December 12, 2024
If The MSM Continues To See Its Role As Deciding Which Facts The Public Should Not See For Fear Of Hurting Democrats, Its Credibility Hasnt Hit Rock Bottom Yet
By Bill Dunne -All News Pipeline
Modern journalism is all about deciding which facts the public shouldnt know because they might reflect badly on Democrats. Blogger Sean Medlock (a.k.a. Jim Treacher) posted that jibe on Twitter back in 2014, and not much has changed since then, except that today the American press finds itself in the middle of a slow-motion cataclysm.
Where all the debris finally settles is anybodys guess, but one thing thats been blasted for sure is the medias credibility with the public. Fewer thanone in three respondents to a Gallup pollnow say they trust the medias reporting a great deal or a fair amount. Its a poll the Gallup organization has been taking since the early 1970s. Back then, the number was 70 percent.
What accounts for that remarkable collapse? Well, as the Mike Campbell character inThe Sun Also Risestells how he went bankrupt, it happened gradually, then suddenly. In the case of journalisms credibility, the gradually part was the slide that stretched across three decades since the early Seventies. The suddenly part began in 2016 with Donald Trumps ascent to the White House.
Thats when the media establishment threw caution to the wind and marched into what author and media researcher Andrey Mirhas dubbed the post-journalism era. The professed ideal of objectivity and fairness in reporting was explicitly abandoned. Trumps unique threat to our nation (per historian Jon Meacham) demanded it.
Shortly before election day 2016, New YorkTimesreporter Jim Rutenberg issued the first clarion call to colleaguesin a prominent front-page column. He wrote:
If youre a working journalist and you believe that Donald J. Trump is a demagogue playing to the nations worst racist and nationalistic tendencies, that he cozies up to anti-American dictators and that he would be dangerous with control of United States nuclear codes, how the heck are you supposed to cover him?
Rutenberg answered his own question: throw out the textbook [that] American journalism has been using for the better part of a half-century.
Author and former CIA analyst Martin Gurri calls Rutenbergs incitement a leap vigorously into advocacy. Trump could not safely be covered; he had to be opposed. Journalists were now staunch allies of the powers that be -- the White House, the FBI, the CIA, the DoJ, all the other branches of the federal bureaucracy. In the old days they fondly told themselves that their mission was to afflict the comfortable and comfort the afflicted, now its comforting the comfortable.
No less a press luminary than Dean Baquet, then the executive editor of the New YorkTimes, essentially blessed the new zeitgeist half a year later. Thats when former U.S. Attorney General Robert Mueller came out of retirement to head the investigation into Trumps alleged collusion with Russia for help in getting himself elected.
Gurri estimated that within a two-year period theTimesalone devoted more than 3,000 articles to the Russia, Russia, Russia story. TheTimesand the WashingtonPostboth were garlanded with Pulitzer Prizes. It was, said Gurri, the first sustained excursion into post-journalism by the American news media, led every step of the way by the New YorkTimes.
But that was then, and this is now. Its seven years later with a further plunge in media credibility. It shouldnt be surprising, then, that cracks -- significant cracks -- have appeared in the post-journalism regime. Most shocking to uniformly left-wing newsroom personnel were the decisions, first by theLos AngelesTimesand then the New YorkTimes, to refrain from endorsing Kamala Harris for president, as expected. Both papers saw instant staff resignations and many thousands of subscription cancellations.
That, however, did not stop Jeff Bezos, owner of the WaPo since 2013 and generally regarded as a liberal in his political leanings, from reading the riot act to his employees. The headline over hiscolumn on the WaPos op-ed pagewas startling enough: The hard truth: Americans dont trust the news media. Under it he wrote:
In the annual public surveys about trust and reputation, journalists and the media have regularly fallen near the very bottom, often just above Congress. But inthis years Gallup poll, we have managed to fall below Congress. Our profession is now the least trusted of all. Something we are doing is clearly not working.
He would not allow his paper, which lost $77 million in 2023 and is heading toward a $100 million loss this year, to stay on autopilot and fade into irrelevance... not without a fight. Bezos analogized the role of news reporting to voting machines. Like them, he said:
We must be accurate, and we must be believed to be accurate. Its a bitter pill to swallow, but we are failing on [that] requirement. Most people believe the media is biased. Anyone who doesnt see this is paying scant attention to reality, and those who fight reality lose.
If that wasnt enough of a wake-up call, along came Patrick Soon-Shiong, owner ofthe Los AngelesTimes. He announced he isreconstituting the papers editorial board, which includes getting rid of a number of very left members.
Soon-Shiong explained he is committed to creating a more balanced and diverse editorial voice, with the hope of better reflecting the political landscape of the United States. He added, the new editorial board will work to offer perspectives across the political spectrum, aiming to foster a broader conversation within the papers pages.
Do these smacks upside the head tothe media establishment portend any lasting changes? Given recent perusals of the WaPo and theTimes, it doesnt look like it.
Bezos and Soon-Shiong, after all, are mere business tycoons. What do they know about the blessed profession of journalism? The old Hollywood image of the gruff, rumpled, streetwise newshound, the Pat OBrien type, is long gone. Many reporters and editors in the legacy media today are degreed idealogues. Their mission is not so much to inform as it is to instill proper thoughts in peoples minds.
Along came the digital age to upset all that, like the asteroid strike that doomed the dinosaurs. The basic dynamic of the news business,as Martin Gurri tells us in hisCity Journalarticle, has been decidedly and permanently turned on its head. Originally it was a means of selling audiences to advertisers; now its advertisers chasing audiences. Those audiences have a million alternative information sources at their fingertips now.
If modern journalism continues to see its role as deciding which facts the public shouldnt see for fear of hurting Democrats, its credibility hasnt hit rock bottom yet.
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