified)
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    “Well, to address the Walden episode, I beg to differ yet again. Heh.”

    All right.

    “What the Torrid Joe report represented was one element to the story.”

    Agreed. This is why I stated that as such, it represented an incomplete ‘answer’ (it was a beginning rather than a conclusion).

    “In a more traditional media environment -- say, the newspaper at a daily paper -- there would be more conversation and several more steps before anything was published.”

    Agreed. For the sake of further clarity, this process, if true to our agreed-upon media standards would reflect a “consistent method of testing information--a transparent approach to evidence--precisely so that personal and cultural biases would not undermine the accuracy of their work.”

    At this stage of the journalism process, certain questions arise and the process is designed with (much needed) standards in place so as to address those questions and avoid those things which ‘undermine’ the accuracy of information. I’m assuming that we agree here so please do correct me if I’m wrong.

    “In the world of weblogs, that conversation and those steps take place out in the open, within a given weblog or between/amongst more than one weblog. The process is comparable, it's just that it happens out in the open.”

    Yes, I understand this.

    If the process is comparable, and IF we are being held to the standard I quoted above (and that I assumed we agree on?) then doesn’t it follow that we mustn’t accept bastardized objectivity of ‘he-said / she-said’ as answers to those questions that arise in the process?

    Shouldn’t we be careful to avoid those things that serve to potentially ‘undermine’ the accuracy of information such as a lack of verification (web links are fine), clarity on context (re: quotes or questions surrounding the issue), etc.?

  • allehseya (unverified)
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    Re: further clarity on the comparable

    “Part of the problem here is that both writers and readers are still learning the new literacy required to understand how news is published via web logs.”

    I don’t view conjecture, opinion etc. on web logs as objective news, nor do I uphold it as a desired element of the process we refer to when creating objective news.

    We seem, however, to agree that there are lost standards within media and what you call “new literacy”; I call media literacy in general.

    Media reform advocates (myself included) believe that media literacy is required of all makers of media, the writers of it and the readers as well.

    The blogging community, digital media (makers and consumers) in general -- are not exempt from benefiting from media literacy – it is all the more necessary when a web log seeks to have contributors collaborate on obtaining ‘objective’ news (or holding itself and the contributors accountable to an ethical guideline of media standards) -- as opposed to merely providing a ‘subjective’ forum for user comments.

    Even though it makes me cringe, I do tend to agree with you that blogging illustrates “how journalism is made, because bloggers are engaging in the entire process publicly, rather than within the walls of the newsroom.” I contend, however – that it does not meet the standards which (correct me if I’m wrong) you and I agree on in this thread thus far (which is why I cringe).

    Just because one can state that blogging potentially exposes a correlation to journalism and how “all the steps are published along the way,” -- one mustn’t assume that the steps taken are correctly taken when watched in the context of a guideline for standards that media has lost.

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    Interesting commentary.

    I'd like to note, as always, the distinction between news and opinion. On a newspaper these are easier to distinguish because we have a section for opinion pieces. In a blog, they can't be separated. While what we do is mostly commentary, there's a fair amount of news posting, too.

    I'd also like to note that blogs are a different, emerging medium. Their very utility comes from being different from traditional news. The question of objectivity is as valuable a one for blogs as it is for regular journalism, but the terms are different. biX, in my mind, hit the salient distinction in identifying transparency as the virtue to strive for. Because the blogs are an emerging medium, it's easier to dodge that Cronkite objectivity that journalists wear like a yoke.

  • ajournalist (unverified)
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    But the article goes on to describe incidents which demonstrate that the protesters were injured and that the City agreed--thus the settlement.

    First, I don't see the city agreeing in that story. I see them admitting unspecified "mistakes" and saying they want the case to go away because they're not confident of their chances with a jury. And I see lawyers for the plaintiffs describing what happened. Given that, it's perfectly appropriate for the headline to have that sort of qualification in it.

    Whether or not the editorial page tinkered with that slugline in yesterday's article, this is exactly the bias I tried to identify.  It gives, at the very least, the appearance of editorial overstepping.

    That's pretty laughable. Most people in the newsroom couldn't give two shits what the editorial page thinks about anything. And if they tried to interfere with the writing or editing of a story, they'd have a pretty short career.

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    Even though it makes me cringe, I do tend to agree with you that blogging illustrates “how journalism is made, because bloggers are engaging in the entire process publicly, rather than within the walls of the newsroom.” I contend, however – that it does not meet the standards which (correct me if I’m wrong) you and I agree on in this thread thus far (which is why I cringe).

