Sam Smith 2005 - One major differences between journalism
today and when your editor started out 47 years ago is that there wasn't
as much bragging, pomposity, hypocritical self-analysis and
professional narcissism back then. Reporters, in fact, were among those
most skeptical of their trade and the public readily endorsed their
judgment. HL Mencken put it this way: "The average newspaper, especially
of the better sort, has the intelligence of a hillbilly evangelist, the
courage of a rat, the fairness of a prohibitionist boob-jumper, the
information of a high school janitor, the taste of a designer of
celluloid valentines, and the honor of a police-station lawyer."
Even
the far less contentious Richard Harwood remarked, "We were perceived
as a lower form of life, amoral, half-literate hacks in cheap suits.
Thus I was assigned to a Chamber of Commerce meeting in Nashville in the
late 1940s and, with other reporters, was given lunch at a card table
set up in a hallway to protect the dining room from contamination."
Moving
from this dubious trade, a majority of whose practitioners hadn't gone
to college, to a profession graced by graduate schools and thence to a
status part actor and part apparatchik of a rising corporate
uber-culture, journalists became ever more prominent and
self-referential even as they were losing touch with both their
purported constituency and their purported purpose. They became the
first group in human history to dramatically improve their
socio-economic status simply by writing about themselves, self-casting
themselves among the very elite from whom they had once been expected to
protect their audience.
Ironically, the result was a status not
only without substance but without honor. While this may appear a
contradiction it is quite typical of early 21 Century power in which one
finds such figures as Donald Trump, Martha Stewart, and George Bush
notable for an authority almost inversely proportional to reputation,
admiration or affection. So many individuals and institutions of power
these days have become only that, impressive for the dominance they have
achieved rather than for the virtues, skills and honor they have
exhibited. Which is why we don't see many Pope Johns, Orson Welles,
Eleanor Roosevelts, Beatles, Katherine Hepburns or Martin Luther Kings
anymore. The only surviving requirement for being on top is being on
top. And reminding others constantly that you are there. Everything
else, from actual achievement to criminal conviction, becomes largely
irrelevant.
Thus, despite the media's rise in prominence, a
Harris survey over nearly 30 years has found that as far as prestige
goes, the press remains stuck, still ranked near the bottom just ahead
of accountants, stock brokers and real estate dealers. This, of course,
was probably also true fifty years ago; the difference is that no one
then pretended otherwise.
But since no one else can get the
airtime or column inches to point this out, the media can happily go
about its business in deep denial and without challenge save for its own
braggadocio parading as criticism in which minor flaws such as a single
story going awry are subjected to portentous analysis while major media
errors - like years of downplaying global warming or buying into false
justifications for invading Iraq - escape scot free.
Take just
one responsibility of the press, investigative reporting. Most
investigative reporting these days is done by non-profit organizations,
led by groups like the Center for Public Integrity, which probably has
more investigative journalists usefully engaged than any media
corporation in the country. Environmental organizations and governmental
watchdogs have broken story after story that a real reporter would have
been proud to have uncovered. And Ralph Nader has been one of the best
investigative reporters this country has ever known. Further,
non-profits, rather than the media, have been at the forefront of
defending freedom of the press and government accountability, ranging
from the daily work of the ACLU to freedom of information suits and the
legal protection of government whistleblowers.
This outsourcing
of journalistic responsibility both saves the media money and provides
it with distance in case something goes wrong with a story. But
non-profits don't win Pulitzers so the myth of journalism as public
savior goes on even though the profession is ever more in the hands of
some of the least public-minded people in American history.
There
are, however, a few recent signs that even the media is feeling a bit
less secure upon the pedestal it has constructed for itself. The crowds
no longer seem to be paying homage. . . or even attention. In fact a
recent survey found that only 22% of Americans say they get most of
their news from a newspaper, barely twice as many as say they use the
Internet as their primary source. Radio is at a mere 15% while 50% rely
upon the true church of our new Middle Ages - guardian of the faith,
inquisitor of free market apostasy, perpetuator of sanctified
superstition, lord of all men, judge of all things, which is to say,
television.
If you look closely at this division of news
curricula, one finds that just under a third of the public relies on
media that by habit, methodology, and tradition are most likely to
concern themselves with the rational and the factual. This does not mean
that such matters are absent from TV, only that you won't use up
anywhere near your Tivo memory recording every Front Line, 60 Minutes
and available equivalent.
