The Poisoned Pool
Posted By: Sgt. Mom @ 1950 on 2005-01-31

In the twilight afterglow of the Edward Morrow era of journalism, the only people that I remember routinely complaining about bias, selective reporting, or outright lies in journalism—print and broadcast both— were of the far-right-over-the-horizon John Birch Society persuasion, sourly grumbling about creeping godless communism (or maybe it was godless creeping communism) at cocktail parties or in letters to the editor. Considering that John Reed and Walter Duranty, among others, made careers out of painting world socialism in far more sunny colors than completely unbiased and disinterested journalism required, I have to concede that those doughty anti-communists of my youth may have had a point. On the whole, it was a given that the main-stream media outlets of the American mid-century had enormous stores of credibility with the public.

It was accepted that the major newspapers, the big three television channels were generally telling the truth, as fairly and as accurately as they knew it. Reporters might be lied to by sources, might be misled or mistaken, might miss the story entirely… but if it was in the paper or on the 6 PM news, well, then it must be an accurate reflection of reality. Our media was not like the Russian propaganda organ, Pravda, which had to be read carefully, teasing out small nuggets of information from tiny scraps inadvertently included, or deduced from a sudden appearance of certain topics. This was American, damn it, and serious reporters had the benefit of the doubt. Only the supermarket tabloids with pictures of monkey babies and hundred-year old shipwreck survivors were assumed to have made up stories out of whole cloth.

I honestly can’t— and won’t given the depths to which the profession has lately fallen— claim to be a paid-up member myself, on the basis of an eight-week shake-and-bake military broadcaster course at the Defense Information School, but I spent a fair amount of time after that, loitering meaningfully in the neighborhood where acts of journalism were being committed; radio and television news, and dabbling a little in the print side. I know the mechanics of interviewing, editing, and writing fourteen lines per minute of copy, or how many yards and minutes of tape wind up in the trash can, because fifteen minutes of talk with an expert must be boiled down to a 15-second insert into a story written in the active voice and taking care to pronounce all the names right. I know that I usually had a pretty good idea of where I was going with a story; because I was in in-house hack for the military establishment… it was what they paid me for.

I was also a voracious news consumer, considering it part of my job to know the direction from which every imaginable s**tstorm might come, and to where TDY orders might send the military personnel who were my audience. I read or had subscriptions to… well, practically everything, at one time or another. Time, Newsweek, International Herald Tribune, Stars and Stripes, Rolling Stone, the military Times newspapers, Harpers’, Atlantic, Working Woman, National Geographic, Smithsonian, MS, Guardian Weekly, National Review, Mother Jones, Utne Reader, Spy, Brills’ Content, Village Voice, History Today, American Heritage…just for starters. The fringier publications often had stories that were a long way off on the horizon; I remember the Village Voice being about the first to start airing troubling doubts about alleged satanic child abuse at day care centers, months before the more mainstream news started taking those doubts seriously, too. Of course, every outlet, every magazine had a different take, a different emphasis, a different angle, and obviously some of the above had a little more credibility than others, and more than a few grains of salt necessary as an adjunct.

When did the rot begin? Hard to say, really, since there has always some potential for distortion of the news. The great press magnates of the mid century did have their foibles: Henry Booth Luce was so enchanted with Chiang Kai-shek and his wife that he (and by extension Time Magazine) overlooked for twenty years the Generalissimo’s complete ineptitude at governing China. No note was ever taken of Roosevelt’s almost complete reliance on braces, wheelchairs and the sturdy arms of aides all during his presidency… or more alarmingly, JFK’s compulsive serial womanizing during his, although both were open secrets among the press corps. Some will argue for Watergate, when the thrill of taking down a presidency put blood in the water for the ambitious investigative reporter seeking fame everlasting.

Peter Boyer’s “Who Killed CBS”, from twenty years ago puts the blame squarely on the emphasis in television news— specifically CBS news, and 60 Minutes— on emphasizing a gripping visual image at the expense of plain facts, of news as entertainment spectacle. A modern morality play as it were. James Fallows in “Breaking the News” put the blame on—among other things— a disconnect between the consumers of news, and the highly paid elite press corps. Whether the genesis of the current situation was ten, twenty or thirty years ago is almost irrelevant, in light of that everything that has piled on in the last three or four years.

Any sort of list has to include CNN maintaining their bureau in Baghdad by quietly killing stories about Saddam Hussein’s atrocities. It has to include mention of how coverage of the Middle East is warped by major international news services reliance on local stringers who have every reason to tilt their dispatches very much to one side. Of how on-scene reportage on the West Bank and Gaza is controlled by the Palestinians, who control access of the place to film crews and reporters. Of photographers who are marvelously on the spot when car bombs, ambushes and executions are going down, and respected news professionals insist that it is their obligation to watch it all happen. Or of reporters like Sy Hersh, whose past performance guarantees a pulpit for dubious and improbable stories of war crimes committed by the American military. It has to include stories based on transparent frauds and forgeries, on political hit-pieces perpetrated by reporters insisting that, no; they really, really are totally unbiased. It has to include stories where interviewees are presented as being merely interview subjects, when they are actually deeply compromised, with a strong interest in the coverage of the story one way or the other.

The pool has been poisoned.

I never was one of those people who assumed that just because it was broadcast, or in print, that therefore it must be true, but when I read or listen to something now, I am thinking: OK, who is this that you are talking too, and what is their game. What is yours? Why did you pick that expert out of your golden rolodex? Who is your local stringer, or your taxicab driver? Your local minder? Who gave you the lead and why? Why does your voice sound somehow warmer, more enthusiastic, when you talk to, or about this person or situation? What footage wound up in the wastebasket? How many people did you talk to before you got the answer that fitted your mental outline of the story? Where have you been before, who really writes your paycheck, and why? How long have you been in this place, how much do you really know, based on your previous reportage?

