liamstliam (
liamstliam) wrote2004-04-22 10:08 pm
Newspaper "scandals"
I am curious about something.
As some of you know, I was a newspaper reporter for 11 years before becoming a teacher, I have worked part-time at papers on and off since then, and I am a total Web newspaper geek.
I wonder what some of you think about the reporting scandals at the New York Times and USA Today. When you have professional interests, sometime you overreact.
I recently read Jayson Blair's book, and most of the time, I had to explain to people who he was.
As some of you know, I was a newspaper reporter for 11 years before becoming a teacher, I have worked part-time at papers on and off since then, and I am a total Web newspaper geek.
I wonder what some of you think about the reporting scandals at the New York Times and USA Today. When you have professional interests, sometime you overreact.
I recently read Jayson Blair's book, and most of the time, I had to explain to people who he was.
no subject
On the flip side, no one seems to be telling the truth nowadays, so one more liar/fabricator just gets a shrug out of most people. :-/
no subject
What does bother me: political biases masquerading as straight news; coverage of technical issues by people who don't understand the technology; coverage of foreign affairs by people who apparently don't know anything about the history of the region in question; coverage of the economy by people who know nothing about economics; coverage of any government-related issue by people who do no background fact checking.
And then I have to worry about reporters making their stories out of whole cloth? Oy. Blair should have been flogged around Times Square.
no subject
Since collegehumor.com has over 5 million readers, and two of their regular columnists go to Penn State, this was noticed, and remarked upon in a daily update.
Within two days, the Penn State paper had fired the writer (a senior journalism student), and had written an apology that was published in the paper (http://www.collegian.psu.edu/archive/2004/04/04-19-04tdc/04-19-04dops-column-01.asp).
She does talk about the scandals at the NY Times and USA Today. And as she points out at the end of her column, they were running a full page spread on the awards that the paper's staff had recieved that year.
I guess that I hadn't really thought about Blair or Kelley too much, until now. Now that I've seen something that hits a little more close to home, a situation that I could more than imagine being in, I feel much more strongly about all of it. A college student run humor website is ripped off by a school paper. That's not something that I would never imagine could have happened back at the Colonel. You like to think it wouldn't, but obviously, it does.
I'm rambling now, but I just wanted to put in my two (or one and a half) cents.
no subject
After I read that article, I forwarded the link to Jim Romasnesko, and it's up on his Media News site.
http://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=45
At this time, it is the top item in the left-hand column.
Dad
no subject
If it's after, I'm excited, because I helped spread the word. Awesome.
;)
no subject
Dad