Yet far from welcoming their colleagues
in cyberspace, the print media has gone out of its way to disparage and
ridicule digitized news, with particular disdain for bloggers who dare
to occupy space the archaic press believes belongs to them. There is of
late much talk about the social and professional status of bloggers who
are presumed not to be as properly credentialed as, say, Jason Blair,
Robert Novak, Geraldo Rivero, Bill O'Reilly, the broadcast staff of
defense contractor General Electric, or the 400 journalists who
moonlighted for the CIA in times past.
But Tom Paine, Ben
Franklin, and Frederick Douglass did not have press passes either, nor
did anyone give them credentials before they commenced their unlicensed
practice of the First Amendment. And where does one go these for such a
license anyway? Usually to the government or to a committee comprised of
employees of large media corporations whose interest is not in
dispensing news but in owning its profits and who hire numerous
lobbyists to manipulate the same White House and Congress their ace
reporters are covering.
There are, of course, good bloggers and
there are bad ones. There are gay prostitutes pretending to be objective
cyber-journalists and there are internet journalists uncovering answers
to questions conventional reporters don't even bother to ask. A simple
test of the average quality of these efforts would be to invite nothing
but bloggers to the next presidential news conference. Can anyone doubt
that it would be more interesting and useful than a room full of David
Gregorys asking questions so predictable that the president already has
the answers on paper?
Something of the same effect could be
achieved by ridding the White House news confabs of media prima donnas
and replacing them with that quiet body of lesser known reporters who
cover truly tough beats such as Congress - a task at least 535 times
more complex than trailing a bubble wrapped president. Science
reporters, investigative journalists who don't usually have time for
show business, hacks who know federal agencies inside and out, not to
mention well-informed advocacy scribes from right and left, would serve
the country far better than the present club of servile stenographers.
The archaic media's discomfort with the Internet began early. I collected some examples for my book, Why Bother?:
-
Cokie and Steve Roberts wrote a column, headed 'Internet Could Become A
Threat To Representative Government,' warning against the direct
democracy of the Internet and saying it could threaten the "very
existence" of Congress.
- A commentator on Court TV argued that acceptance of government regulation of the Net was the equivalent of growing up.
-
Leslie Stahl on 60 Minutes called for the removal of undesirable
information from the Net. Asked on what grounds, Stahl replied, "That
it's wrong, that it's inaccurate, it's irresponsible, that it is
spreading fear and suspicion of the government; 10,000 reasons."
-
A writer in the Washington Post warned that without gatekeepers of
information -- e.g. the Washington Post -- "our media could become even
more infested with half-truths and falsehoods."
- On Crossfire, Geraldine Ferraro breathlessly warned that "we've got to get this Internet under control."
-
A front page story in the New York Times was headlined 'Term Papers Are
Hot Items On The Internet.' Other horrors in the Times' series included
a story that the Net had caused Dartmouth students to forget sex,
socializing and drinking; another on how to spot your computer
addiction; and, finally, how the same technology that encourages
celibacy at Dartmouth encourages flagrant and prolific sex everywhere
else.
I went on to note that "those not in media elite have found
something quite different on the Net. They are creating a cyberarchy of
transformation -- as different from the hierarchy of traditional
information and politics as the vast wilderness of America was from the
taut geography of 19th century Europe. The old dukes and baronets,
clinging to their decadent landscape of conventional thought, rail
against the primitiveness, the raucousness, the freedom of the new
media, but theirs is effete whining in a happy hubbub of people
discovering the ubiquitous potential of a new frontier. The ways of the
Net have become inseparable from the ways of new politics -- they are
the smoke-filled room, the Tammany Hall, and the political picnic of a
new age.
"With the heady discovery of how many of us there really
are has come a sense of incipient rebellion based not on ideology but
on dreams and values -- a shared faith that truth, freedom, the
individual, community, and decency still matter."
I have been a
radio reporter; have edited newspapers and newsletters; have written for
local, national and foreign readers; have had articles in more than two
dozen publications; and then ten years ago I took to the Internet.
Nothing has made me feel closer to the guardian angels of journalism and
more a honest part of the free press than this latter adventure, while
nothing has made me feel more distant from those who haughtily claim
custody of journalism's holy grail even as they dishonor its most
hallowed traditions. Anyway, in the end, there is only one journalism
credential that really counts: telling good stories well - and
truthfully.