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To sin tax or not to sin tax
I know I've lost faith in reporting overall and go to both "liberal" blogs and at least three different newspapers before trying to form an opinion.
Fair, balanced, unbiased -- all of these noble words seem to no longer be the main goal.
What surprises me is that you have only now caught onto this! The polls that came out, what, a week ago (?) showed that (this is from memory, so don't quote me on it) about 50% of Americans believe that the media in general is rooting for Obama, about 8% thought the same about McKain, and only thirty-something percent thought that the media was actually being "fair."
Welcome to enlightenment!
I can't recall who said it on a chat show a couple of weeks ago, but his prediction that one of the aftermaths of this campaign season is we will look back at 2008 as "The Year Journalism Died."
I expect this to be a rising tide of opinion as the end nears.
PLEASE stay on this. You are, to my mind, the one who can lean on this credibly.
We are yet again at one of those points in the business and for a fantastically interesting read on the idea of "objectivity," The Columbia Journalism Review did a cover story called, "Re-thinking Objectivity," (in '03!) that is a must read for news nerds. Note the second section "Tripping Toward The Truth," on the history of how being objective has bobbed and weaved through journalistic history.
It's a primer for what is happening now.
http://cjrarchives.org/issues/2003/4/objective-...
markp: You are quite right. I was slow to catch on to the new AP. Mea culpa. But polls showing what most Americans think of "the media" don't impress me. First, because the polls and the Americans both accept the existence of one thing called "the media." I don't.
Look: Fox works for the GOP. ABC, NBC and CBS seem confused and fearful except in their relentless pursuit of mediocrity. MSNBC is liberal but employs Pat Buchanan. CNN will do almost anything for better ratings. PBS science and documentary programs are dynamite, but its news is "on one hand this, on the other, that, time will tell." The New York Times often is liberal - whatever that means - but it allowed Judith Miller to recycle White House disinformation on Iraq. Also, the Times hired Bill Kristol, the brilliant neo-con who urged that we ignore the silly idea Shiites and Sunnis might dislike each other. Oh, and talk radio is right-wing politics or religion of the "Jesus hates" variety. And I haven't mentioned national magazines or local papers or blogs or the New Mexico Independent. My point - it's complicated.
Gene Grant: Thanks for the vote of confidence. I will keep noodling the issues. I do remember that CJR issue and we certainly should continue to rethink objectivity. But with or without the word, I figure journalism must always demand accuracy and fairness.
Arthur Alpert
Arthur Alpert