Category: journalism
Peter Jennings, 1938-2005
I knew — but didn’t want to know — this was coming: Peter Jennings, anchor and senior editor of ABC’s "World News Tonight" since 1983, died today just four months after the April 5 announcement that he had lung cancer. His accomplishments were manifold, his presence assured, his news judgment rock solid.
One aspect that may not get a lot of attention — the role Jennings played in helping ABC News adapt to the digital age. I don’t know if he was the first, but he certainly was among the earliest network stars to write a regular email newsletter. His "Jennings Journal" set a tone for breaking through the barriers between news operations and viewers. When he wrote, "as always, we welcome your thoughts on the news, the broadcast, and this newsletter," it was genuine; he answered many emails personally and constantly addressed concerns. His senior producer Tom Nagorski sent out the 9/11 edition, noting that "normally Peter Jennings writes it" but he was at the anchor desk.
In his dispatch about the death of mentor Roone Arledge, also of cancer, Jennings called it "the saddest news of the day for many of us in this news division … he fought so hard for so long." Words that echo now.
Coda: We heard the news during a national cut-in on NBC affiliate KSDK’s late-night sports show. When we switched to ABC affiliate KDNL, owned by Sinclair Broadcasting, an installment of "Extra" was on the air. Maybe we missed the announcement there.
You Can Go Home Again
I’m back at home base in University City, Mo., after a trip that got so long and complicated friends have sworn to make an intervention if I try something like it again. For the record, between July 25 and Aug. 5 I went from St. Louis to Philadelphia (CTAM), Santa Monica (ContentNext mixer), Los Angeles (MES), Santa Clara (BlogHer), Palo Alto (rest day/Mobile Monday), San Francisco, Las Vegas (family time/father‘s birthday/shoe show) and finally home Thursday in time for a late dinner with my favorite editor.
I owe many of you apologies for dropping out of touch for several days. I hit a not-too-rational point where I felt compelled to finish my OJR piece on BlogHer before I could do anything other than my work on paidContent.org. The article went live earlier today, I’ve taken a very deep breath and now it’s time to make my re-entry. If you haven’t heard from me yet, you will soon.
As I thought, writing about BlogHer turned out to be daunting for many reasons. Left to my own devices, I’d still be writing, editing, rewriting. Robert Niles, thanks for the patience and the encouragement; Diana Day, as always, I owe you.
One of the issues I ran into is the difference between writing about something as it happens or writing about it in a changeable/updatable space compared to writing something essentially published once. I also knew that by the time we published those who wanted to follow the conference already would be doing so through the often-amazing live blogs, post-BlogHer posts and the like but that many of my readers would be coming to the story cold. Plus, I’ve already written about a lot of the issues that cropped up during the weekend so didn’t want to cover a lot of that ground again. If you’re looking for blogging v. journalism redux, skip it.
Voice was another issue. In the end, to be true to the experience it had to be in the first person.
About the live bloggers, as frustrated as I was about the WiFi un-access, knowing that cadre was doing the job gave me the freedom to sit back a little. I still took a lot of notes but I wasn’t worried about getting it all down and transmitting it. Thank you for the breathing space.
For more than my take, I urge you to spend some time with the other BlogHer participants. You can check my link blog, too. Via Nick Bradbury’s Feed Demon newsreader, I spent hours of plane time wending through the posts of those who offer full-text RSS feeds. It felt like taking two journeys at once.
(That’s also how I found out about Nick’s pending surgery. Nick, good thoughts and prayers for your recovery.)
I’m sure I’ll hear about anything I got wrong. Just to show I learned something at BlogHer, you’re welcome to let me know what I got right, too, here or at OJR — and please link. Yes, it’s still hard to ask.
Matt Cooper’s Latest Scoop
Just saw Matt Cooper’s comment following his grand jury testimony today — the one about not scooping himself by holding the details for a future issue of Time. The magazine has a web site now and is no longer held hostage to weekly news cycles; if he put the pedal to the metal, we could read about it tonight. Withholding that information any longer than logistically necesssary at this point will not help anyone.
Beyond that, I wonder if Cooper or his editors realize that answer sounds like Time is trying to capitalize on a sorry situation. Guess it makes some sense given the way it’s been handled up ’til now but I sure hope that’s not the case.
