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Thomas
D. Williams:
The Decline Of Journalism
Scoop
Independent News
www.sccop.co.nz
New Zealand
Tuesday, 21 November 2006, 4:36 pm
Published originally by
The Truthout Report
www.truthout.org
If
some doomsday industry analysts are to be believed, newspapers are laid
out and stacked neatly inside their own future death warehouses, not only
in the United States, but worldwide.
"October was a pretty depressing month for national newspapers. While
circulations slide, the industry news has been dominated by job cuts and
staff unrest, particularly among journalists," England's Guardian
Unlimited reported in November. A month earlier, Der Spiegel, the
intellectual German news magazine, disclosed that more and more, German
journalists are leaving the print media to get safer and more lucrative
jobs with corporate public relations agencies.
But some concerned and dedicated journalistic observers both inside and
outside the US news business believe the demise or baggage-seat status of
newspapers is a farfetched theory. It is promoted, say news insiders, by
corporate executives operating large newspaper chains. They are engrossed
in making news collection as cheap as possible, while forcing a larger
advertising layout in newspapers at the expense of the formerly generous
pages of a variety of local, national and international news. And as they
do, publishers and editors claim to be inventing a new, easy-to-read,
streamlined form of tabloid attractive to all ages, particularly the
younger set.
Threat of Extinction
Published explanations of fiscal threats to newspapers from so-called
industry communications experts and corporate news executives sound so
logical. Their mantra is: the news business is under constant threat of
extinction from fierce Internet advertising competition, extraordinary
increases in newsprint costs and declining newspaper profit margins.
It is hard to question news executives' assertions that the Internet is a
modern information superhighway, easier to access, keenly popular with a
younger generation of site-Googling activists. As a result, experts say,
newspapers are losing much of their classified and display advertising to
a host of flashy, photogenic and even audio-video-oriented Internet sites.
Only older adults, used to washing ink off their hands, would read a
newspaper, those same experts say. Newspapers have fought back, creating
their own Internet sites with free news and paid advertising.
In spite of the Internet's allure, and a variety of news sites like Salon
and Slate, many competing newspapers are still making 20 percent profits.
That is five percent more than used to be acceptable in the decades when
publishers understood the costly but essential responsibility of being
part of the Fourth Estate, while scrutinizing and reporting on government
and corporate corruption.
Profitable and Resilient
In its 2005 state of the news media, Rick Edmunds of the Poynter Institute
says, "As businesses, newspapers are strong, highly profitable and
resilient. In good times and mediocre, the industry now boasts operating
margins in the low to middle 20-percent range, a bit less than Microsoft
and Dell, but higher even than pharmaceuticals."
Hosts of editors, reporters and readers are angry just listening to and
repeatedly reading what they consider "excuses" to increase
profits while eroding probing enterprise journalism. Those committed to
public service news and investigative reporting believe grave industry
profits to be manipulative, shallow or misleading. In fact, the very
rationale for saving newspapers - cost cutting, layoffs and buyouts - is
thought to have created circulation and profit drop-offs, and to foster
the very predictions of a dark, deadly fiscal whirlpool. The bigger the
staff and cost cuts, the more advertisers and readers are scared away,
indeed creating loss of disgusted readers and lesser profits.
As newspaper size shrinks, experienced reporters and editors are replaced
by relative greenhorns. Then, the comparative evidence in daily published
reporting shows a wide variety of in-depth stories and features morphing
into larger sensational headlines, bigger photos, news graphics and
repetitious bad news dominated by politics, crime and war.
Lock on Talent
Paul Marks, 53, spent 30 years of his life as a reporter in more than one
newspaper before he became discouraged by the lock on his development and
talent, and left the ever-declining staff of the Hartford Courant this
year. He said he once again feels professionally energetic and less
creatively constrained as an aerospace and speechwriter for the president
of Pratt & Whitney, a manufacturer of aircraft engines, gas turbines
and space propulsion systems.