    Just because one can state that blogging potentially exposes a correlation to journalism and how “all the steps are published along the way,” -- one mustn’t assume that the steps taken are correctly taken when watched in the context of a guideline for standards that media has lost.

    Well, of course they aren't always taken in the "correct" way (whatever that may be, of course). My only point here is that we can't take a single instance of a weblog posting a single piece of information... we can't take that out of context. And the context is "this is one piece of information amongst all the pieces of information that this weblog and others who are covering this story have published".

    In essence, weblogs that work in this way inherently come with a disclaimer: "This is what we've heard so far, and who we've heard it from".

    It's just that it would be extraordinarily unwieldly to actually include that disclaimer on everything that's posted.

  • the prof (unverified)
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    "Objective" journalism has been around a long time and has little to do with current political conflicts. It emerged as a goal of journalists long ago, some suggest as far back as Andrew Jackson (so that journalists would not be seen as tools of mercantalists and planters). It really took hold in the Progressive Era (1890s).

    Michael Schudson, Discovering the News Herbert Gans, Deciding Whats News

  • allehseya (unverified)
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    b!X states:

    In essence, weblogs that work in this way inherently come with a disclaimer: "This is what we've heard so far, and who we've heard it from". It's just that it would be extraordinarily unwieldy to actually include that disclaimer on everything that's posted.

    As inconvenient or unwieldy as it may be to cite sources, extend research, verify leads, remain objective etc. – I suggest one endure the inconvenience and begin to wield the discipline to do so only in the event that a blog posits that it’s contributor(s):

    “represents a kind of accountability we used to want the press demand from our leaders. Now we can demand it ourselves.” as stated by Jeff

  • allehseya (unverified)
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    Jeff?

    Something just ocurred to me --

    I filled in your paragraph like this (below) in my mind when I first read it:

    “...represents a kind of accountability we used to want from the press and demand from our leaders. Now we can demand it ourselves.”

    -- which led me to the critique I derived at (with all of my issues and baggage re: Media Reformin tow)-- but it ocurred to me just now that I may have been filling it in all wrong and changed the context / meaning (therefore your intention) through misinterpretation?

    I'm sorry if this is the case.

  • Tenskwatawa (unverified)
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    <h1></h1>

    Only a short comment (you wish) for now. On the particulars, as The Oregonian has them:

    "But city taxpayers can't be faulted for wishing ... that this $300,000 would be going to parks and potholes, not the pockets of lawyers and litigious protesters."

    Alan Graf, in an interview on the KBOO 90.7 FM (kboo.fm) 5 o'clock news, said the attorneys fees and court costs, ("ten attorneys for two years," I think I heard him say), come in addition to the $300,000 reparations to plaintiffs. It could cost the city millions of dollars to be able to save the money it economizes by hiring police less well-educated, less well-adjusted, less well-seasoned (read: "older"), at the lower wages that roustabouts, tinhorns, and newbies can be hired for.

    So The 'O' may have it wrong, the settlement amounts are not going into "the pockets of lawyers" -- they're extra. Stay tuned for the 'objective' facts of the outcome and/or a newspaper correction.

    Further note: Not in the news story nor the editorial was it accurately stated that the Bush, the Bush uber-security robogoons, and the anti-Bush demonstration, all converged in the name of a Gordon Smith 2002 Campaign fundraiser. If Smith is going to book his fear leader for a greed-money appearance, then Smith owes to pay for the unlawful damage and breakage Bush causes.

    The 'O' is covering up Smith's blame for this whole thing. The City should countersue Smith to recover losses. This $300,000-plus-costs settlement should have included a personal apology from Smith to the Oregonians who were shot, assaulted, beaten, and poisoned by the security force needed to keep Smith in a bubblewrap to campaign for office away from voters.

    Why does the newspaper cover-up for Gordon Smith? What's the objective? (To be continued....)

    <h1></h1>
  • Andrew Kaza (unverified)
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    In the vast array of commentary thusfar, I see something missing. That is, the frightening collusion of interests that occurs when competition in the media is stifled and therefore, "freedom of the press" falls by the wayside. The root cause of so much bad (i.e. non-objective, lazy etc.) journalism is the lack of competition. Journalism is, in that sense, just like any "service industry". Its standards will fall without proper competition. Connect the dots, people! The government has been loosening standards and allowing absurd levels of media concentration for over two decades now. Concentrate on changing the problem at the source and eventually we will see the end product change. It's time to demand accountability from our leaders in DC, especially (because media regulation is almost totally at the federal level...perhaps something else that should change?). Last year's outcry to the FCC over the latest ownership giveaway should be only the beginning. There is a lot of work to do. Who's in???

