Posted on 05/25/2005 8:09:39 AM PDT by Pikamax
Donald Graham Ascends To Calm Newsweek Bunch by Tom Scocca
What does it mean when a news-weekly becomes the news story of the week? On May 18, Newsweek invited its rank-and-file staff to join the editors in the conference room for the weekly cover meeting to address the implications, both internal and external.
The expanded invitation was a break from the usual Wednesday routine, according to a Newsweek staffer. But crisis management at the embattled newsweekly had reached a crucial point. Two days earlier, editor Mark Whitaker had retracted a May 9 item about alleged Koran abuse at Guantánamo Bay. Now, top executives had descended on New York. Donald Graham, chief executive of the Washington Post Company, came in from Washington; Newsweek chairman and editor in chief Richard M. Smith had cut short a trip to Asia and flown back.
Mr. Graham opened the meeting with a speech seeking to rally the staff, according to one person who was in the room. He recalled his tenure as publisher of The Washington Post in 1981, when Janet Cookes Pulitzer Prizewinning story of a child drug addict was exposed as a fraud.
Newsweeks error, Mr. Graham told staffers, would be mentioned high up when other people wrote about the magazine. Still, he said, with time, the reference would drop from the first paragraph to the last; Newsweeks reputation would heal. Unlike Ms. Cooke, Mr. Graham said, Newsweeks reporters hadnt knowingly done wrong.
"He wasnt minimizing the mistake that was made," the staffer said. "He was distinguishing it from these other [scandals]."
The staffer added: "In some ways, he was saying it was like Janet Cooke: When you went out into the wider world, everyone was talking about it."
But Newsweek, for its part, decided to tone down the talking. Following Mr. Grahams address, the editors and staff hunkered down for their weekly cover decision. At a meeting the day before, according to two staffers whod been present, the staff had contemplated preparing a cover package pegged to the Periscope controversy.
Another staffer, who wasnt present at the meeting but had been briefed on the package, described the concept as an overview about "Whats Wrong With the Media?" While the planning was only preliminary and no pieces had been assigned, the editors had discussed potential elements of the package, including pieces by guest contributors, a piece on blogs and the media by Steven Levy, and a meditation on sourcing by Jonathan Alter.
The editors decided, however, to shelve the idea. Instead, they picked newly elected Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa for the cover, fronting a package about the growing political influence of Latinos. The media package would be scaled down and put in the inside.
"Every week, we debate various options for the cover as the week progresses," Newsweek editor Mark Whitaker said in an e-mail statement. "We had been talking for months about the possibility of doing a cover on Latino political power if Villaraigosa was elected mayor of Los Angeles, and on Wednesday after he won decisively it felt like a smart and timely call."
Mr. Whitaker added the magazines story mixand how much attention to give its own coveragewas based on the same news judgment that guides his staff each week.
"We made those decisions the way we always do: based on what we think will be of most interest to our readers," he said.
The newsroom had been dreading the prospect of giving the media story more prominent play. "There was a thought," said one staffer who wasnt present at the cover meeting, "that if we put us on the cover, it would blow up again."
The editors calculations were guided, in part, by a rapidly moving news cycle. Under prolonged scrutiny, the initial media-scandal concept"Newsweek Item, Badly Sourced, Sparks Lethal Muslim Riots"had been modified bit by bit: Had the item really caused the rioting, or was it merely a pretext? Had Newsweek really been unusually reckless and inflammatory compared to other outlets? Was the alleged desecration of the Koran by U.S. guards more egregious and unlikely than, say, setting attack dogs on naked Muslim prisoners?
Meanwhile, the White House had gone from denouncing Newsweeks journalistic standards to defending itself from charges of disingenuousnesswhat was that about anonymous sourcing again?and of bullying. By May 17, the press corps had turned openly skeptical, if not hostile, toward the administration: "With respect, who made you the editor of Newsweek?" ABCs Terry Moran asked Presidential press secretary Scott McClellan. "Do you think its appropriate for you, at that podium, speaking with the authority of the President of the United States, to tell an American magazine what they should print?"
That transcript, posted the same day on the Drudge Report, helped convince Newsweek that the tide was turning, two Newsweek staffers said.
"We decided that getting into the whole mediaWhite House thing was for other people to do," Mr. Alter said. "It would be defensive for us to make these pointsthough I have to admit it was hard to resist, given how glaring the hypocrisy was."
Mr. Alter also said that the introspective cover package was treated like any other news topic that was losing steam. "Were always going to assess what a story will look like the following week, depending on how much news energy it would have," Mr. Alter said. "The [Newsweek] story peaked on Monday. Very rarely do we do extensive coverage of a story that breaks early in the week."
So Newsweek ended up with a scaled-down treatment of journalistic fallibility. Mr. Alter weighed in on the necessities and pitfalls of anonymous sourcing. Mr. Whitaker addressed the scandal in his editors note, and Mr. Smith wrote a 900-plus-word letter to the readers pledging to tighten up the standards for anonymous sourcing. Evan Thomas and Michael Isikoffthe latter of whom had written the initial itemreported on the Pentagons investigation of Guantánamo Bay log entries for evidence of Koran abuse.
Internally, the magazine had decided by the end of the week not to go down a Times-ian road of public soul-searching and investigation. Newsweek, said former assistant managing editor Sarah Crichton, "is not a blame-filled organization . Ive worked at places where, when something happens, peoples heads have to roll. At Newsweek, thats not how it happens."
"It would have been hard if, layered on top of everything we were going through with the public, we had been at each others throats," Mr. Alter said.
Before the end of the workday on May 18, Mr. Smith sent an e-mail to the staff via spokesman Ken Weine, voicing his support for Mr. Whitakers response to the crisis. "After returning from my abbreviated trip to Asia," he wrote, "I have had a chance to thoroughly review the handling of our story . As Mark and I agreed early on, the only honorable course for Newsweek was to retract the story."
Mr. Smith followed up with a second staff e-mail on May 21, when the issue closed, offering a preview of his letter to the readers. "I want you to take a close look at the last paragraph in particular," he wrote. "It applies to the entire Newsweek staff." In that letter, the chairman had written: "I can assure you that the talented and honorable people who publish Newsweek today are dedicated to making sure that what appears on every page in the magazine is as fair and accurate as it can possibly be."
"In this particular case," Mr. Alter said, "scapegoating wasnt merited, because we were victimized by a sourcenot by a bad apple in the ranks . [T]his was not a case of gross malfeasance at the reporting or editing level. I think that made it easier for people not to turn on each other, because there really wasnt anybody to blame."
Gabriel Sherman
Ahem. The problem is that Newseek, like WaPo, has been habitually reckless with the truth. And basing your ethical standards on what "eveyone else is doing" tells me Newseek's problems are systemic.
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