As an eventual result of declining staff, Marks said, Courant editors cut
back on reporter training, workshops, fellowships and conferences.
Reporters were sometimes trapped collecting and writing a workaday 10-inch
story instead of attending a rare all-day, local seminar on an assigned
specialty - in his case the energy industry.
When he and other reporters wanted to be reassigned to expand their
careers, Marks said, they frequently were blocked because cutbacks made it
difficult for editors to transfer them to better assignments with so few
replacements. And, as time and cuts wore on, said Marks, reporters had
difficulty suggesting time-consuming, in-depth stories because they were
needed instead for day-to-day routine coverage. "The people who had
good local or deep sources and thorough understanding of the political
landscape the Courant lost to attrition," said Marks. "As a
result, the Hartford Courant just became another parachute in news
organization, like TV stations or the Associated Press."
"Every time a newspaper loses staff, it forces those remaining to
take on more duties in the effort to continue the paper's core mission ...
to create a strong local report," Les Gura, metro editor of the
Winston-Salem Journal, told the Poynter Online journalism site. "The
problem?" he asked. "If you reduce staff, you are going to have
to either cut local coverage, or add duties to those remaining to maintain
local coverage."
Readers Rebelled
As reporters were being pulled out of some towns that supplied prime
circulation, said Marks, local readers were pelting the paper with
e-mails, phone calls and letters complaining about the loss of published
news in their towns. Still other readers are being fed a steady diet of
news features, initiated from such superficial inspirations as eunuchs
collecting taxes in India. Such oddities can be easily collected by a
reporter from the Internet and rewritten, a task that saves the reporter
the time it takes to explore on the street for a more fascinating,
readable local feature, said Marks.
However, the Courant's newly appointed top editor, Cliff Teusch, has said
the cuts are merely a challenge for editors and reporters to reinvent ways
to cover news for a "thriving" newspaper. "We all know very
well the grander reinvention agenda that faces us today," Teutsch
told the staff recently. "We need to make the smartest, boldest moves
we can as we confront challenges in circulation and advertising and
changes in how people get their news and information. As a staff, you have
shown great enthusiasm for this in the numerous innovative ideas you have
submitted in recent days."
Bob Greene was a longtime investigative reporter and editor for Newsday
and the founder of the journalism program at Hofstra University. He is
perhaps one of the foremost experts in the country on investigative
journalism. Greene suggests the innovation Teutsch mentioned has
disappeared. "Reduced news staffs lead to gradual abdication of
responsibility for comprehensive and insightful news coverage," he
said.
"The quarterly report drives public corporations, including those
holding and publishing newspapers," says Greene. "When many of
our great newspapers were owned by individual persons or families, they
were willing to reduce their profit margins in any given quarter or year
if it came to maintaining reporting staff or devoting much time and money
to investigative and other forms of public service reporting. This was in
tacit acknowledgment that their businesses also had a unique
Constitutional responsibility to fully inform.
Profits Are the Goal
"In this respect, I can think of publishers like the Taylor family
and the Boston Globe, Alicia Patterson and Newsday, the Bingham family
with the Louisville Courier Journal, the Chandler family and the Los
Angeles Times, the Pulliam family in both Indianapolis and Phoenix and
many others, big and small. These newspapers and others of their kin are
now owned by public corporations, where constantly increasing profits are
the paramount goal," says Greene.
Pat Feeley, a former Connecticut resident now living in Colorado, is a
veteran newspaper reader who buys hard copies of the Coloradoan, and
regularly reads the New York Times online, as well as sometimes the online
Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times, "and even the [Hartford]
Courant." She thinks news executives, editors, reporters and readers,
too, have allowed their public service values and native intelligence to
erode. Instead, she says, they have become mesmerized by starlit gossip
and scandals, money-making, power politics, Internet blogs, television and
conformity.
"Newspapers and journalists themselves are slipping," says
Feeley, "and most have adapted ineptly to the succession of
electronic media. The public companies have become hysterically responsive
to the 'expectations' of Wall Street.... [News] is a mature industry, and
a profitable one, and it isn't going to have growth like Microsoft or
Crocs or Google before the bubble burst. I think it is managing for the
short term, not the longer one.