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    It's often the case that I feel the discussions on these threads are more valuable than my original post. I believe if I cut and pasted several paragraphs from the comments, it would better represent my initial intentions. That, apropos of nothing. Anyway, great stuff.

    I'll post another update in a moment, but here is a response to "a journalist" upthread. Today the O ran yet another article, and this time Maxine Bernstein gets it right. Your comment: First, I don't see the city agreeing in that story. I see them admitting unspecified "mistakes" and saying they want the case to go away because they're not confident of their chances with a jury.

    But here's what the article says:

    Katz acknowledged the city's liability before approving the settlement. "Mistakes were made. There was no question about it -- you had to be blind not to see it," Katz said.

    Commissioner Erik Sten said the cases showed a lack of community policing. "We did wrong by these protesters" Sten said, "and when that happens we should settle and make it right."

    I don't see how you spin that any way but an admission from the City--mayor and unanimous City Council vote--that they agreed with the protesters' assertions.

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    Other random comments. The Prof identifies the understanding of "objectivity" I was questioning in the initial post. As a result of our scientific approach to the world post-Darwin, modernism was very much about measurable truth. Journalism picked this up and established goals of objectivity that were in accord with current understanding of the public-good on public-owned airwaves. That notion is of course now in tatters, but it still persists as an expectation and a quasi-goal.

    Allehseya, my interest in objectivity has the two dimensions: I'm interested in it as a intellectual riddle, but thanks to the past 10 years of right-wing abuse, I also regard it as a critical element of our Democracy. For a number of reasons, the "media" in the aggregate have done a less-than-adequate job of serving as a check to the power of the GOP. Political blogging emerged specifically to give voice to those of us who wanted to do the job we didn't see the press doing. Andrew's comment is essentially my view on this.

    I remain convinced we can do it in a fair, transparent manner--but possibly leaving aside the notion of "objectivity" as a relic from the past is a good place to start.

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    Didn't your parents ever tell you not to believe everything you read?

    My folks drilled that one into me, and it seems like all this yearning for an "objective" media is just us being lazy-brainers ourselves and wanting to be able to believe everything we read so that we don't have to go to the trouble of thinking about whether the sources are credible or have interests of their own.

    And I still think it's juvenile and silly to pretend that anything written by people can be totally objective - people have beliefs and thoughts and predispositions that play into whatever they see or do or write; all that influence can be limited by procedure (this is where the transparency comes in) but it's never eliminated.

    I do agree that mainstream media consolidation is big, bad and scary, but keep in mind that there's lots of alternative places to get whatever news you agree with (witness blogs and the rest of the interweb) and more people are getting only the news that they agree with from these places.

    So, do we want traditional news that adheres to traditional principles on process, do we want new news that is creating new protocols as it grows, do we want someone else to do front-end critical thinking for us, do we want to have the critical thinking onus put on us at the back end, or is it all of the above?

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    Related: Here's a survey from the Pew Center for People & the Press about how most people don't dig media consolidation, and how Americans want their news coverage to be both "pro-American" and "neutral" at the same time.

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    As inconvenient or unwieldy as it may be to cite sources, extend research, verify leads, remain objective etc. – I suggest one endure the inconvenience and begin to wield the discipline to do so

    This was said after I talked about how it would be silly to place a disclaimer "This is what we've heard so far, and who we've heard it from" on every single weblog post. So I'm unclear as to how the above exhortation even relates.

    Nowever, not in the quote of mine to which the above is a response or anywhere else, suggested support for not doing the above things (with the exception of the mythical objectivity, of course). What I said is that any single weblog post is merely one step in the evolution of any given story.

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    "Nowever" was meant to be "nowhere" -- a good example of why it's not okay for b!X to be posting comments on blogs before he has gone up to Stumptown for his coffee.

  • Chris Bouneff (unverified)
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    I've read this chain with interest, especially hearing from non-reporters about what reporters strive for. I was a newspaper reporter for 10 years and have been out of the business for about eight years. On the outside, I learned that there's a certain newsroom mentality in which we assumed our public knew things about how a newspaper works that they don't understand, such as the difference between the editorial page and editorial staff and the news pages and the news staff. The average reader doesn't know the difference and doesn't know about the firewall between the two departments, for example.

