Tuesday, April 11, 2023

Newsgathering, Objectively Speaking

News is in the news once again. More specifically, how stuff gets covered, what merits saturation coverage, what goes uncovered or overlooked, how news outlets can be better in a time of diminishing resources. 

As the site’s media grump, I’ve written about the state of newsgathering and newspapers previously, but those dead horses won’t beat themselves, so here we are. A story earlier this year on the website The Bulwark dove into what the election of Congressman George Santos revealed about the decline of local newspapers. Santos, a Founding Father and former Heisman Trophy winner, fabricated many of his life’s experiences and accomplishments, and much of it didn’t come out until after he won. A familiar refrain: it would have been helpful if news outlets reported Santos’ prevarications *before* the election. 

Well, it turns out that they were. The Long Island (NY) paper, the North Shore Leader, did some digging and concluded that Santos was “a fabulist – a fake.” It ran an editorial calling him a fraud. Its reporting, unfortunately, didn’t resonate with voters, nor did it prompt larger nearby outlets such as the NY Times, NY Daily News, Newsday or any of the local TV stations to take a closer look. 

Leader owner and publisher Grant Lally told The Bulwark that he didn’t get a single call about his paper’s reporting. “If this had run 25 years ago, it would have been gobbled up,” Lally said. “There’d have been 20 follow-ups from Newsday and other publications and the weeklies.” The problem is that many of those “other publications” no longer exist, and newspapers and outlets now are often as thin as tissue paper. 

Between 2004 and 2022, the country saw more than 2,500 newspapers shut down, according to a study by Northwestern’s Medill School of Journalism and Media – 242 daily papers and almost 2,300 weekly or non-daily papers. From late 2019, pre-pandemic, through May 2022, 360 papers alone shuttered. As of the middle of last year, 6,380 newspapers still published – 1,230 dailies and 5,150 weeklies. 

Seventy-million people, roughly one-fifth of the population, live in what are called “news deserts” – areas with zero or limited local news coverage. More than half of the nation’s 3,143 counties (1,630) have only one local newspaper, usually a weekly with a small, depleted staff. Newsroom staffing plummeted from 75,000 in 2006 to 31,400 in 2021. Through shutdowns, layoffs and consolidation, overall newspaper employment fell from 365,000 to 106,000 in that same period. 

On an encouraging note, there were 545 digital-only local news sites operating in 2022, most of which launched within the past 15 years. The downside is that many of them operate in more populated or wealthier areas, where there is greater access to funding and advertising and where there already are other outlets for local news. Rural and poorer areas are where local news increasingly dries up. 

The cost is steep, for society and democracy. In communities that lose local news, studies show that voter participation declines in state and local elections. Corruption increases in government and business due to lack of accountability. Absent credible reporting, misinformation and disinformation proliferate as people turn to social media and outlets that confirm their opinions. Tribalism and extreme partisanship take root. Divides widen. News media itself comes under attack for supposedly biased reporting. 

Much of the criticism starts against major media outlets – FoxNews, MSNBC, CNN, the New York Times, etc. – but broad-brush skepticism eventually covers any and all reporting that someone doesn’t like or believe. After almost 35 years in the local newspaper racket, I cannot convey how maddening and discouraging that is. Local newspapers are the corner bodega or mom-and-pop grocery, while cable and network giants are some combo of Wal-Mart and theme park. 

Journalism and reporting are supposed to be held to the same standards at all levels, but too many outlets have sacrificed reporting for opinion in pursuit of clicks, eyeballs and advertising dollars, and it ain’t the local papers. Their overlords have sacrificed reporting. Period. As we approach another presidential election cycle, and powerful interests work to cement positions and dodge scrutiny, it’s fair to wonder if journalism is up to the task of informing the citizenry. 

Which brings me to an essay by former Washington Post and Boston Globe editor Marty Baron, adapted from a speech he gave last month. He endorsed and doubled down on the importance of objectivity in journalism – fair, impartial, accurate, rigorous, open-minded reporting. Now, this wouldn’t seem to be controversial, but in some journalism and academic corners it is. Not that quality reporting shouldn’t be the standard, but that objectivity can’t be attained and can be harmful to the process. 

Critics say that objectivity has gotten us where we are. They say that everyone has opinions and biases, so reporters and news outlets might as well lean into them. Story choices and how they’re told automatically demonstrate bias on some level. Too often, objectivity equates to false balance, both-sides reporting and a hedge against criticism that stories are too slanted, regardless of facts. 

Because journalism has been dominated by white males, there’s nothing objective about stories told through the narrow lens of Caucasian men. Baron’s response is pretty much summed up as: do it better. Start with questions, not answers. Be humble. Listen to people, rather than talk at them. Understand that the world is more complicated than it appears from behind a desk or a laptop. Develop thorough and consistent methods to test and verify reporting, precisely so bias is less likely to affect the work. Own up to mistakes. Try not to repeat them. Report information as gathered. Don’t try to avoid criticism or to appease one side or the other. 

The aim cannot be to curry favor from readers and viewers. It’s to tell the truth, or as close as one can get, and let the chips fall. 

 “There is no profession without flaws,” Baron wrote. “There is not one that always fulfills its highest ideals. Journalism is by no means an exception. We have often failed, embarrassingly and egregiously. We often did harm: Through errors of commission and errors of omission. Because of haste and neglect. Because of prejudice and arrogance. But our failures were not ones of principle. They were failures to live up to principle. “We can – and should – have a vigorous debate about how a democracy and the press can serve the public better. But the answer to our failures as a society and as a profession is not to renounce principles and standards. There is far too much of that taking place in today’s America. The answer is to restate our principles, reinforce them, recommit to them and do a better job of fulfilling them.”