See also Not Above The Law — Not Below, Either | Time Inc. Folds In First Amendment Case
Not Above The Law — Not Below, Either
The problem with using the argument "journalists aren’t above the law" is it actually places journalists below the law, suggesting that journalists don’t have the same rights as other citizens to refuse compliance with an order that goes against their ethics or that they believe to be unlawful. The legal system has built-in remedies for those situations. The willingness to back beliefs by facing those consequences rather than complying is an act of civil disobedience and journalists have as much right to civil disobedience as anyone else. Like any other citizen we also have to be prepared to pay for exercising that right, which is why Judith Miller’s current address is the Alexandria Detention Center in Virginia aka prison.
Along those lines, shield laws aren’t in place to elevate journalists anymore than whistleblower laws create a different class of citizen. Both are efforts to provide a flow of information that might not otherwise occur. Move beyond Judith Miller and whether you think she’s picked the right fight, whether you respect or detest her reporting. Think about the stories that might not be told and the damage that could do. Should bloggers and independent journalists be included in shield laws? Anyone who accepts the responsibility of newsgathering and reporting should be covered regardless of title or medium.
And all of us should think very carefully about the way we grant confidentiality. Perhaps we could work out agreements like the plea bargains that pepper "Law and Order." Tell us the truth and you’re covered. Lie or abuse and all bets are off.
Updated 7/13/05 with clearer language about who should be covered by shield laws.
Time Inc. Folds In First Amendment Case
This is tough. Time Inc. announced this morning that the magazine will "deliver the subpoenaed records" — ie turn over reporter Matt Cooper’s notes and source about Valerie Plame — in the hopes that the move "obviates the need for Matt Cooper to testify and certainly removes any justification for incarceration." Later, on sibling CNN, Time Inc. Editor in Chief Norman Pearlstine explained that he believed this was the best way to respond to the Supreme Court’s decision not to hear the cases of Cooper and Judith Miller, that the First Amendment does not mean journalists are above the law and this is the rule of law.
But, he said, Time would continue to use confidential sources and assure confidentiality because this is an unusual confluence of circumstances, the shield laws offer some protections and most cases wouldn’t end up with a Special Prosecutor. That’s if sources concerned about anonymity still want to be involved with Time, of course.
I’m sitting here with a small, blue three-ring binder labled "Time Editorial Guidelines" that I once consulted like a bible, back when I logged serious hours as a Time stringer. I still use the July 1987 memo from then-Time Inc. Editor in Chief Henry Grunwald as a bookmark; that’s Grunwald as in the late father in law of Matt Cooper.
On rare occasions, I had to promise confidentiality to sources. I did so with these words behind me:
"It is Time Inc. policy not to reveal the identity of a confidential source, even if an edit staffer is questioned about the source of the identity in litigation. The senior person, who may be required to testify with respect as to why the source was considered reliable, must be prepared to protect the confidentiality of the source."
That language and the rest of the section is aimed primarily at the use of confidential sources in what might be derogatory stories. And, Grunwald made it clear in that memo, that these were only guidelines, "not absolute rules of conduct." He wrote:
"There can be situations in which good journalistic judgment will indicate proceeding differently. The important point to remember is that Time Inc. journalism must continue to adhere to the high standards that have always prevailed within our organization."
According to an interview with Pearlstine in Folio, the company rewrote the most recent confidential source guidelines to make it clear to reporters and editors that protecting sources could lead to jailtime. I don’t know if the rewrite included a warning that confidentiality would be breached if Time Inc. lost in litigation — or that it would make that decision over the objection of the reporter. Cooper told the Wall Street Journal:
"A corporation is not the same thing as individual. They have different
responsibilities and obligations and there is no dishonor obeying a
lawful order backed with the force of the Supreme Court of the United
States. I prefer they not hand over documents that disclose the
identity of my sources, but that’s their decision to make."
I understand Pearlstine’s concern that journalists not appear to
think they are above the law. But that doesn’t leave compliance as the
only course of action. Arthur Sulzberger Jr. understands that. So does
Judy Miller. (Disclosure: I also was a very active stringer for the
Times for years and Miller was one of my editors.) Sulzberger’s statement from this morning via the Times Online:
"We are deeply disappointed by Time Inc.’s decision to deliver the
subpoenaed records. We faced similar pressures in 1978 when both our
reporter Myron Farber and The Times Company were held in contempt of
court for refusing to provide the names of confidential sources. Mr.
