When the Watchdogs Are Asleep, We All Get Robbed
In the wake of the financial collapse, I wonder if the remaining (if relatively low) public respect for the press is gone for good. Yes, the delivery platform of the future will change, but the content still has to be credible. And now it must be said: The media blew both of the major catastrophes of our time.
By Greg Mitchell / May 5, 2009
NEW YORK — Sometimes, pieces that may not really fit come together in revealing ways, especially nowadays, thanks to immediate distribution and then saturation via the Web. It happened again recently.
Several leading newspapers announced new layoffs, furloughs and/or pay cuts. A few hours later, a new Rasmussen poll revealed that one in four Americans now believe that the “faux” news delivered by Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert is replacing “real” news sources as viable outlets.
Unlike previous polls, this one showed that it wasn’t just Democrats and the under-30 crowd who feel this way (actually, more Republicans endorsed this view). After recent press performance, who could blame them? Especially since Stewart seemed to reveal more guts and passion — and even skill — than nearly anyone else in the “real” media in destroying Jim Cramer and some of his blowhard CNBC brethren for their cheerleading role in the financial collapse.
A few days after that, Ben Stein, a friend of Cramer’s, in his regular Sunday column for The New York Times, hailed Stewart for “calling us all to account.” Why wasn’t he praising the Times itself or any other member of the mainstream news media?
But it goes way beyond that.
No one is a bigger booster of newspapers than I, going back to my first job in journalism as a summer reporter four decades ago. I have long defended newspapers from charges of political “bias” and championed their coverage, and credibility, over that found in any other media.
But in the wake of the financial collapse, I wonder if the remaining (if relatively low) public respect for the press is gone for good. Yes, the delivery platform of the future will change — the Kindle, iPhone apps or rubbery plastic may replace paper everywhere — but the content still has to be credible. And now it must be said: The media blew both of the major catastrophes of our time.
I speak, of course, of the Iraq war and the financial meltdown. I wrote a book about the first, calling it “So Wrong for So Long.” I could write a sequel on the second disaster, and maybe title it “So Wrong Again.”
True, there’s more of a consensus around the Iraq failure. The press has circled the wagons on the latest flop, and I agree that individual reporters at certain papers did some fine watchdog work, to no avail. But the defenders of the press in this matter are cherry-picking the good stuff, much like Bush with his intelligence on Iraqi WMDs.
Others admit the press failed but could not have possibly understood how bad things were at the banks and on Wall Street. “No one knew” and “we’re only as good as our sources” or “they lied to us” are the common excuses. That sounds exactly like the media defending its Iraq miscues.
Many point to the terrific press coverage of the financial meltdown since September. Agreed, but again, the media also played great catch-up on Iraq — when it was too late.
And to say that some did probe deeply — well, I concur, just as some did on Saddam and WMDs. And, as in that case, the reports were often buried in the paper or the broadcast, or just sat there quietly waiting for follow-up or editorial comment. The watchdogs barked, but often off in the distance, and then went on their way. Why else was the Jon Stewart rant taken as such a breath of fresh air?
History will be the judge, although I suspect the first books that prove my case will appear any month now. But it doesn’t matter what I or other commentators charge. It’s what the news consumer thinks. And there’s no way that most of them, fairly or unfairly, have not already thought: Damn media. Why didn’t they warn us of these financial shenanigans in time?
The media miss stories all the time, always have, always will, and there’s nothing to be ashamed about in that — you can only do so much, especially in a time of slashed newsroom staffs. But to miss a story of this enormity, with consequences that will echo (like Iraq) for decades, only adds weight to the warnings of doom for the “old” media.
[Greg Mitchell is editor of Editor & Publisher. His latest book is Why Obama Won.]
Source / Editor & Publisher
These are excellent comments. Newspapers exist to sell advertising and reflect the views of their owners.
For 20 years, the Right has innacurately claimed that the press has a liberal bias, which has made the press overly sensitive to this criticism.
In 2006, Congress passed the Boehner Bill, which will cut the benefits of many retirees whose pensions fail to $250 a month. How many reported this. It will effect many liv es.
People like Eliot Spitzer were warning about mutural fund and financial industry malpractice. The press mainly focused on his sad personal life.
Now the press is easing the GOP come-back by exaggerating the party’s weakened position. It still retains most its supporters, has all sorts of assets and expertise to use for a 2010 comeback, and shrewdly positioned itself by making almost no suggestions on how to edeal with the deep depression.
Sherm