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As ombudsmen see it
(The following is reprinted from the Winter 1994 issue of Nieman
Reports.)
In response to a request from Nieman Reports for flagrant judgment calls by
editors and reporters, ombudsmen sent the accompanying reports.
Readers' Caution Exceeds Editors'
By Henry McNulty
The reading public, so we are told, increasingly distrusts and dislikes the
press; when it comes to credibility, journalists are right up there (or
down there) with used-car salesmen, politicians and televangelists. Much of
this antipathy, I am convinced, comes about because journalists and readers
inhabit two different worlds governed by different value systems.
If common ground is to be found between news producers and news consumers,
I'm convinced it must begin with a discussion of the values we share and
don't share. The newspaper is the perfect place for such a dialogue, but
unfortunately it's hardly ever used for that purpose.
Twice a year, however, I devote my ombudsman's column to an examination of
the values gap; I give readers a kind of "you-be-the-editor" quiz, almost
always focusing on ethics.
Most of the cases I use spring from actual news events. I describe a
scenario, then give a choice of editorial actions, usually boiling down to
"print it" or "don't print it." Typically, hundreds of readers respond. For
each quiz, I also poll my newspaper's top editors to find out how they would
handle the same situations. In a follow-up column, I report the percentages
of readers and of editors voting each way on each question.
The examples involve the everyday choices faced by those of us in the news
business. Which facts should be included? Should we show someone innocently
committing an unsafe or illegal act? Do we report a rumor? What about
offensive language or actions? When are the media invading someone's
privacy? What happens when timely reporting interferes with thorough
fact-checking? Which news should be withheld from the public?
In making such choices, there are no "right" or "wrong" answers; there are
only judgments based on personal or professional senses of right and wrong.
Readers disagree and editors will, too. But what interests me most are the
ways in which news producers (journalists) as a group fail to agree on the
ethical choices. In several years of doing these quizzes, I've discovered
that:
The responses to my quizzes reveal other differences between how readers
view the world and how journalists see it. But simply to acknowledge
different points of view, though a necessary starting place, won't do much
to narrow the gap between newspapers and their readers. If each side remains
convinced that the other is a bunch of valueless dolts, not much has been
accomplished. A dialogue is needed.
Publishing the responses to the quiz lets each side see where readers and
journalists agree and where they differ. Equally important is the
reinforcement of the truth that there often are splits on most issues among
the members of each group -- readers and editors. That's a revelation for
some people, who believe everyone shares their point of view.
In the newsroom, it's also important for the news producers to be aware of
the ways in which they and their readers disagree on ethical issues. Such
awareness will inevitably bring responsible journalists closer to
readers.
Out, out damned statistic
By John Sweeney
A statistic is like a magic wand. Or so we Americans think. It can prove a
point, silence doubts and end all arguments. To journalists, an
"authoritative source" holds even more magical power. Journalists believe
all they have to do is accurately quote the source, thereby making it a fact
and capable of withstanding any veracity test.
Marry the statistic to the authoritative source and you may approach media
immortality. Once a figure pops up on the screen, it tends to be repeated
over and over. Variations may occur, but few journalists challenge the
truth of the claim.
The Newhouse News Service recently did all of us a favor by collecting the
following comments, all of them made on one day in Washington:
Domestic abuse is a horrifying problem and journalists should publicize it
mightily. But common sense tells us all of these statements cannot be
true.
Which one is? Are any? Any why haven't journalists nailed it down?
We're supposed to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable, but
aren't we also supposed to check the numbers? Numbers magic works across
the political spectrum. From the right we learn everyone everywhere is in
imminent danger from violent criminals. From the left we hear that one in
10 teenagers fired a gun at someone. And on milk cartons we read that one
in 50 kids has mysteriously disappeared.
Do any of these claims make sense? Are any of them true?
We're suckers for statistical studies. Advice for opinion manipulators: If
you want your message to get big play in the press, say it in numbers.
Especially, alarming numbers.
Whether it's the numbers of domestic abuse, homeless people, missing
children, drug dealers or welfare queens, we journalists tend to pass along
the statistics, satisfied that the authoritative source is correct.
But that's not the way it is supposed to be.
We're supposed to be skeptics. Remember: "If your mother says she loves you,
check it out."
Of course, if mom said a study showed she loved us, we wouldn't bother.
Non-P.C. photos and second-day headlines
By Larry Fiquette
In newspapering, "close call" is the name of the game. Because almost every
decision is a judgment call, "lapses" (second-guesses) show up in a lot of
different stripes.
Photos are among the most troubling: should the paper print photos showing
non-P.C. behavior -- bikers wearing no helmets, drivers not buckled up,
celebrities smoking, etc.?
How about printing a photo of a black child decorating a Halloween window
drawing a witch surrounded by Stars of David? Does that constitute
insensitivity to Jewish readers -- or is it just the messenger bringing a
controversial message? How about dirty language or graphic descriptions of
murders, abortion and sex practices? The list goes on.