Farber served 40 days in jail and we were forced to pay significant
fines. Our focus is now on our own reporter, Judith Miller, and in supporting her during this difficult time."
Pearlstine referred to the Supreme Court’s non-decision as limiting "press freedom in ways that will have a
chilling effect on our work and that may damage the free flow of
information that is so necessary in a democratic society." But it’s his decision, not that of the Supreme Court, that’s turning Time Inc. into an ice house.
Brrrr.
Harry Shearer’s Riff On Defining Journalists
Harry Shearer, who’s already had an honorable mention here, uses his Huffington Post blog for a riff on the definition of a journalist. He suggests reading it in your best Casey Kasem voice — whatever you do, read the whole thing. Some of it rings true; we might wish some of it didn’t. It’s a tad long but that tends to be the case with riffs. Just a taste:
Journalists like:
deadlines.
bylines.
a bigger news hole.
free food.Journalists don’t like:
deadlines.
editors.
cramped press facilities at major news events.
media whores.Journalists can be Anchors, but never Sales. They can be reporters, or
just repeaters. A journalist looks down on celebrities until the day he
becomes one.A journalist spends too much time covering a story that gets too little
space so it can be skimmed by a reader who has too little time.
Sy Hersh, Technology and Journalism
The Guardian’s Hamish Mackintosh interviews rabblerousing investigative reporter Sy Hersh about the impact of technology on journalism. A few excerpts:
So Dan Gillmor’s idea that "we are the media" isn’t quite the case yet? The net does one thing great for people like me: it used to be that if
I wrote a good hard story for the New Yorker magazine and the New York
Times didn’t pick it up then we all felt bad. Now the internet is so
vibrant that everything’s on it on blogs, logs or websites. The blogs are still very undisciplined though and they can be very vicious.Has the net made it harder to cover up stories such as Abu Ghraib? … The
big impact of the net is that there’s an astonishing amount of
information to be accessed by people who know their way. For me, the
net is all about information flow, and in the long run it’s going to
mean better information.How important is an online presence to the New Yorker? I don’t
know for sure but I think it’s a big deal for them. I know when I have
a good story going they get about half a million hits a day. …
Bittersweet Moment As The St. Louis Post-Dispatch Changes Hands
Today, the paper synonymous with Pulitzer for more than 100 years became part of Lee Enterprises Nearly half a lifetime ago, I commenced from Washington University into a reporting gig at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. They were open from the start; odds were, I wasn’t going to be able to convert the job into a permanent post. It was a different atmosphere then, with an emphasis on significant experience at smaller papers and a move to the PD as a step up. The bulk of my professional experience was from a mix of internships and fill-in jobs at the major metro Atlanta Journal. Worse, in some eyes, when I returned for a degree I steered away from the world-class j school at Mizzou. On the other hand, I had enough experience to avoid being paid at the lowest scale.
I didn’t change the right minds about staying on full time. But from June 1984 on, the P-D has been an integral part of my life. I met my partner Ed Kohn in the newsroom, first learning from him about using open records and asking tough questions; others became valued friends and mentors. Some of the best advice I ever got was from the late Jim Millstone, who told me in slightly different words to have a life outside the newsroom. There was the joy of learning St. Louis City Hall from Greg Freeman, who turned out to be a great columnist and left us far too soon, and other aspects of reporting and editing from so many other top-notch professionals. Gossip columnist Jerry Berger shared tips, contacts and Yiddush long after I left. The paper stood by me when I came close to being called as a witness in a court hearing about a candidate’s lack of residency, a story I broke, and, after my gig was over, when I was sued along with the P-D by someone upset over my parting series about an urban not-for-profit spending most of its money on administrative services. (The suit , a nuisance filing, was dropped.)
A favorite pre-cell-phone moment: covering the 1984 VP Fair fireworks by the amazing Grucci family and checking before I went out on the explosive-laden barge for a place to file from if there was an accident — until I realized if there was a problem I wouldn’t be the one filing.