"Don't discount the decline of American education," she said,
"and the rise of the consumerist imperatives as sources of trouble in
the newspaper trade. We now think we should be entertained from infancy to
senility, and aren't willing to work to understand difficult concepts,
other cultures, other points of view, nor do many citizens have the skills
to do any of that. This goes for journalists as well as readers," she
explained. "We keep seeing what we want to see; we keep following the
herd, as in the hero worship that kept Bush in office with scare tactics.
[Some] journalists and publishers knew better, but were afraid to say
anything for fear of being tabbed as 'disloyal' or 'un-American.'"
Simplistic Thinking
"This is the kind of simplistic thinking that says, 'You're for us or
against us' was contagious," said Feeley. "Fear and greed too
are powerful motivators. I think the scariest thing is how many people
listen to and read only [information] that agrees with their point of
view; the proliferation of purported news outlets permits one to do that.
If you are narrow, you only get narrower that way, and the country gets
more polarized."
Although newspaper executives like Dennis FitzSimons, chairman, president
and CEO of Tribune Company in Chicago, say the declining revenues of
newspapers require responsible officials like himself to repeatedly cut
expenses and reduce staffing, those closer to the printing presses believe
these reductions are themselves the cause of lost revenues and quality
newspapers.
As a result of the pressures from stockholders and boards of directors,
the Tribune is actively trying to extract itself from the fiscal-vs-journalistic-
value controversy. Its officials are proposing to sell out as a corporate
whole or by auctioning off its newspapers and television stations to
individual buyers. The latter prospect has encouraged some dedicated
journalists to hope that selected parts of the news business will flash
back decades. That's when some newspapers were owned by rich individuals
who allowed professional editors and reporters to pursue in-depth news.
But a few of the potential buyers swooping in over the Tribune, it is
believed, are thought to have ambitions to influence news content for more
selfish schemes.
But as newsroom cuts continue to threaten the product, the corporate goal
of attracting new buyers willing to pay the highest of prime sales prices
seems to become less realistic to some inside the news profession. And,
even if that goal is reached, it is clear to many editors and reporters
that new owners will have to improve staffing levels and encourage a wide
variety of in-depth story collection.
Tradition Destroyed
"Reporters and editors once had a vocation and worked in a place that
generated hope and the possibility of justice," says Andy Thibault, a
former reporter and editor who now operates, investigates, reports and
edits from his own Connecticut news blog. "The so-called news
executives have sold out and destroyed a grand tradition."
In her last column before she took a buyout in December 2005 as part of
staff reductions at the Hartford Courant, 27-year news veteran Michele
Jacklin was clearly fed up with constant erosion at the nation's oldest
continuously published broadsheet.
"In the 1980s, the Courant staffed its Capitol bureau [covering the
state legislature] with five reporters. [Still] other reporters were
assigned to cover the full panoply of state agencies, from the Department
of Transportation to the Properties Review Board. Today, there are fewer
reporters in the Capitol bureau and many of the state and regional beats
have been dismantled," wrote Jacklin in "This Columnist's Last
Stand."
"Not long ago, a spokesman for a major agency confided that employees
once lived in fear of opening the newspaper and reading about some
bureaucratic misstep that was sure to land them in hot water. That anxiety
has gradually dissipated," Jacklin wrote.
Heft of Cotton Candy
She continued: "Nowadays, the spokesman said, agency officials don't
worry about embarrassing revelations. The news media don't dig as deeply
as they once did, don't attend hearings as often as they used to, don't go
to as many press conferences as in the days of old. Sad to say,
Connecticut's Fourth Estate no longer believes that informing and
educating voters about their political leaders and government is its chief
responsibility. As a substitute for hard news and insightful analysis,
readers are served up a steady diet of splashy graphics, celebrity gossip
and stories with the heft of cotton candy."
