Real Reporting' That's News to Me
It’s been a long, rough-and-tumble two-year election season, and I’m sure I speak for most when I say I’m glad it is finally over. But now that the dust has settled and I am finally able to look back over the whole process, I’m lamenting a loss.
No, not John McCain’s loss: I’m crying over the death of journalism.
It’s been dying for a while now. Perhaps it was inevitable, seeing as journalism is tied to capitalism. For generations, publishers have struggled to find the balance between journalistic obligation and populist sensationalism. In other words, do we report on events and issues the public should know or what they want to know? Who decides what’s news? Is it what sells newspapers?
The questions have never really been answered. In this country, we began with a biased press. In the 1700s, publications existed to advance the interests of political parties. Then in the late 1800s, publishers like Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst relied on rumors and exaggerations to sell newspapers. Eventually, The Washington Post and The New York Times became dedicated to the unbiased pursuit of issues relevant to their readers.
And for a while, things were looking good. We had the exposure of Watergate, Iran-contra and other monumental stories that proved journalism was truly serving the public interest.
But then along came Ted Turner and his 24-hour news coverage — CNN. Soon it became obvious there was not enough interesting news to sell 24/7, so the network hired some talking heads to shoot off their opinions. Suddenly news and opinion, which had been concretely separated in the print media, were hard to differentiate. It was difficult to tell what exactly was “news.”
Then Rupert Murdoch, the man responsible for that beacon of journalism, The New York Post, launched Fox News. Sean Hannity — who holds only a high school diploma, who has never reported in the truest sense of the word — received a prime-time spot. Meanwhile, MSNBC now features liberal sportscaster Keith Olbermann (I still can’t figure out how ESPN gives you any insight into politics) and Air America Radio personality Rachel Maddow, who has grown accustomed to venting her own liberal opinions rather than reporting. Maddow replaced established reporter Dan Abrams, a Columbia Law graduate who covered significant legal cases including Bush v. Gore during the course of his journalism career.
And how can we forget the rise of the Internet? People abandoned the hard copies of credible sources like The New York Times and The Washington Post and moved to the information superhighway, where the lines between true and false are blurry at best. Blogs such as The Huffington Post and DailyKos add flames to the fire by spreading gossip and rumors in the name of news.
This leaves me asking, where have all the journalists gone? It’s been especially hard to tell during this election cycle.
Sarah Palin’s nomination triggered a controversy over whether she faked her own pregnancy to protect her 18-year-old daughter, Bristol. And that story, which originated on a liberal blog, made its way to all the major media outlets. That prompted the revelation of Bristol’s real pregnancy and the request that the media respect the privacy of the family. That didn’t stop the Associated Press from getting an interview with Bristol’s boyfriend, the father of her child, Levi Johnston, and promoting it as “a rare interview.”
Once upon a time, the press functioned quite differently. We know now Presidents Franklin Delano Roosevelt and John F. Kennedy habitually cheated on their wives, but nothing ever ran in any newspaper. We had a depression; we had a Cold War. Today, The New York Times has no problem with running a piece suggesting Senator McCain may or may not have had an affair with a female lobbyist.
Perhaps the trend can be traced to the fact that our politicians are becoming more like celebrities. This election was certainly different from 2004: Our president-elect was treated like a superstar. Remember those crowds of 80, 90, 120 thousand people? The Republican vice-presidential nominee drew comparable crowds and headlines. John McCain and Joe Biden were, for the most part, left in the shadows.
We started seeing their faces on the covers of Rolling Stone and US Weekly. But over the course of this campaign, headlines in the celebrity magazines slowly started making their way onto the covers of publications like Time, The Washington Post and The New York Times. And let’s not forget the blogs and Internet news sites that scrambled to be the first to report on how many houses McCain owns (even though most serve as investments, not residences).
