Posted on 05/23/2003 5:09:16 AM PDT by AbsoluteJustice
Sympathy for the NY Times
A newspaper that seldom plagiarizes, yet is often plagiarized Has the venerable New York Times gotten more than its fair share of bad press over the Jayson Blair fiasco?
By Michael Kinsley SLATE.COM
May 21 Although rarely reluctant to join in a schadenfreude festival, I nevertheless feel sorry for The New York Times. Duped by one of its own reporters, hemorrhaging rumors and leaks like the institutions it is used to covering, its extravagant public self-flagellation merely inviting flagellation by everyone else, the paper is at a low ebb. Much of the criticism and self-criticism is deserved. But after two weeks of Times-bashing, its time for a bit of therapeutic outreach.
ONE REASON the Times has my sympathy over being duped by a writer is that Ive been there. And let me tell you: The clarity of hindsight is remarkable. A couple of years ago, Slate published a vivid, rollicking yarn about an alleged sport called monkeyfishing. The author claimed to have used a rod and reel, with rotten fruit as bait, to catch monkeys living on an island in the Florida Keys. As editor of Slate at the time, I read the piece before it was published and didnt like it for a variety of wrong reasons. So I cannot even claim to have been blinded by enthusiasm. Others at Slate did like it and so we published it. When outsiders challenged it, I read it again. A BLIND EYE It was like reading an entirely different article. Red flags waved from every line. At first the author stood by his story and we stood by him. But within days, poking around by ourselves and others made this position untenable, and so we both caved. The question remains, though, why my baloney-detectors didnt function beforehand, when they could have saved us considerable embarrassment. All I can say is: Congress is about to exempt dividends from the income tax i.e., stranger things than monkeyfishing actually do happen. Whatever the reason, reading an article with doubts raised is a different experience from reading it in its virginal pre-publication freshness. As Slates Jack Shafer has pointed out, most readers of Jayson Blairs Times articles did not spot the hints of fabrication or plagiarism either. This includes many of the critics who now say that the Times missed important clues because of institutional arrogance or political bias or an affirmative action mentality. Of course readers are entitled to assume that published articles have been pre-skepticized. And Jayson Blair duped the Times again and again. But holding foresight to the standards of hindsight is a bit unfair.
FIT TO PRINT Much or even most American news reporting and commentary on national issues derives uncredited from the New York Times. Even if you dont read the Times yourself, you get your news from journalists at other media who do.
My second reason for feeling sympathy for the New York Times is that it now wears the Scarlet P, for plagiarist, when in a way we are all plagiarizers of the New York Times. Plagiarism technically applies only to an articles words, not to the ideas and information contained in them. But the value of a newspaper article lies more in the ideas and information than in the precise words. And much or even most American news reporting and commentary on national issues derives uncredited from the New York Times. Even if you dont read the Times yourself, you get your news from journalists at other media who do. The Times sets the news agenda that everyone else follows. The Washington Post and maybe one or two other papers also play this role, but even as a writer who appears in the Washington Post -- a damned fine newspaper run by superb editors who are graced with every kind of brilliance, charm, and physical beauty I would have to concede that the Times is more influential. Its not just the agenda setting. Our basic awareness of what is going on in the world derives in large part from the Times. How do you even know that Baghdad exists? Have you been there? Touched it? How do I, sitting in Seattle, know the current status of the Bush administrations Mideast road map, about which I may choose to opine with seeming authority? Column-writing is an especially derivative form of journalism. But even the hardest of hard-news reporters starts with basic knowledge that probably comes more from the Times than her own two eyes.
SETTING THE TONE Its true that the journalistic food chain runs both ways: Big media like the Times often pick up
(Excerpt) Read more at msnbc.com ...
Hey now, I'll bet you learned that in journalism school?
They never miss a beat when it comes to feeling the pain of others, even when they have to right to do it. The Scarlet P is a badge of the moral windbag.
The VLWC is under attack by the unwashed from the REDZONE!
Mike Barnicle wasn't given such breaks. Jeff Jacoby wasn't given such breaks. Wonder why. Maybe Kinsley should ponder that.
Kinsley's whine here is an indication of how important the NYT was and is to the leftist cause, note the defense has to employ the same denial of reality, and twisting of logic that got the rag in trouble to begin with.
If you had a functioning baloney-detector, Michael, you wouldn't be a "Liberal" in the first place!
"The Times sets the news agenda that everyone else follows."
"The Times sets the news agenda that everyone else follows."
First, this sentence needs a question mark. Second, his "baloney (bologna) detector" is no doubt maxed out from his own liberal rantings and ravings.
I have a sunken treasure hunt for Michael Kinsley to invest in.
Schadenfreude |
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