The Associated Press's recent headlines tell it all:
Tribune Said to Be Mulling Sale of Company in Pieces
Google Targets Newspaper Advertising
LA Daily News Publisher Out, 21 Jobs Cut
Akron, Ohio, Newspaper Cuts Top Newsroom Job
San Diego Newspaper Offers Buyouts
Surprisingly, despite today's predictions of the demise of newspapers as a
result of declining advertising and readership in the Internet age's
takeover of communications, part of this dragged-out story is decades old.
The movie "Network," about the perils of network television news
aiming daily sensationalistic programming at viewers and advertisers to
make millions of dollars for corporations, was produced 30 years ago.
"Deadline USA," another and even older 1950s film, starring the
legendary Humphrey Bogart as the feisty city managing editor battling to
save his newspaper as it's about to be sold off for profit-taking, has, as
well, a familiar story line in this 21st century.
On one hot polar extremity is Bogart's character, editor Ed Hutchenson -
and in "Network," actor Peter Finch's character, wild and crazy
news anchor Howard Beale - while on the other frigid extremity are
multiple imaginary, money-hungry corporate executives.
The two courageous characters, editor Hutchenson and news anchor Beale,
look to many harried modern-day newsmen like rare dinosaurs, but are they?
"Not Going to Take This"
As his world as a newsman morphs more into entertainment and his very
professional existence is threatened, Beale screams at his TV viewers:
"I'm as mad as hell, and I'm not going to take this anymore!"
And editor Hutchenson is outraged and unrelenting - fighting on all fronts
for his news colleagues and for the perpetuation of his sacred journalism,
says a New York Times movie review.
Where are Beale and Hutchenson today?
They are still around, but seldom seen in the columns of their own
newspapers. One of them lost his battle with corporate executives
recently.
Los Angeles Times editor Dean Baquet was ousted November 7 for taking the
"mad as hell and I'm not going to take this anymore" attitude
toward staff cuts at the paper. Eventually, after he continually refused
to go along with the latest in a series of staff cuts ordered by Tribune
Company executives controlling the Times, Baquet, to the dismay of
reporters and editors, was forced out earlier this month.
"Sometimes when I sit down with editors and managing editors, I find
them all too willing to buy the argument for cuts," Baquet was quoted
as saying. "We need to be a feistier bunch. It is the job of the
editor of the paper to put up a little more of a fight than we've been
willing to put up in the past, because a public service is at stake. We
understand the business model is changing and we have to do some
cutting," he said, "but don't understand it too much."
But, of course, Baquet, instead of covering city hall as a newsman, was
fighting it as the editor closest to corporate executives' reach. And, now
he's gone from the Times after 19 years as a journalist there and
elsewhere. Eight years earlier, as an investigative reporter for the same
Tribune that pressured him out as editor, he won a Pulitzer Prize for
leading a team of three in documenting corruption in the Chicago City
Council.
Link:
http://cooljustice.blogspot.com/2006/11/decline-of-journalism.html
*************
Thomas
"Dennie" Williams is a former state and federal court reporter,
specializing in investigations, for the Hartford Courant. Since the 1970s,
he has written extensively about irregularities in the Connecticut
Superior Court and Probate Court systems for disciplining both judges and
lawyers for misconduct. His stories about the corrupt activities inside
the Hartford Probate Court helped encourage a federal grand jury probe
leading to the conviction of the court's investigator for corrupt
activities, the first attempted impeachment of a judge or any official in
the state's history, and a legislative probe that resulted in major
changes of the court's disciplinary system for state lawyers. Another of
his investigative inquiries in the 1980s led to the forced resignation of
a Superior Court judge who was hiring and appointing friends and relatives
for lucrative court duties. His most recent freelance stories exposed
failings of the Connecticut Judicial Review Council, investigating
misconduct by Superior Court judges and the regular one-and-a-half-year
delays in deciding State Appellate Court cases. He has received numerous
awards for his investigative and in-depth reporting.
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