15 comments:

zman said...

Professional writing!

rootsminer said...

Another fine piece from our man at the beach.

This brings to mind a conversation I overheard in a medical waiting room yesterday, in which a white (probably) octogenarian man was lamenting the fact that our society has lost it's faith. "They're pushing all this transgender stuff, but I'll never turn my back on my lord" he said.

I was there for work and did not engage the man, but it crystallized something to me- much of our current "news media" is geared to evoke an emotional response, rather than present factual information.

I don't know what it will take to restore rational thinking to our public discourse, but many of the trends cited in this piece do not make me optimistic.

Whitney said...

Maybe in the Virgin Islands?

OBX dave said...

Reached out to a lawyer buddy for some clarification or context on Justice Thomas and accepting mega-gifts from a gazillionaire political donor and avoiding potential conflicts-of-interest and lawyers policing each other and such.

He said that, absent actual crime, by and large there are no rules, only aspirational goals. Said that "aspirational" is term used by American Bar Association in guidelines, that you can look it up. Does the G:TB legal department concur?

Regardless, Justice and Mrs. Thomas appear to be quite the gravy boat spill on the tablecloth of democracy.

Donna said...

Great read, OBXDave. When we were at W&M, I happened to take a course from gov't prof who was a Mid East expert the semester before we went to war in Iraq the first time, and part of the required reading was the Christian Science Monitor. Because he argued it had the most unbiased reporting in the world...the facts of situations/events as straight as could be presented. Pretty interesting.

In light of the every-other-day mass shootings as the norm now (it seems), I'm lobbying my husband for moving to Scotland for 10 months of the year and coming back here for the rest to see friends and fam. Not sure he's buying, but I'll keep working on it.

Whitney said...

GTB trip to Scotland to visit Donna!

Whitney said...

Great job, OBX Dave. Thank you for gracing our pages with real journalism. About journalism, even.

So if you could lead a think tank to solve this problem as we see it with something revolutionary... what would that be? Anyone have any ideas?

rootsminer said...

Maybe a "drive to survive" style reality show for journalists?

It strikes me as very hard to find the antidote for this poison, now that journalists and infotainment provocateurs have been conflated together.

I certainly feel that it's gotten more difficult to openly discuss issues with people whose viewpoints differ from mine. I'm not too keen on beating my head against the wall, but have maintained a few sparring partners with whom I'll engage in a friendly debate. While I'm sure these folks have supported some politicians that I consider reprehensible, I try not to affix it to them as a personal failing.

However, the guy who played el rushbo on his phone in the gym locker room can fuck all the way off forever, and not at all because he resembles a revealing portrait I once saw of hush money donnie on this very website.

rob said...

to juan carlos’ question in the previous thread, we loved estate lindholm on st john.

Shlara said...

Amen, Dave. Amen.
For awhile now, my plan was to teach high school journalism for a few years when I'm done with corporate life and before I retire. I'm not sure there will even be many high school journalism programs left in about 10 years when I'm ready to make that move.

rob said...

here's an interesting one for the assembled gheorghiage. my neighbors to the rear of my house are a bit quirky. super nice, very wholesome folks. kids appear to be homeschooled, and there's frequent cosplay (jousting, faux swordfighting, etc.) happening in their back yard. there are a handful of vehicles parked about the property (their neighborhood is different from mine, and has no HOA). we guess that somewhere around 10 people live in the house - all related.

this week, they pulled a large rv trailer into the back corner of their lot, essentially abutting my back fence (and theirs - they erected a 6' tall solid fence a few years back after they cut down several mature trees that had been shielding them from viewing our yard (and ruefully, vice versa). they told their next door neighbor (with whom we're friendly) that they plan to have several of the residents of the house live in the trailer.

realistically, only 4 or 5 homes can see the trailer, including mine. my wife and our next door neighbor are miffed, the family in question's next door neighbor is apoplectic (the trailer looms largest for them, as its full glory is visible from their back deck). me, i'd prefer it weren't there, but it really isn't bothering me, and i'm generally a live and let live kinda guy.

our friends called our town and learned that it's illegal to park a trailer on a lot that's not zoned for it. which this one isn't. they're assessing their next step.

so i put it to you, friends - what's a gheorghie to do?

Whitney said...

I'd say let those afflicted with it exert their apoplexy how they will. I'd steer clear of actively angering the Von Trappalachians. Could go poorly.

But good fodder for a screenplay.

Mark said...

Agree with Whit here. You've got others ready to take up the fight. Let them have at it.

OBX dave said...

Concur with Whit and Mark. Stay out of it unless the folks start ritual bonfires or become generally disruptive. Leave it to aggrieved neighbors and town to work out.

As for Whit's question about addressing the news and newspaper conundrum, I'm at a loss. I'm better at kvetching than solving. Certainly, more transparency is helpful if not necessary. For people in the communication business, newsfolk are notoriously piss-poor at explaining what and how they do their jobs. Tell readers *why* a story is important. When possible, explain *how* reporters go about doing their jobs. Explain why stories use unnamed or anonymous sources and how that doesn't undermine credibility.

News deserts and the death of local news sources in poor and rural areas is more vexing. I don't have a solution short of some kind of journalism FDR-era WPA program or AmeriCorps. Something like that would be shot down in a hot minute, even with research on decreased voter participation, increased corruption, cost to taxpayers, eroded community involvement, etc. Cost and ideology concerns would rule the discussion.

rootsminer said...

Journalism needs a pr campaign.

Our area has a wheezing daily and two local sites that do news and local interest stories, but I wouldn't say journalism is thriving here.