Monday, April 22, 2024

All The News That Fits ...

Manufacturers routinely subject their products to stress tests, a wise and necessary practice that allows for improvement and reduces the chance of human suffering and litigation. Other outfits have stress tests thrust upon them while in motion. Their ability to cope and adjust on the fly determine their value. News organizations belong to the latter group. 

Each day brings new challenges, and it’s up to the group to figure out the best way to gather and distribute information within the landscape. Sometimes results are deft and seamless, other times leaks and cracks and breakdowns are apparent. Or, as the philosopher Sam Elliott said in “The Big Lebowski,” “Sometimes you eat the b’ar, sometimes the b’ar eats you.” 


As an old newspaper guy and the site’s media grump, I’m often as curious about *how* stuff is covered as *what’s* covered. Which brings us to a couple of areas that caught my attention. One is the war in Gaza, or more specifically, coverage of the war in Gaza by several major news outlets. The other is who gathers and presents the news, and the filters through which they sift coverage, in this case at National Public Radio. 

First, you can go to a hundred places for news about Israel and Gaza and its effects on Israelis and Palestinians. I have no additional sources or insight. But I was struck by a couple of pieces illustrating that large, smart, capable news organizations are twisting themselves into crullers simply attempting to tell people what the hell is going on. The news site The Intercept was given an internal memo from New York Times editors instructing reporters about what language and terms they should and should not use in describing the conflict. Avoid terms such as “genocide” and “ethnic cleansing,” as well as “slaughter” and “massacre.” Don’t refer to areas of displaced Palestinians as “refugee camps” or Gaza as “occupied territory.” The words “terrorist” and “terrorism” are acceptable when referring to the original Hamas attack on Oct. 7, but not when Israeli soldiers or citizens target or kill Palestinian civilians. 

NYT editors say the aim is to avoid loaded words and terms that convey more emotion than fact, and to simply use precise descriptions. However, a NYT newsroom source told The Intercept: “I think it’s the kind of thing that looks professional and logical if you have no knowledge of the historical context of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. But if you do know, it will be clear how apologetic it is to Israel.” 

A handful of NYT newsroom sources claim that the paper is being deferential to Israel and Israeli military sources for details of actions and civilian deaths. Meanwhile, NPR’s public editor wrote a recent piece saying that the most frequent criticism received is that its coverage highlights the suffering of Palestinians and downplays the pain and grief experienced by Israelis. That NPR doesn’t emphasize enough that Hamas sparked the present conflict with its initial attack or camouflage itself by blending in with the general population. Nor does it provide Israeli voices and context within stories about what are described as Palestinian civilian deaths and casualties, raids on hospitals and communities, etc. 

The public editor’s response was, essentially: We’re doing the best we can; not enough hours in a day or time in our broadcasts to mention everything. Unspoken was: And no matter how much we do, some of you *still* will bitch because we aren’t tailoring coverage or using language *you* want. 

NPR’s supposed Palestinian bias was also cited by a former editor. Uri Berliner was a senior business editor who recently resigned after 25 years, saying that he “cannot work in a newsroom where I am disparaged by a new CEO whose divisive views confirm the very problems at NPR” he outlined in a recent online essay. Berliner wrote at length for a piece on the site Free Press that NPR’s news side has morphed from an obligation to straightforward journalism, albeit with a liberal slant, to full-on, left-leaning advocacy that attempts to tell listeners what to think. 

Despite a commitment to a more diverse newsroom, he wrote that the “most damaging development” was an absence of viewpoint diversity: no conservative voices, no one to challenge when more rigorous standards of reporting or journalism are ignored. He pointed out that several years ago, NPR’s Washington D.C., office where he worked had 87 registered Democrats and zero Republicans, a ratio that was met with staggering indifference when he brought it up to superiors. Listenership is down, he wrote, and the audience has narrowed. 