    Today, any journalist who says the goal is objectivity is probably a broadcast reporter who doesn't know anything about journalism.

    Any journalist worth anything knows you don't strive for objectivity -- you strive for fairness. And that's the way any good journalist talks about what he or she is after. Do you understand what the sources are saying to you? Do you have all the major angles covered? Have you looked at all the important data, and do you understand it?

    Then you write your story. You try to tell a compelling and interesting story, something that the public will read. You try to represent the important aspects of the story. You try to do some truth-telling.

    Be objective? No one can do that, not even the best reporter. You choose a lens through which to look at a story, and you do your best to get the tale across in the 15 column inches you have. Sometimes you have more space and can fill out a story.

    But you can’t cover every angle and every side. That is a limitation of summarizing complex issues. You can't make it appealing to all parties. But when you put your product out there, if you're worth anything, you evaluate it, you listen to feedback, and you make positive changes to your reporting and writing for future stories.

    Clearly, not all news outlets are interested in fairness. Fox News on the conservative side, for example, or Dan Rather on the liberal side at times in his anchor's career. But, hey, that’s the price we pay for a free media, whether its consolidated or vast.

  • Randy (unverified)
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    Is it OK to complain in this thread about the general laziness of the press these days? How they swallow just about anything with only minimal skepticism or question, lest they lose their status at WH press conferences or briefings?

    Or how television looks first for the easy visual and then builds their story around it instead of doing the work to make a story and then figuring out what visuals might work?

    Loved WWs article about whether or not the Boregonian is going to send their staff out to help that newspaper in the midwest where the staff is on strike? And their excuse was something like "No one wants to see a newpaper go unpublished (cannot lose those ad revenues!)". Like drop-in foreign reporters are going to find the really important stories the public needs to see in that city.

    Good thread folks.

  • Christy (unverified)
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    This conversation reminds me a bit of my grandmother...She is an apolitical conservative. I know a few of these. They claim to know nothing about politics, yet had Bush/Cheney stickers and forwarded emails about Bush lovingly visiting soldiers in the hospital.

    Anyway, she just loves "fair and balanced" Fox News because they tell HER version of the truth.

    Objectivity comes from both the journalist and the reader. If you want to find a bias, you will. And if you agree with the bias, you are far less likely to notice it.

    With that in mind, I avoid The Nation and other very left publications as much as I avoid Fox News.

    This is also why I introduced my students to The Onion back when I was not an underemployed teacher. I didn't tell them it was satire and they all freaked out a little. A lesson in remembering to think for themselves and, as the cliche goes, not believing everything they read.

  • allehseya (unverified)
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    Disclaimer: posted at the risk of sounding redundant

    Fairness, transparency, the process of verification, etc. (of information being presented in a news article which serves to inform the public on the facts surrounding an issue) each represent an ethical approach (standard of media) that are applied to an 'objective method'.

    While I understand the post-modern pastime of playing with semantic riddles and their literal applications / contexts in a world where everything is perceived through a subjective lens – I don’t understand discounting the words used to embody ideal concepts on the grounds that they are too “idealistic” or “naïve”.

    It seems, while reading this thread, that the word / concept “objective / objectivity” is being tainted and discarded in such a manner. Why not toss out other relics such as “truth” and “love” in similar fashion while we’re at it, Jeff?

    Jeff states that his interest in objectivity is twofold: “ I'm interested in it as a intellectual riddle” and “also regard it as a critical element of our Democracy” but then (perhaps from too much postmodern pondering of the riddle?) he goes on to state that “I remain convinced we can do it in a fair, transparent manner – but possibly leaving aside the notion of ‘objectivity’ as a relic from the past is a good place to start.” This begs the question (in my mind) that if objectivity is, as Jeff states, “a critical element of our Democracy” then why “leave it aside”? Is the word not cool enough for the postmodernists?

    I'm not cool -- but I’ll join in the postmodern game anyway and grant that “objectivity” is an ideal. And yes, even unrealistic in its purest form (as most ideals are). I still contend, however, that fairness, transparency, the verification process etc. are the realistic approaches (standards) that we apply and that should be used to strive towards that ideal.

    After all, hasn’t humanity always strived towards an ‘ideal’ of various forms? “Democracy” itself represents a striving towards a ‘utopian’ ideal of sorts – ‘objectivity’ likewise strives towards a similar ideal of ‘truth’.

    One would think that using the ideal of ‘objectivity’ as a guide to develop methods and ‘standards’ would be advisable – especially in a society which relies on media to function in a role of checks and balances, informing and alerting the public when something within that society is amiss.