The consequences of this type of journalism have become obvious. On Oct. 30, Harvard University’s Center for Public Leadership released a poll on the public’s trust in the media. Of those polled, 89 percent said the news media places too much emphasis on trivial issues; 39.5 percent of respondents said they trust cable news the most; 77 percent think the news media is biased.
Even now, careful fact-checking and journalistic standards are rapidly deteriorating.
We see reports, for example, of an unnamed McCain aide claiming Sarah Palin didn’t know Africa was a continent — and the story runs unconfirmed in The New York Times and The Los Angeles Times. Even our own college newspaper, THE HOYA, has stricter standards. Since when are journalists in the business of spreading rumors? Isn’t it their job to deliver the truth?
On Friday, President-elect Obama assembled his team of economic advisers to address job losses and the possible collapse of the U.S. auto industry. It was a sobering event, and for the most part, the questions were tough. Would Obama support a stimulus package? Would he negotiate with Iran? Any news on cabinet appointments? But amid the real reporting, someone asked: “Everyone wants to know what kind of dog you’ll be getting your girls.”
Maybe I’ll find the answer on “Countdown with Keith Olbermann.”
John Swan is a senior in the College and a former editor in chief of THE HOYA.

Nov 12 2008 at 4:46 a.m.
Been following this writer for a while now. As the Editor in Chief of a major college publication he has moved his publication forward (The Hoya has become a model college paper...BTB with no journalism major at GU!..MAYBE THAT says something!)
I don't agree with all his points, but I do say this. A FAIR POV and a great cry for every journalist that only wanted to report the news, and sadly, a art missed by many of us, more then we know.
Nov 13 2008 at 2:22 p.m.
Caveat Lector, John. Fair points in principle, but Keith Olbermann, Rachel Maddow and many others who, granted, have significant media platforms, are commentators, not journalists, and make no claims to the contrary.
As for the bastions of journalism showing their feet of clay, true that: there are lapses in judgment and out and out mistakes, but even in the "golden age" of journalism no publication was truly, perfectly impartial. It's just that today, with so many more sources of information there is (a) far more commercial competition and (b) far more availability of alternate sources of information, making it (c) that much easier to see the flaws.
Nonetheless, there's still plenty of good journalism out there if you look for it with a careful and critical eye. And plenty of good commentary too, on all sides of the opinion spectrum. You just need to be a critical, and informed, reader. Caveat Lector.
Nov 27 2008 at 12:19 p.m.
Bad reporting here, too. The rumor of the Bristol/Sarah/Trig triangle did not originate in a liberal blog, as the writer states. The rumor was already all over Alaska well before Palin was even considered as VP. Also, there is no evidence at all that the rumor is false, except for the honorable Gov. Palin'w word on it, and the letter from her doctor, who would obviously have been in on the triangle deceit from the beginning, if is indeed what happened. Funny that that letter was finally issued the very day before the election, the day it was most likely to just get reported matter-of-factly with no follow-up questions/investigation. What a way to "disprove" a rumor -- through the word of two of the people who would have had to have been in cahoots to have purportrated the triangle in the first place!
Dec 03 2008 at 4:16 p.m.
"Only a high school diploma", sounds a wee bit elitist. But that's the liberals problem, only "They" can tell us what we need to hear because "They" were educated in the finest most progressive institutions and know what's best. As for Watergate & Iran-Contra, had they been a"Democratic issue", it would have received the same treatment as "Chapaquitic, "Himey Town", and "Roosevelt going on TV to address the stock crash", a few days above the fold and then a footnote in the food section. Face it, there is a "Liberal Bias", the media hates Republicans and want all Conservatives to die, "Can't we all get along" only applies to them as does tolerance and "embracing each others values". Most of the media, print and televised stink, who cares what Oprah, John Stewart, Bruce Springsteen, Madonna, et al think, they're entertainers, but unfortunately, thats what we have become, a "Media Celebrity Driven Society", People Magazine wins, National Geographic loses. By the way, good article John, see you at UConn (hopefully)