RSN Fundraising Banner
FB Share
Email This Page
add comment

writing for godot

Controlling the narrative: The new way to cover up lies

Print
Written by Robert Douglas   
Monday, 07 December 2015 15:43
Once upon a time, when newspapers were the gold standard for journalism, I had a phone fight about who should shape the news. After raising my voice and slamming down the receiver, I declared myself the winner and did a Rocky prance around the newsroom.

But, alas, the exchange was but one round. Turns out I lost the match.

I was an editor at the time. My Apollo Creed was a spokesman for a prominent politician. He was trying to spin coverage favorable to his boss. I was trying to protect my role as journalistic gatekeeper — ensuring what appeared in my pages was the unvarnished truth.

I believed — as I still do — what I learned as a cub reporter: Journalists have an almost sacred duty to shake out the lies and biases proffered by newsmakers and their agents so readers can get un-spun facts on which to base their opinions.

But I don’t defend the newsroom against deception anymore. I left newspapering before the economy and newer media put the industry on the ropes.

My victorious verbal sparring partner, meanwhile, has expanded his client base and now makes bug bucks shaping pubic opinion an their behalf with minimal resistance from a vigilant press, which shows signs of going down for the count.

In today’s media landscape, shills and self promoters reign supreme. Given the explosion in the number of media outlets and the ever shortening of the news cycle, the notion of a journalistic gatekeeper is archaic. Real-time information is accessible to everyone. Newspapers no longer have a leg up on shaping the news. The news agenda is set by those who can “control the narrative.”

This concept was the subject of a recent feature on Outside The Lines, ESPN’s insightful newsmagazine show. It showed how fading sports celebrities, such as Kobe Bryant and David Ortiz, announced their planned retirements using an athlete-organized platform called The Players Tribune.

With a multitude of clamoring media distorting or misconstruing coverage, players “need to be sure our thoughts will come across the way we intend,” Founding Publisher Derek Jeter said in an Oct. 1, 2014, editorial explaining the logic for the new platform. “We want to have a way to connect directly with our fans, with no filter.”

Athletes aren’t the only public figures who are trying to sidestep the conventional media vetting process, as uneven as it is. Politicians do it, too. They announce major initiatives at events packed with their supporters. Or they publish mirror-mirror-on-the-wall biographies that tell fairest-of-them-all stories.

And while their truthiness may be get by initially, it is are low-hanging fruit to the few remaining media watchdogs on the lookout for egregious examples of fabrication.

Case in point: Republican presidential hopeful Ben Carson whose book, Gifted Hands, makes false claims, including one that he was offered a scholarship to a service academy that doesn’t offer any.

But being caught in a lie these days seems a calculated risk worth taking for public figures intent on controlling their own self-aggrandizing narratives. They can always modify their claims and/or question the motives of whomever calls them out.

Or they can simply repeat what they know is false as if it were true.

It doesn’t seem to matter much. There are so many outlets and what purports to be news moves so fast, damage done by lies can heal over like a paper cut leaving only a faint scar to one’s credibility. The news cycle goes on.

There is no gold standard in journalism anymore.

Welcome to 1984.
--------------------------
Robert Douglas is a former union official and former business editor for The Palm Beach Post and Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel. You can contact him at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it , like him on RBDMedia.com on Facebook or follow him atRBDMediaDotCom on Twitter.
e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
Email This Page

 

THE NEW STREAMLINED RSN LOGIN PROCESS: Register once, then login and you are ready to comment. All you need is a Username and a Password of your choosing and you are free to comment whenever you like! Welcome to the Reader Supported News community.

RSNRSN