    For what its worth, I think that the majority of people contributing to this thread (Jeff included) agree that fairness, transparency and process of verification are necessary standards of media. Where we seem to differ is mainly in choosing to admit that these are approaches to an objective method in journalism. (Due to a petty distaste for the word 'objective'?)

    Towards resolving that difference, I’ll quote again point 3 from the link that Jeff and b!X have pointed us to in their posts:

    “When the concept of objectivity originally evolved, it did not imply that journalists are free of bias. It called, rather, for a consistent method of testing information--a transparent approach to evidence--precisely so that personal and cultural biases would not undermine the accuracy of their work. The method is objective, not the journalist. Seeking out multiple witnesses, disclosing as much as possible about sources, or asking various sides for comment, all signal such standards. This discipline of verification is what separates journalism from other modes of communication, such as propaganda, fiction or entertainment. But the need for professional method is not always fully recognized or refined.

    Method = objective Approach = transparent

    Do we really not agree and if so, pray tell -- why?

  • allehseya (unverified)
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    sorry about the italics nightmare above -- it's been a long day.

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    This is just me trying to end the italics.

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    The method may or may not be somehow objective, but the problem we've been identifying and describing here is that the concept of objectivity in journalism has been bastardized into meaning (1) that journalists must be objective and that (2) the product of journalists must somehow be objective -- neither one of whicbh is realistic.

    Some people may want to spend their time trying to somehow rescue the word "objective" from the bastardization. But others of us would rather spend our time jettisoning the term as beyonf rescue (whether or not we even feel rescue is possible) and focus instead on finding other more accurate ways to describe journalism.

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    Your readers looking for a further discussion on "objectivity" might like to check out:

    http://www.cjr.org/issues/2004/6/mooney-science.asp

    This is Chris Moody's article in Columbia Journalism Review about the perils of being "objective" when covering science-related issues.

    The wingnuts have a host of publicists out there posing as experts ready to preach the party line to gullible reporters.

    As I taught my journalism students more more than a decade there are not always two sides to a story. There are often three or four or more. Often the "two sides" don't want you to know anything about the other sides at all.

    It is a reporter's job to know more than your sources tell you about an issue. Getting that kind of background is hard work. There are few reporters that meet that requirment these days and fewer media outlets willing to pay such reporters what they are worth.

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    Allehseya, it sounds like we're actually a lot closer to agreement than dissent. For what it's worth, I think that the vestiges of thinking that one can be objective still plague journalists. I like what Russell and others have written above. It sets aside the notion of objectivity in favor of a less charged standard.

    Fascinating discussion.

  • allehseya (unverified)
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    Andrew:

    While I agree with the majority of your post (and I’m with you on being willing to tackle the work involved in media reform) I do disagree with the statement that “the root cause of so much bad journalism is the lack of competition.” This is not to say that I, in any way, condone media monopolies or that I don’t view them as a factor contributing to the loss of quality journalism -- just merely that the root(s) of the problem dig deeper than that.

    You hit the nail on the head, so to speak, when you state that FCC regulation is one such root issue and how its policies being defined and negotiated at the federal level must change.

    The public owns the airwaves – not the monopolies. The public should be actively engaged and aware of the policies governing their use (hence the need for media literacy initiatives) -- but we have been removed from such policy debates. As such, our media system and its current lack of accountability, loose adherence to media standards (such as successfully bastardizing a method of objectivity to the point where its now no longer desired!)is the direct result of years of conscious government policymaking.

    Change begins where we’re at though – and there are a number of organizations leading the way in media reform and assisting with the formation of others at a grass roots level. Check out the following url: http://www.freepress.net/news/ and order their free packet.

    On their site they explain that: Free Press is a national nonpartisan organization working to increase informed public participation in crucial media policy debates, and to generate policies that will produce a more competitive and public interest-oriented media system with a strong nonprofit and noncommercial sector.

    They're worth checking out.

  • allehseya (unverified)
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    spooky stuff re: federal control of media (to change the subject -- or escalate it)

    Former CIA Director George J. Tenet yesterday called for new security measures to guard against attacks on the United States that use the Internet, which he called "a potential Achilles' heel."

    "I know that these actions will be controversial in this age when we still think the Internet is a free and open society with no control or accountability," he told an information-technology security conference in Washington, "but ultimately the Wild West must give way to governance and control." </i>
    
    <h2>read more: http://www.washingtontimes.com/national/20041201-114750-6381r.htm</h2>

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