The late, lamented Knight Ridder (KR) media organization wasn’t perfect by any means (who or what is?) but maybe having to play second-fiddle in the stature department to The New York Times and The Washington Post has resulted in KR journalists depending far more on digging through the muck and developing authentic sources than attending official press conferences or taking a dictation lunch with an anonymous partisan quote machine or an ‘unimpeachable’ intel spewer.

So it’s time to pay attention when a longtime KR journalist berates (see below) much of the quality of what passes for fairness in reporting. I’m fantasizing that some sort of ‘measurement tool’ needs to be introduced into the yearly review of each journalist at their respective organization. That is: how many government, military or corporate officials did you upset this year? 0? 5? 10? A minimum of 25 or so is needed to be retained. Air time, soiree invites and the like are NOT valid reasons for becoming a journalist but sadly seem to have become the measuring stick for having ‘made it’ and being considered a media success. And owning a house on Nantucket or any such hoity-toity address automatically disqualifies oneself from utilizing the title of journalist. He or she who holds something along the lines of a Nantucket deed has obviously forsaken any ‘boat-rocking’ of the establishment and become part of it.
Here veteran KR journalist Larry Hoyt skewers those ripe targets in the following, part of a recent lecture he delivered:

    “THE WHITE HOUSE VS. THE MEDIA: IT’S WAR

    THE SECRETS-OBSESSED NIXON HAD IT IN FOR THE PRESS. SO DOES THE SECRETIVE BUSH ADMINISTRATION. BUT THIS TIME, THE BATTLE IS WORSE.

    By Clark Hoyt
    June 4, 2006

    Not since Vietnam and Watergate have relations between the press and those in power in Washington been as strained as they are now.

    This is the age when the White House treats the press as though it were just another interest group — a hostile one with no particular role in our democracy.

    When the Bush administration was still riding high in January of 2004, Andy Card, then the White House chief of staff, said of the press to the New Yorker’s Ken Auletta, “They don’t represent the public any more than other people do. . . . I don’t believe you have a check-and-balance function.”

    The Nixon administration — fighting its own unpopular war and obsessed with secrecy — also lashed out furiously at the press, placing journalists on its famous “enemies” list. We were “nattering nabobs of negativism,” according to former Vice President Spiro Agnew, who was eventually forced to resign in disgrace for accepting cash bribes.

    Today, the Bush administration has gone so far as to threaten possible criminal prosecution against New York Times’ reporters for revealing that the government was engaging in warrantless wiretapping in its war on terror.

    And while the administration’s moves have echoes of the past, mainstream news organizations are dealing with that pressure in a very different climate from the 1970s. They are weakened by economic pressures radically transforming the media landscape and by falling public trust fed by relentless attacks from right and left and well-publicized failures to adhere to high ethical standards.

    One of the best examples of the clash between the White House and the press is over the war in Iraq. Are things going badly there? Not really, the administration and its partisans say. If the public believes Iraq is a mess, it’s the media’s fault for reporting all that bad news about improvised bombs, death squads and beheaded bodies in the streets. Why doesn’t the press instead focus on the many schools that have been rebuilt or the new power plants and health clinics?

    It’s true that there is good news coming out of Iraq, including the daily heroism and idealism of many American servicemen and -women and many Iraqis. But the real story, the big story, the one to which journalists properly gravitate, is the stubborn insurgency and sectarian violence that kills people daily and threatens the stability of the entire country and even the region.

    To deny its gravity and to complain that the media aren’t reporting the good news is, to me, somewhat like admiring the new draperies in a house that’s on fire. They’re nice, but they aren’t the story.

    While the press has continued reporting the bad news from Iraq in the face of criticism, on some other stories, reporters have retreated to a split-the-difference journalism intended to offend no one. This person said this. Her polar opposite said that. We’ll quote them both equally. You, the reader, can make up your own mind about who’s telling the truth, because we’re not going to make any attempt to reconcile either statement with objective facts for fear of offending someone.

    This is not responsible journalism…”

To read the rest, go here:

http://tinyurl.com/qxk3m

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