Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/11/26
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]We forget > that 99 percent of what we write about rarely rises above our paper's > ultimate fate: wrapping fish and lining the bottom of bird > cages. Not only to I agree with this statement, it's an argument I used to make with editors who didn't want to try something new, in terms of layout, art, or even writing technique - so what if it doesn't work? It will be forgotten by 6 p.m...HOWEVER... We simply > don't do that many "save the world" kinds of stories. So much > of what we do > involves ordinary people who, because of us, are experiencing > their sole "15 > minutes of fame." Don't we owe it to them to get it right? Yes - As I reporter one owes it to a source to "get it right. So, damnit, GET IT RIGHT. Take accurate notes. Use a tape recorder. Be sure of what you are hearing. In 23 words of writing thousands of stories, I NEVER had someone claim I misquoted them or took something out of context. Did I ever make factual errors? Of course. Were my stories always great, or even good? Of course not? But did I ever screw someone because I got it wrong? No. Just work carefully. And working on deadline is no excuse not to work carefully. Nor is working on a small paper in a rural area any excuse to not adhere to basic journalistic principles. It is, of course, true, that most of the stories most of us write are about common folks in common situations....But exceptions made in this area become precedents. If I agree to show a story to Joe Blow, I have no moral ground - and may have shaky legal ground on which to stand - when I refuse to show a copy of a story to the FBI, Justice Department, or local police department..,..and THAT is a precedent no journalist worth the name wants to set.... > Where we are > significant is as the recorder of history. Fifty years from > now people will > look up what we read and expect it to be right. Accuracy > checks ensure this. NO - What insures this is making corrections if anyone points out an error to you...The papers with which I am familiar make sure that every correction is sent to the paper's library, and the correction is attached, with a note, to the original clip - be that clip electronic or paper. So when one later looks something up, one sees the error - and correction - flagged. > > But the ultimate justification for accuracy checks is that we > do not, as this > fella implies, give up any power. We simply consider what the > subject has to > say. We listen to his objections. We don't have to change > anything. But we > can. Often, the subject is right and we are wrong. We change > those errors and > in the process, the world, the first amendment and those 250 million > Americans are served by it. Sorry - But just wait until a local DA doesn't like the story you're written about some crime, scandal, etc., and makes legal moves to block the publication of your story...Yes, you may prevail...But at enormous expense to the paper, expense that many small papers can ill afford. And because they can ill afford the expense, in this day of corporate journalism and ownership by folks who are committed to making a buck INSTEAD of making a buck WHILE doing good journalism, you may see the story quietly die. > This is an out-dated, ill-conceived "rule" in journalism. The real problem with journalism today - which, in many many areas has sunk to the level of the National Enquirer, is that too many people in the business consider basic "rules" and principles "out-dated" and "ill-conceived." Fifteen years ago leading papers such as the New York Times and Washington Post wouldn't report on "rumors," they would either find a way to confirm the rumors,and then run the facts, or they wouldn't run the story. Today, alas, such is not the case. > harms subjects > and it harms us and our reputation. It's little wonder that > journalists rate > along with lawyers and used car salesmen in polls. > > One last comment: This fella says he worked for the > Washington Post and that > at that paper reading a subject a story could be a firing > offense. Maybe it's > just embellishment NO - It's not... but in both the book and the movie "All > the President's > Men" Great source... Washington Post reporters Woodward and Bernstein are > depicted as calling > the target of one of their stories (I believe it was John > Mitchell) and > reading him their story for his reaction and comment. If when > the state of > the union is at stake it's OK to accuracy check, why isn't it > OK when dealing > with some ordinary Joe feature story guy? That exception was made for a number of very specific reasons - 1. The stories were all based on anonymous sources, which placed the reporters and paper at higher than usual risk; 2. The paper was playing a VERY high stakes poker game with the government of the United States, and was being threaten with economic and legal retaliation; 3. The reporters were hoping to provoke Mitchell into a provocative reaction - and they got it when he said that "Katie Graham is going to get her tit caught in a wringer." And, not to put to fine a point on it, but the "Fella" in question began as a copyboy at The Washington Post in 1967, worked there as a reporter from 1970-1980 - receiving several Pulitzer nominations along the way - went to Newsday in 1980 and was there until 1993, serving at various points as Science Editor, Senior Correspondent for Science and Medicine, and medical columnist, receiving several Pulitzer nominations, and winning a Pulitzer in 1984 as one of two lede reporters on the paper's coverage of the Baby Jane Doe case. The "Fella" as taught journalism at George Washington University, C.W. Post College of Long Island University, and now teaches basic news writing and science feature writing at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The "Fella" also writes a column for Boston Magazine, has written 10 books, and has contributed over the years to a number of national magazines. > > Bob (First, be a mensch) McEowen > > P.S. I apologize to the group for this sidetrack discussion > into journalism > "ethics." I have nothing more to say on the matter. >