Brent Cunningham, Managing Editor of “Coluimbia Journalism Review” and lecturer at the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism
Objective reporting and critical thinking are the strongest tools of a journalist
“As with all journalism, it is hard to know the impact of what we write. And as it pertains to the major problems of US journalism today, we often feel we are tilting at windmills”, says Brent Cunningham, Managing Editor at “Columbia Journalism Review” and lecturer at Columbia Graduate School of Journalism in the USA.
“Columbia Journalism Review” is a magazine published six times a year, and this year it received the “Utne Independent Press Award” as a magazine that showed sense for objective reporting in every social sphere and non-biased presentation of its attitudes.
1.What is the main role of the CJR? Most people describe CJR as a media watchdog, enforcing a broadly accepted set of journalistic standards. True enough, but the magazine is much more than that. CJR is a magazine of ideas. We recognize that the media is an extremely powerful institution, and we try to examine any number of issues? From why the US went to war in Iraq to race relations in South Africa? Through the lens of how the press covers these issues. You can write about almost anything? Class, politics, etc. through the lens of the media. Our ultimate goal is to help working journalists? Editors, reporters, owners? Think through the problems that they confront, but also to agitate for an aggressively free press that takes its adversarial role toward government and the corporate world seriously. We believe that the press has a special and crucial role to play in free societies.
2. What are the most present problems in the American journalism and what effects has the CJR on eliminating difficulties it notes? As with all journalism, it is hard to know the impact of what we write. And as it pertains to the major problems of US journalism today, we often feel we are tilting at windmills. Take the corporatization of the press. If I had to point to a single situation from which many other problems flow, this would be it. It isn’t just the simple fact that most media companies here are publicly traded commodities, which creates a situation where the investor’s needs--profit margins? Trump all other journalistic concerns. But this situation, over time, creates something far more insidious than the quest for ever-higher profits. It generates a caution that seeps into all corners. Reporters are afraid to challenge or argue with sources, lest they be accused of bias. Editors are afraid to publish gruesome or controversial photos, lest readers drop their subscriptions. If your main goal is making as much money as possible, then you cannot pursue the type of tough, unflinching journalism that a free society needs.
One recent example of something that CJR, along with some other prominent media critics, can take some credit for: the introduction of "fact-check" features and segments during the late stages of the US presidential election. Notably The New York Times added a regular piece in which a reporter took something one candidate said and showed what was true and what was not true about it. ABC News did something similar in its post-debate coverage. Such adjudication of factual disputes is something CJR has been imploring the press to do more of now for more than a year.
3. Could we speak nowadays about independent journalism or the media owners define the freedom frontiers to the journalists? First of all, I should say that despite all the bad things that corporate ownership has done to the press in this country, I still believe that there are plenty of good reporters and editors out there who try to do independent journalism. It has by no means disappeared. Look at the work Sy Hersh has done since 9/11 in the New Yorker. Or the work that Jim Fallows has produced for The Atlantic. Second, the emergence of Web logs? Bloggers? Certainly offers the promise of more independent journalism. But so far the blogosphere is uneven journalistic territory, with some very good and smart reporting and commentary, along with some disturbingly thin and irresponsible work that attempts to pass itself off as journalism. So it is unclear how this will evolve. The other thing to consider is that, as with many of the best Web sites that emerged in the late 1990s, the best blogs could ultimately be scooped up by the big media companies, thereby undercutting their independence.
4. After the question about journalist's independence one can't avoid the question about objectivity in the journalism toward the most journalists declare that tend to. Is the objectivity term nowadays used and abused? As something to strive for, objectivity remains a useful concept for the press. However imperfect, it serves as a check on the temptation to be intellectual dishonest as well as on a reporter’s biases, political or otherwise.
That said, objectivity is problematic to the extent that it excuses lazy he said/she said reporting, which does nothing to help readers understand the implications of the numerous complex subjects in the news each day. Reporters who cover beats develop expertise, and I believe it is a crucial part of their job to use that expertise to, as I said earlier, adjudicate factual disputes to help readers and viewers understand who is right and who is wrong when that is knowable. When it is not knowable, reporters must dig deep enough to be able to show which side in a debate has a more legitimate claim.
There is quite a bit more to this question of objectivity, but that’s probably enough for this forum.
5. Do you agree that there is a positive bias in the newspapers? A bias toward positive, as opposed to negative, news? Or is there positively a bias in newspapers? To the first I would say no, there isn’t bias toward positive news. One of the ways we define news is to say that it is mostly about things that are broken, or problems, things out of the ordinary. Most of that is negative. To the second I would say that of course there is bias in newspapers. Personal bias, institutional bias, class bias. Journalism is, to a large degree, subjective. Any operation driven by humans is inherently biased. But I do not believe that most newspaper reporters in this country are ideological warriors, setting out each day to push an agenda.
6. What is the reason for the journalism being distant today from the ordinary citizens more than ever? Do journalists have no time to hear the people's voice or they avoid themes about everyday problems in order to protect themselves from a conflict with the institutions?
I assume you are referring to the article I wrote on class bias in journalism. It is a problem. We cover the rich, the powerful, the people who have access to the various "systems" that make up our society. We identify with people who are like us, and with people who have what we aspire to. No one aspires down. The flipside of this is that we approach everything else? The poor, the sick, the destitute? As alien, something to be observed and studied and, ultimately, solved. Problems. The press in this country by and large reflects the interests of the professional class, which journalists have joined over the last quarter century.
7. Which countries today are the focus of interest for the American journalists? Do they write stories about the countries, their history and their population besides themes about the political conflicts? Well, you have papers like The New York Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, and Los Angeles Times that, along with the Associated Press, maintain significant foreign bureaus. The tend to write about countries where the US government or military is heavily involved? Iraq, Afghanistan, Russia, and Israel, obviously? Or places where there are stories that have managed to force their way into the public consciousness. Sudan, for example, or Ukraine. These papers also give us a steady diet of cultural and political reportage from Western Europe, Japan, China, India, etc. Then there are midsize papers, like the Miami Herald and Dallas Morning News, that cover news out of Central and South America, due to the demographics of their readership and their proximity to these countries. But in general, the US media does a lousy job of covering the world. Far too many Americans still believe they can afford to ignore the world, and that is reflected in the press.
8. You are professor of the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism. What is your opinion as a teacher, that journalism schools should teach of? That is a huge question, but I will keep my answer simple: investigative reporting, ethics, and how to think critically about the world. Beyond that, journalism education is moving toward specialization. By that I mean students get dual degrees in things like religion and journalism, or science and journalism, or law and journalism. Generally, I believe in this approach. But most journalists jump around and cover a range of topics in their careers. So if you know how to report and think critically, I still believe those are the journalists’ most vital tools.
By Marija Kuka
|