Stern lectures for the logically-challenged. Others have opinions, I have convictions.
Wednesday, January 04, 2006
The Scoop Mentality
Once again, I am embarrassed to be in my profession.
I was watching the first repeat of O'Reilly last night when, just before midnight, Fox broke in with the news that 12 miners missing in a coal mine in West Virginia had been found alive.
Well, the news was so good, I didn't even mind that they cut off 10 minutes of O'Reilly's show. But as the coverage continued, I got more and more doubtful.
Geraldo is an embarrassment. The guy should be drummed out of journalism. Why does he insist on inserting himself into the middle of every news story? Why can't he just report the facts and step aside? He was reporting on his cell phone but I could tell that he was dancing in the street along with everyone else at the news that the miners had been found alive.
Then Donna Feducia at the anchor desk started asking the right questions. "Where is this news coming from?" Geraldo's joyous response: "Woo Hoo! It's coming from everywhere!" (woo hoo added for emphasis).
"Well, has anyone seen the miners?"
"No."
No?
About an hour into this report, the source of the news still hadn't been confirmed and nobody had seen the miners. I went to bed at one am with doubts. I woke up again at three and turned on the TV. Only one miner had been found alive -- 11 dead. At the bottom of the screen was the Chyron message, "Family: We were lied to."
Bad grammar aside, now we have a mess. Every journalist knows that breaking news is almost never accurate. Numbers are almost always wrong. Yet they go nuts when a story breaks and all rush to put it out first.
I don't. I don't mind at all if I am "scooped" by the BBC, Reuters, AP, AFP, UPI, etc. I would rather sit on a story for an hour or two and be accurate than break it and be wrong. I thought that's what journalism was all about -- until I went to work in a major newsroom. Most of the time, my editors don't give me that choice. If there are only two sentences known about a breaking story, they want those two sentences on the air. It galls me whenever I have to issue a correction.
I don't know why the scoop mentality exists. What difference does it make to anyone anywhere in the world other than the folks at that mine whether that story is broken at midnight or one am? Contrary to what liberals say, there is no right to know. It is better to be accurate than to be fast.
The bodies and the lone survivor have been recovered, but this has now become a media story. I expect it to be around for awhile, as the media loves nothing more than to examine itself endlessly -- and then reject all the conclusions that they might have blown it.
Update: It's 8 am and I haven't heard a peep from Geraldo since I went to bed.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
6 comments:
Yeah, I kinda fell for the report. Unfortunately, it just wasn't Fox that was reporting that. Maybe it's time for a congressional hearing on how the news is reported.
Oh, everybody was reporting it. I find it unfortunate that Fox was one of them. I can only blame it on the B team. Sometimes things happen on the overnight shift that would never happen during the day. That's the excuse I'm sticking with. As for congressional hearings, that would be a violation of the First Amendment, and when is the last time a congressional hearing solved any problem?
Well, it would make me feel better (just to use liberal language). The MSM is always calling for a congressional hearing on things
Someone has to look in on the leaks that we keep having though. There is no reporter-ratfink confidentiality as recognized by the Constitution. The press can print or run whatever story but when it comes to national security and leaks that should never happen.
Long and short your right just frustrated with the MSM this morning
I agree, Geraldo uses questionable journalistic methods.
Thanks for dropping by my blog.
LR, Thank you very much. I thought I was the only one who thinks the journalists that covered this story were irresponsible. ER actually said only the electronic media were irresponsible. Newspapers have editors that verify the stories. So now, I am holding in my hand, the local morning paper with headlines that scream "12 miners found alive!"
Guess he was wrong about that one.
Well Mark, I cut newspapers a LITTLE slack because they cover yesterday's news today. They have to meet a daily deadline, but they lost this bet. I haven't read a paper in five years.
Post a Comment