In 2011, twenty-six percent of listeners described themselves as conservative, 23 percent as middle-of-the-road, 37 percent as liberal. In 2023, eleven percent said they were conservative, 21 percent middle-of-the-road, 67 percent liberal. On the journalism end, Berliner wrote that the office went all-in on Trump-Russia collusion in the 2016 presidential campaign before anything was proven, barely bothered to investigate the possibility of a Chinese lab leak as the origin of the COVID-19 virus despite credible questions that persist to this day, and dismissed the Hunter Biden laptop story in 2020 out-of-hand before any real reporting as a potential distraction for the task of ousting Trump. After George Floyd was killed by a white police officer in Minneapolis, rather than explore the impacts of racism through reporting, he wrote that management accepted systemic racism in the nation as a given and charged staff with acknowledging and helping to dismantle white privilege. [Note from the tiny dictator: For what it's worth, the WaPo's Erik Hemple dug into Berliner's claims and found many of them wanting for evidence, which doesn't besmirch the media grump's broader point.]

These are tough times for the news business. As news sources dwindle in an increasingly polarized society, there’s no guarantee that if NPR reported straight down the middle and had more conservative voices that it would attract listeners and have a better balanced audience, that if New York Times reporters didn’t have to check every other sentence through a wartime sensitivity glossary that it would present a fair accounting in a combat zone. But dear lord, people, don’t overthink it. Report and write and speak and present the way you were taught. Follow common sense and your gut. Don’t erect more obstacles than are already in place. The b’ar needs no help.

23 comments:

Marls said...

I’m part of NPR’s dwindling right of center audience (love me some Kai Ryssdal) and notwithstanding Erik Wemple’s opinion piece in the WaPo, I think Berliner’s comments generally hold up - especially when you move beyond just the Trump Russia coverage that Wemple focuses on.

But this seems a symptom of a greater disease, the Foxifcation of our media sources as they scramble for shrinking revenue streams. Play to your base as it keeps the lights on. Hire folks that can do that and reward them when they succeed. Whether Maddow or Carlson, the whole thing becomes a self-licking ice cream cone.

I guess my question is whether this a crumbling of media standards or a return to the historical norm. When talking of the 4th estate, Oscar Wilde said “In old days men had the rack. Now they have the Press. That is an improvement certainly. But still it is very bad, and wrong, and demoralizing.” Clearly the digital age has changed things but are we that far off from the “yellow journalism” of the late 1800s and is Rupert Murdoch all that different than the media barons skewered by Citizen Kane?

rob said...

unbiased opinion here: i think the kind of writing that should be most rewarded in a just society is children's book authorship. children, after all, are our future.

Marls said...

Agreed, JoJo should be celebrated.

Whitney said...

Happy Earth Day, brothers and sisters

Donna said...

I'd be curious to know what you think, OBX Dave, about the statement: There's no such thing as fully unbiased reporting.
True? Untrue?

My closest friend from HS is Jewish and teaches at the largest Jewish day school in the country in Rockville, MD. She teaches in the upper division (HS), in the Jewish History Dept (holds a PhD in Comparative Religion from UCSB). The current situation is a disaster, obviously. Their school has people with relatives who are hostages. They presume them dead now. The HS students, including my friend's daughter, is outraged at Israel. Thinks they're terrorists, starving the Palestinians, killing children, refusing humanitarian aid to Gaza/Palestinians, etc etc. The adults/teachers/parents are trying to explain the history of Israel/Palestine since end of WWII (and for millenia, for that matter) -- it's awful and terrifying. Most of them think Netanyahu is mishandling this horribly. Most of them hate Hamas. Most of them have long thought at 2-state solution is the only way. And they're willing to discuss Jerusalem. But no one who is not extremist is in charge. And the Palestinians screwed-up in '48 from the get-go. And on and on and on and on. Just in case you were interested. I was recently in DC and stayed with them, and it was interesting to discuss (and hard - Sara's kid is 17 and pretty vehement/loud!).

I bought the book, Rob. So pleased for you!!

Oldest kid living it up still overseas - in Italy today, start of 8-day trip! Viva Italia ~ including a visit to the town where my grandpa was born.