But "lapses" can be much subtler, too. Let's look at headlines. Because of
today's round-the-clock radio and TV newscasts, Americans are more
up-to-the-minute than ever. If we've heard all the day's big stories by
bedtime, they seem old hat at the breakfast table.
So, in the search for newness and freshness, newspapers sometimes play up
the latest twist -- often someone's reaction to the day's news -- which then
becomes tomorrow morning's headlines.
Let's say someone lodges an accusation early in the day against a public
figure -- President Clinton, for example. That allegation is likely to
dominate the day's radio and TV airwaves.
But if the president decides to counter the allegation before the end of the
day (the spins come quickly these days), his response can make the next
morning's headlines, not the allegation.
That "second-day lead" gives the denial more importance than the allegation.
Post-Dispatch readers have complained often about this "editorial slanting"
-- the cart out in front of the horse. I've fielded just such reader
objections over Whitewater allegations, Israeli-Palestinian violence, and
political campaigns.
Example, the headline read, "White House Denies Report of IRS Threat,"
concerning Clinton's 1993 problems with his travel office staff. That was
Saturday's headline based on a Friday story in The Washington Post, which
reported that a White House lawyer had raised the possibility of using the
IRS to investigate possible wrongdoing in the travel office if the FBI
would not. The White House denial followed even Sen. Robert Dole's call for
an investigation. Did the headline favor the president?
Example: "Wheat Defends Record on Crime and Drug Bills." That appeared over
a story about a political opponent's same-day accusation that Alan Wheat,
Missouri candidate for the U.S. Senate, was soft on crime.
Example: "Egypt Deplores Attack That Killed 4 Israelis," on a first-day
story about the attack. In bygone days, morning papers routinely headlined
the most important events of the preceding day, even if they were almost 24
hours old by the time readers got their paper. The historical record was
important. News was chronicled...well, chronologically. The event, then the
reactions. The impression coming in from readers now is that many would
have newspapers resume their old role, giving the historic value of the
news as much weight as the other factors that usually determine the play and
the headlines -- surprise, conflict, the unexpected and, yes,
entertainment.
That's a view from a contrarian's desk. But it could help avert some reader
complaints that editors' bias shows up in the headlines.
Abortion and AIDS in California
By Lynne Enders Glaser
Lately, it seems that about once a month I've encountered a "flagrant
judgmental lapse" that gives me reason to beat my breast and howl in
righteous indignation on the part of readers.
In July, for instance, it was the deletion of a significant paragraph from a
wire account and the alteration of a formal name in the same story that
caused abortion opponents to charge, once again, that The Fresno Bee had
reflected its editorial position on a news page. The article reported that
the nation's Roman Catholic bishops would fight against any health-care
reform that included abortions in a standard benefits package.
Deleted, at The Bee, was a paragraph saying that on the same day the bishops
made their stand, a Times Mirror Center poll had concluded "the public
opposes abortion coverage in a federally guaranteed benefits package by a
margin of 68 percent to 26 percent."
A copy editor also changed the name of the Pro-Life Committee of the
National Conference of Catholic Bishops to "an abortion opposition
committee."
Explained an assistant managing editor, the paper intended to run a separate
story on the poll, but ran out of space, and somebody forgot to reinstate
the removed information. About the name change, she said, it should not
have happened. She referred to the deletion and the name change as "bad
calls." I added, "...you'll get no argument from me about that."
And, I concluded my column for July 31: "To me, the most serious thing about
these two calls is that they contribute -- unnecessarily -- to the belief of
readers, who feel strongly that the media are against their cause and will
do whatever they can to advocate abortion rights."
In August, I was equally dismayed about a headline on a local dispute over
funding for the AIDS quilt. Fresno Mayor Jim Patterson objected to spending
city dollars to pay for its display. Bee headline: "Patterson throws wet
blanket on AIDS quilt."
Readers -- straight and gay -- were quick to condemn The Bee for
insensitivity, lack of taste and, once again, for inappropriate use of
humor.
"If the story had been a feature examining some aspect of the life of a
person with AIDS, a 'clever' headline would probably not be appropriate,"
said the same assistant managing editor. "But given the [political] context,
I really don't think the headline was inappropriate."
She added, "Nevertheless, we regret if we did offend some readers."
I wrote for Aug. 29 that I, like the readers who called, was "offended and
surprised by the application of word play to this subject."
Even more, I said, I am "...distressed by a trend throughout the news
industry to rely so heavily on being clever.
"I recognize the power and value of snap, punch, alliteration, puns. But, I
think these techniques often are applied when there's no need, and then they
detract, put off, even offend. 'AIDS' is such a powerful word that it
doesn't need help to get your attention. Not only does it come with an
emotional snap, it also carries the visual punch of capital letters."
I feel the same way today -- about both subjects -- as I did when I first
addressed them.
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