When Dinosaurs Attack
Dan Riehl points to this gem from a Huffington Post interview with Helen Thomas:
To a certain extent, I agree with Thomas that blogging is dangerous... for journalists. The gatekeeper isn't dead, but he is ailing. Blogging software now makes it easy for subject matter experts and enthusiasts to provide the insights and critical review that most journalists simply don't have the background to report thoroughly, or accurately. I'd hasten to add that this isn't always the fault of journalists. Many if not most journalists are generalists, who may be assigned to whatever the "hot" story of the day may be, across a wide range of topics. We've less tolerance for the siloed journalists who cover a specific beat and refuse to become subject matter experts in the area that they are assigned. But no matter where journalists come from, must are always still primarily journalists, with a communications/journalism background, and they simply cannot compile the depth or breadth of knowledge that someone who has the academic and practical professional experience that many bloggers have developed. It is for these reasons that science blogs, milblogs, tech blogs and law blogs almost always have better commentary than the journalists merely assigned to cover the same areas, even though these bloggers will rarely break as many new news stories. Where bloggers typically excel is with providing content and corrections to news stories that journalist simply don't have the expertise to give. Now, it is a fair criticism that with tens of millions of blogs that many, if not most of them, are junk. It is a fair assessment that most blogs merely exist to echo opinions, but provide very little in the way of news in their content. But it is equally true that in blogging the cream rises to the top. What we increasing find in journalism, however, is that what floats to the top assuredly isn't cream. Bloggers have removed the mystique of the profession of journalism. It isn't rocket science. It never was. Though taught on the undergraduate and graduate level, some of the best journalists lack a college degree. Good reporting is craft or a trade reliant on a thirst for knowledge, dilligence, insight, ethics, and an ability to communicate—personality traits that no journalism school in the country can provide. The best a journalism program can do is polish the skills and technique of someone who already has these traits, but specific pedigrees are irrelevant when it comes the long-term quality of the work. A degree from Columbia may get your foot in the newsroom, but it won't keep you there. The quality of your work determines your future... or should. I can think of a half dozen bloggers covering politics that have done more original reporting than Helen Thomas over the past few years and certainly deserve a seat in the White House Press Corps more than Thomas, who only seem to exist now as an irritant for the White House Press office, and as an amusement for her peers. In the end perhaps it is her own current irrelevance that makes Thomas regard bloggers as dangerous, as a new breed of information providers devours the old.
HP:Do you think technology is changing [journalism]? That a good reporter will always find a venue because there are so many media outlets now? Thomas: No, but I do think it is kind of sad when everybody who owns a laptop thinks they're a journalist and doesn't understand the ethics. We do have to have some sense of what's right and wrong in this job. Of how far we can go. We don't make accusations without absolute proof. We're not prosecutors. We don't assume.HP: So if there's this amateur league of journalists out there, trying to do what you do... Thomas: It's dangerous.
Posted by: Confederate Yankee at 10:01 AM
Comments
Posted by: Mark at December 07, 2007 11:39 AM (4od5C)
Posted by: Swen Swenson at December 07, 2007 02:33 PM (xQ1mW)
Posted by: yeah right at December 07, 2007 05:22 PM (MyDKI)
Posted by: mark at December 07, 2007 05:56 PM (5aV6B)
And bloggers don't usually have a job they need to protect or preserve and are much more free to give voice to controversy or controversial facts. I worked for newspapers for over 20 years and I know how rule-based they can be. They don't really encourage original thinkers off the editorial pages and as we see today with NBC and have seen many times at the NYT or at certain magazines, not towing the party line can cost you your livelihood.
Posted by: Sara at December 07, 2007 06:07 PM (QWlxD)
Been reading Daily Kos again?
Posted by: C-C-G at December 07, 2007 08:06 PM (SoUge)
Posted by: ajacksonian at December 07, 2007 09:14 PM (oy1lQ)
Back when they had a monopoly on information, the audience had to accept what they dished out. But today, the internet in general and the blogs in particular have exposed these people for the biased mediocrities that they are, from CBS, ABC, PBS, to NYT, and the LA Times. The funny thing is how oblivious they are to the fact that the game has changed. They just continue doing what they've always done, a little puzzled and irritated about this whole internet thing. Just like the dinosuars as the comet hit.
Posted by: Cicero at December 07, 2007 10:22 PM (K69N2)
The attitude of the lefties seems to be, "who told the peons they could have opinions other than the ones we give them?"
Posted by: C-C-G at December 07, 2007 10:36 PM (SoUge)
Like your good buddy, Dan Rather? Or most of the reporters who wrote on the Duke lacross team? Or report from the "Green Zone" about events in other cities? (Do I really need to go on?)
Posted by: MikeM at December 07, 2007 11:15 PM (nyO8l)
Why any White House press secretary wastes his or her time trying to answer her questions/speeches is a mystery
Posted by: Mikey NTH at December 08, 2007 05:36 PM (xzmT0)
Posted by: Purple Avenger at December 08, 2007 08:43 PM (wWoFq)
Posted by: Pablo at December 09, 2007 09:52 AM (yTndK)
Nine Elements of Journalism (by Bill Kovach and Tom Rosensteil)
1. Truth
2. Loyalty to Citizens
3. Verification
4. Independence from Subjects
5. Independent monitor of Power
6. Forum for Criticism & Compromise
7. Make the significant interesting, and relevant
8. Comprehensive & proportional
9. Freedom of personal conscience
Standards
Cite original sources
Attribute source material
Use multiple sources
Check Every Fact
Report every perspective
Be Unbiased
Balance objectivity and skepticism
Take care organizing and reporting information
Avoid confidential sources
Decline gifts and favors
Recuse if biased
How would you rate their performance?
Arch
Posted by: arch at December 09, 2007 02:50 PM (YgJCw)
Jim C
Posted by: Jim C at December 09, 2007 09:36 PM (ON55K)
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