Later, the Post-Dispatch and parent company Pulitzer became my part of my beat as a media writer — first, for the St. Louis Journalism Review, and then for Editor & Publisher, the New York Times and many other publications; moving from someone who had been paralyzed by chance meetings with Joseph Pulitzer Jr. on the stairs to someone who interviewed him. I covered Pulitzer going public; the death by a thousand cuts of the rival Globe-Democrat; the rise and flameout of the St. Louis Sun; the arrival — and departure — of editors; Joseph Pulitzer’s will; the awarding of a Pulitzer Prize to freelance photographer Ron Olshwanger — and then broke the still-repeated story that a photo editor had erased images, including Diet Coke cans, from the photo of the moment that ran in the paper the next day. (For some time, the Diet Coke cans showed up as screensavers in the photo department.)
People were never quite sure how much Ed and I talked about work in progress; he kept newsroom confidences much tighter than many of his colleagues. Occasionally, I astonished him by breaking news about the paper; those were good days. But as he became more involved in the way the paper was run, it became harder for me to write about the newsroom. Eventually, I moved away from covering the corporate side, too. It felt incredibly strange to be at Media Week last December and not be chasing the sale story.
Now, the paper’s role in my life is that of news source, dinner conversation/dinner delayer, indirect financial support. I don’t know everyone any more, can’t put a face with every byline. My own byline appeared last year from a conference. I’m critical of it, probably hypercritical because I see so much potential; I also can be hyperforgiving.
The Post-Dispatch and Pulitzer Publishing were tremendous supporters of SPJ for a very long time. (My guess is that Lee would be 100 percent behind reviving the St. Louis chapter.) In 2000, publisher Terry Egger arranged for the loan of then-new conference facilities for a
regional conference still appropriately titled "Change Happens." The anniversary of the first Joseph Pulitzer’s
birthday coincidentally fell at the same time in early April; we celebrated with a sheet
cake bearing the likeness from the masthead and, I think, some words
from the platform. It was a reminder that the ideals — not always the
reality, but the ideals — mattered beyond the Post-Dispatch.
As the Post-Dispatch and the other Pulitzer newspapers become part of Lee Enterprises, we should all remember that those ideals matter far beyond the name Pulitzer.
Coda: I thought it was a good sign when I realized that Lee’s vice president of news is the same David Stoeffler I got to know in the early ’90s when he was was at the Wisconsin State Journal. Today’s announcements included David’s appointment as editor and publisher of the second-largest paper in the Lee chain, the Arizona Daily Star. He will continue as news vp. I was intrigued to find some of his views about Lee’s news initiatives online, along with a chain-wide professional development site. Take a look.
Steve Jobs Doesn’t Get It
During a dinner chat at "D: All Things Digital," Steve Jobs was asked about Apple’s lawsuits against bloggers. From John Battelle, who is among those blogging the conference: "He claims that no one has the right to publish confidential
information just because they can, and so far, the courts are agreeing
with him. " Battelle’s stayed out of the fray thus far but last night’s comments pushed him into taking a public stance.
"I say, fuck that. I’ve stayed out of this one because it’s orthogonal
to search, but it’s directly related to my ability to do my job, and I
am not alone.
At the core of this case is a clear attempt to draw a line between
professional and amateur journalism, and as a practitioner of both, I
have to say it’s a very dangerous line to be drawing. Should the courts
decide whether the next Tom Paine has to work at the Wall Street
Journal before he starting cranking out his pamphlets? I don’t think
so."
He added: "Forcing journalism into some kind of a ‘qualified’ box is a very bad
idea. Jobs vowed at the conference to take this issue to the Supreme
Court if necessary. I hope he does, and I for one plan to fight him the
whole way there. If you agree, help EFF work on this issue. "
John gets it.
Welcome, Bayosphere
As I reported late yesterday on paidContent, Dan Gillmor’s first Grassroots Media project is underway: Bayosphere.com. The first phase — moving Dan’s blog from Typepad to Bayosphere — was close enough to being accomplished to go live last night. (No RSS feeds yet.) Registration is required for comments, as part of the community-building effort. This makes particular sense for Dan, who has been plagued by a troll and comment spam. I’m all for a high quality-to-noise ratio although registration, particularly when anonymity is allowed, is no guarantee of quality. Good luck on all counts, Dan — and please give "wretchedaccess.com" a home as soon as you can.
One more thing: I’ve grown increasingly disconcerted by use of the term "citizen journalism," which seems to suggest that professional journalists — those of us who do it for a living — aren’t citizens. Grassroots media works in some instances, as do a few other terms (including we-media, as in Dan’s book "We The Media" ), but I’m going with "p2p media" or "peer media" for now.