The saddest part of this new era of journalism, is that I already assume that I am being lied to, until otherwise confirmed by research. It is good to be an informed and savvy consumer… but what trust and credibility the mainstream media have carelessly pissed away.

Edward R. Morrow is probably revolving in his grave like a Black & Decker drill.

Update: Just exercising my privileges as an admin here, as the freaking system won’t recognize my comment:

Somehow, darling, I can’t imagine you attending any cocktail parties in “the twilight afterglow of the [Edward R. Murrow] era of journalism,: as he moved from CBS to the USIA in 1961. ;) — KC

14 Comments

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  1. Somehow, darling, I can’t imagine you attending any cocktail parties in “the twilight afterglow of the [Edward R. Murrow] era of journalism,” as he moved from CBS to the USIA in 1961. ;)

    Comment by Kevin L. Connors — 20050131 @ 2022

  2. And with that long list of subscriptions you still couldn’t claim to be well read could you? But that was the only protection that one could take to try to get the real story.

    I think that the news is like the theory of relativity. As the velocity of light is approched your ruler gets shorter, but so does what ever is being measured. Therefore, you can’t tell that the ruler is shorter. Everything is just normal as can be. With the news that we get, there is no way to tell if it is good or bad news. Fact or fiction.

    Just maybe, the bloggers will pressure some changes in the news reporting. Something to hope for!

    Comment by Carl Tunich — 20050131 @ 2051

  3. Nah, but I was certainly around when some of the fiery-anti-commie friends of my parents and grandparents were holding forth, I used to enjoy making some of them turn purple… until my mother made me stop provoking them. (Sigh for those dear innocent amusements of my girlhood…making the John Birchers go all incoherant.)

    Comment by Sgt. Mom — 20050131 @ 2130

  4. LOL, Sgt. Mom. When I was soliciting for the Orange County [strike that - Santa Ana] Register, back in the late ’60s, I’d get some people that would say. “I wouldn’t dare subscribe to that ‘John Bircher’ paper!” Well, little did the idiotarians know that few of the edicts of R.C. Hoiles were the same as those of John Birch. Or that today, they would be mine.

    Comment by Kevin L. Connors — 20050131 @ 2150

  5. The rot began with Watergate. The press became intoxicated with its power, and it also attracted an entirely new generation of journalism majors who “wanted to make a difference”. An entire generation of reporters want to be the next Woodward/Bernstein and bring down a President.

    Comment by Steven Den Beste — 20050131 @ 2249

  6. So reporters are ever seeking the next Watergate, instead of reporting?

    Comment by Patrick Chester — 20050131 @ 2254

  7. When I was a sophmore in high school I was in a play and I’d been doing plays at the library since I was a lil kid but this one in the converted attic of an ol’ church…that’s when I began to realize that you can make just about anything seem like anything else with enough paint, hot-glue or makeup.

    It was also where I began to ask the question…”Who’s paying for this and why?” CNN’s “Health Watch” as sponsored by major pharmeceutical company just doesn’t have the credibility it might have.

    Comment by Timmer — 20050201 @ 0539

  8. I agree with Stephen..but the rot goes further back than Watergate. You only need to look back to the 19th century and the Yellow Press or even earlier with the likes of Jean-Paul Marat and his paper L’Ami du Peuple. Just goes to show how far the press can get out of hand, if allowed.

    Comment by Jaalinta — 20050201 @ 0754

  9. “News” has come to be like advertising - you have to carefully parse and analyze it before you can decide what’s true and what’s somebody’s fantasy.

    Luckily my parents taught me to be critical of ads at an early age ;)

    Comment by Terry — 20050201 @ 1140

  10. I doubt that there has ever been a pure and objective press. Remember, Journalists are human, they all have the same foibles as the rest of us, including prejudices, slanted views, and agendas. No one should be surprised that there are left-wing reporters and right-wing reporters. Just know who is which, and read down the middle to get a fair approximation of the truth.

    What I DON’T like about today’s “journalism,” is the tendency among a large percentage of reporters to make news events that promote their own desires.

    Comment by Joe Comer — 20050201 @ 1238

  11. The trouble is that people no longer know how to think. It isn’t really taught in schools. It went out when modern education came in. You can’t have critical thinking and responding to feelings simultaneously. You can’t have critical thinking and no moral absolutes. Without absolutes there is nothing to base an argument on. Like axioms are to geometry.

    Comment by Carl Tunich — 20050201 @ 1247

  12. If what I hear can be believed, the mass media in the USA less varied, politically, than they used to be. But I’m not sure that I can trust my sources on that. From here, even the Democrats look uncomfortably right wing.

    But I’ve been at the other end of the media telescope, and I know how my own experience of an event can seem quite unlike what is reported.

    Comment by Dave Bell — 20050201 @ 1335

  13. The high Muckdy, Muck (Easton Jordon) at CNN has accused the U.S. Military of murdering 12 journalists in Iraq.

    http://www.forumblog.org/blog/2005/01/do_us_troops_ta.html

    Papa Ray
    West Texas
    USA

    Comment by Papa Ray — 20050202 @ 0757

  14. Actually, I think the rot started farther back than Watergate. There has always been that element in the press - they have such power to report things the way they want them to be… I remember my parents never trusting the television news - and they were constantly critical of the newspapers!

    But the real downhill started when Walter Cronkite decided that we lost the Tet Offensive instead of having an overwhelming victory. Once the press figured out it could sway public opinion to that magnitude, with no repercussions, the collective heads swelled. Watergate just lent them even more momentum.

    Looks like with blogs and talk radio - they’ve started the big crash into the brick wall. It’s about time!

    Comment by Teresa — 20050205 @ 2351

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