Posted on 06/06/2003 12:32:22 PM PDT by Paul Atreides
In the wake of the resignations of the top two editors at the New York Times, NBC News looked at declining trust in the media overall and identified two culprits: Conservative, pro- corporate bias and the Fox News Channel.
In a NBC Nightly News piece on Thursday night, reporter Jim Avila noted that "media watchdogs complain almost daily of bias, charging that some stories are deliberately ignored." His sole soundbite for that point: a representative of the far-left group, Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting, who charged that public cynicism toward the press is fueled by "the whole corporate climate, where people feel they're being sold to rather than informed."
Then, over video of the Fox News Channel, Avila blamed it too: "And some experts say opinion-based journalism, so popular on cable TV, undercuts credibility."
As opposed to the opinion-based journalism of NBC News and the rest of the news media, as if there were no bias in the media until FNC came along a few years ago.
The June 5 NBC Nightly News led with a story by Andrea Mitchell about the resignations of Times Executive Editor Howell Raines and Managing Editor Gerald Boyd and then Tom Brokaw went to Avila in Chicago for a look at how the public views the media.
Avila began with a Spokane artist who sees routine mistakes in stories about him and then Avila recalled how "a 2002 Pew Research study shows that only 35 percent of the public trust news organizations to 'get the facts straight.'"
Next, Avila gave a soundbite to a man in restaurant who doesn't believe all he reads in newspapers and Avila confirmed he has "plenty of reasons" to think that way. Avila reminded viewers of NBC's own Dateline NBC simulated truck explosion controversy, the case of Janet Cooke at the Washington Post in 1981, Stephen Glass at the New Republic who "imagined" stories in 1998 "and Mike Barnicle's factual carelessness for the Boston Globe."
Avila didn't mention that NBC has helped rehabilitate the ethically-challenged Barnicle by making him a fill-in host and regular commentator on MSNBC.
Avila asserted: "Jayson Blair is just the latest example of journalistic fraud chipping away at an industry built on trust. How bad is it? Denver's Rocky Mountain News, a subscriber to the New York Times News Service, no longer automatically runs stories based on Times's unnamed sources." John Temple, Editor of the Rocky Mountain News: "Somehow, standards seem to erode in their newsroom." Avila turned to bias, but only saw it from the right: "But it's not just mistakes, say critics. Media watchdogs complain almost daily of bias, charging that some stories are deliberately ignored." Steve Rendell, Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting: "The cynicism that people have about media isn't just about Jayson Blair and Mike Barnicle. It's about the whole corporate climate, where people feel they're being sold to rather than informed." Avila: "And some experts say opinion-based journalism, [over video of the Fox News Channel showing FNC putting its logo on screen as music played] so popular on cable TV, undercuts credibility. Viewers now charge bias against any news they don't agree with." Greg Mitchell, Editor and Publisher magazine Editor: "They often disagree with stories because they don't agree with the political outlook or the revelations that are in those stories." Avila concluded: "And journalistic missteps like those in the New York Times only give ammunition to those who believe even true stories are fiction."
While on the subject of the New York Times, three resources for evidence of the liberal bias and agenda of Howell Raines before and during his tenure as top editor of the New York Times:
-- The MRC's "Spotlight" section on Raines put together last year by the MRC's Tim Jones. You'll be able to watch video of Raines praising the wonders of Bill Clinton and complaining that "the Reagan years oppressed me" and that Reagan "couldn't tie his shoelaces if his life depended on it." See: http://www.mediaresearch.org/mrcspotlight/raines/welcome.asp
-- "Raines of Error: Howell's 21-Month Times Editorialship," an article written by TimesWatch.org Editor Clay Waters. See: http://www.timeswatch.org/articles/2003/0605.asp
-- A listing of a couple of dozen articles about Raines posted over the last few years by TimesWatch.org and the MRC. See: http://www.timeswatch.org/topicindex/R/howell_raines/welcome.asp
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The other "journalist" drummed out for ethical indiscretion in the last few years have also be LIBERALS.
And it's our fault? NBC's not playing with a full deck.
In the wake of the resignations of the top two editors at the New York Times, NBC News looked at declining trust in the media overall and identified two culprits: Conservative, pro- corporate bias and the Fox News Channel.
I don't really see how you can be in the news business and stay opinion free. We are all human. That's why a good paper (or whatever media outlet) would make sure that they are staffed with persons from a wide variety of political backgrounds and ideologies (and I don't mean a black liberal, a white liberal, a gay liberal, a female liberal, a hispanic liberal, a rich liberal, a poor liberal, etc....and maybe one moderate for "balance").
To NBC: whatever...................
To NBC: whatever...................
William Flax Return Of The Gods Web Site
No, FNC is not responsible for opinion-based journalism, they are responsible for a different opinion in major news networks. This is such a silly argument anyway. If you line up 4 witnesses to an accident you will likely get 4 different accounts. I suppose a journalist is supposed to give equal weight to each but had that been happening I doubt FNC would have gained the audience they have.
Gee... that sounds like perfectly-packaged sound bite to me. I guess the media hacks couldn't digest it though.
over video of the Fox News Channel, Avila blamed it too: "And some experts say opinion-based journalism, so popular on cable TV, undercuts credibility."
That's because the public can now tell, by comparing the news on Fox with the news everywhere else, that "everywhere else" has been consistently promoting news stories to serve a liberal agenda, while ignoring actual happenings. Fox does it too, but it hypes and ignores different things than the other guys. So someone watching both can, for the first time, see media bias in action. Back when every channel you could get was lying the same way, it was only by accident that you would ever find out that they were all lying. The Iraq war was the perfect example. We were losing horribly, on every channel but Fox. It was nothing but quagmires and setbacks on the "network news," in the New York Times, and on the covers of Time and Newsweek, and just about anywhere else you looked. But if you watched Fox, we were storming toward Baghdad. And you could see it live, right on TV. Here come the tanks, driving right up to the Presidential Palace in Baghdad. Here's the Fox reporter, standing right in front of the Presidential Palace. Flip over to CNN, CBS, NBC -- take your pick -- and there's Baghdad Bob and Peter Arnett telling us how badly it's all going. Back when all of 'em lied the same way, the average Joe couldn't tell. Now he has Fox, and he can see totally different pictures and hear totally different things, and then draw his own conclusions as to how much "credibility" he should award to the so-called mainstream media. His answer seems to be, "not much," and this greatly disturbs the liberals in the rest of the media who used to be able to tell Joe any damned thing, and have him believe it. The people who are used to "managing the news" on behalf of the Democratic Party and Democratic candidates -- because the reporters and editors are all liberal Democrats -- find they can't do it anymore. They get caught at it, and their credibility suffers. Oh, cry me a river. |
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