Youngest (daughter) sang yesterday with the Va Choral Society a serious set of music - all in Latin. Like you, Rootsy, amazed at child's abilities.

Hope y'all are enjoying Spring - rather chilly here in SE VA for it, actually, this Earth Day.

rob said...

thank you, donna! we're climbing the charts.

my kids and their friends are batshit angry at the israelis to the point where they're actively arguing that they shouldn't vote for biden because the u.s. is supporting israel. there's a whirlwind to be reaped in the coming months.

Marls said...

Netanyahu sees this as his last chance to pull off what he has wanted to do for years. As Donna points out, what is happening in Gaza is awful and terrifying, but appears to be the height of realpolitik.

I have tried to have thoughtful conversations with some younger folks on this topic and it is hard. Most are staunchly moralistic in their support of the Palestinian people - which I get but also question if they would feel the same way if they were the ones living in a place where the stated goal of numerous political regimes around them was their death and destruction. The folks I really struggle with are the ones that basically shrug when asked what if the shoe was on the other foot and the Israeli people were being slaughtered (as they would be if not for US support). I think there are a lot of younger folks that would not blink if Israel as a nation was wiped off the map.

zman said...

Regarding shoes on other feet, the last time terrorists killed hundreds of Americans we bombed the daylights out of the country they hid in for 20+ years.

zman said...

And Rob, do your kids think Trump will be gentler to Hamas and Gaza?

rob said...

i think kids in general think adults have fucked a lot of things up and gaza is a convenient canvas upon which to express their overall frustration and anxiety about the future. the issue that has my kids - but not all their friends - grudgingly willing to vote for biden is female bodily autonomy.

Marls said...

They can vote for Jill Stein!

OBX dave said...

Hey Donna, I'll take a crack at your question and try not to gasbag: Yes, unbiased reporting is possible. Given the textbook definition of 'bias' -- prejudice in favor of or against someone or something, generally viewed as unfair -- there's actually a great deal of unbiased reporting. That said, nearly all reported stories contain choices: what to emphasize; whom to talk to; what to include; what to omit. There has to be. Otherwise, most stories would read like cell phone contracts or agriculture reports.

I tend to think that many people who claim 'bias' simply do not agree with how a story or situation is framed or presented. That's as much a product of people retreating into their camps or information silos as a failure of reporting. Sure, there's often room for better balance or greater context, but it's not bias unless there's a conscious tilt and favor for one and dismissal of another.

Take Israel/Gaza, pretty much a no-win situation. If a news outlet does more stories related to death and suffering of Palestinian citizens than pain and grief of Israelis, it's not necessarily bias. Perhaps it's a function of access, or a numerical decision: larger numbers of deaths and greater disruption. Same if the story ratio is flipped to highlight Israel military actions and pursuit of Hamas and Israeli hostages and atrocities committed against them. Either way involves choices and might include lazy, shitty reporting but not automatically bias.

Mark said...

Knicks-6ers just got really fun.

Whitney said...

Also, who actually eats bear?

OBX dave said...

If you want to quibble with Ralph Waldo Emerson, Preacher Roe, Roger Penske and Sam Elliott, be my guest ...

Whitney said...

Bunch o' weirdo bear-eaters, sounds to me like.

Whitney said...

Well, geez, guys, I’m sorry about offending those of you that dig on ursine. It’s just not for me.

rob said...

we flew over the key bridge accident site coming home from boston on sunday. from that vantage point, the scale of it all was jawdropping.

rob said...

consecutive texts from my daughter follow:

“im gonna personally nuke this country”

“can yall bring me a bottle of tequila when yall come to the show”

so things seem to be going well.

OBX dave said...

JoJo's book arrived on the sandbar today. Big hit with the missus, she asked me to pass on. Loved the illustrations.

rob said...

nice! jojo went over the 100 mark in sales overnight. i think that means i get a gold copy from the recording academy.

rootsminer said...

Does one of us now need to gild a copy of the book for Rob's trophy wall?

Marls said...

ZMan is going to represent JoJo in the suit against Rob for profiting off of her NIL.