Difference between revisions of "Journalists"

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m (→‎Journalists: links to all names, in case articles happen)
(→‎Journalists: John Gibson on Anna Nicole Smith vs. That Pesky War)
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* '''[[Dick Meyer]]'''
 
* '''[[Dick Meyer]]'''
 
* '''[[Fred Branfman]]''': author of reference {{reference|1}}
 
* '''[[Fred Branfman]]''': author of reference {{reference|1}}
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* '''[[John Gibson]]''' of [[Fox News]] attacked reporters who were ignoring the Anna Nicole Smith story (of which he was offering continuous coverage) to focus on the Iraq war as "snobs." [http://thinkprogress.org/2007/02/26/gibson-iraq-media/]
 
* '''[[Judy Miller]]''' (see [[Wikipedia:Plame affair|Plame affair]]) "was a mouthpiece, turning out biased reporting that was fatally dependent on administration sources pursuing their own agenda. {{reference|1}}
 
* '''[[Judy Miller]]''' (see [[Wikipedia:Plame affair|Plame affair]]) "was a mouthpiece, turning out biased reporting that was fatally dependent on administration sources pursuing their own agenda. {{reference|1}}
 
* '''[[Nicholas Kristof]]''' "was a real reporter when he quoted [[Joseph Wilson]] refuting administration lies on Niger." {{reference|1}}
 
* '''[[Nicholas Kristof]]''' "was a real reporter when he quoted [[Joseph Wilson]] refuting administration lies on Niger." {{reference|1}}

Revision as of 12:27, 22 July 2007

This is a growing seedling article. You can help Issuepedia by watering it.

Gone are the days (if there were any such) when journalists could be depended on to find the truth and publish or broadcast it, whatever the consequences. Well-known, respected reporters and even entire news networks now have their own agenda, handed down by owners or by the necessity of maintaining close ties to those in power in order to have the latest scoop. Those in power have become skilled at manipulating the news media in these and other ways, with many journalists (though by no means all of them) acting mainly as political agents.

"Without a media critical of government, America[n] democracy simply ceases to exist -- as occurred when the Bush administration took this nation to war in Iraq by distorting the information it had about Saddam's weapons of mass destruction."1

Keeping track of the behavior of individual journalists and news agencies is therefore comparably important to keeping track of the behavior of individual politicians.

Journalists

Deceased

References

  1. The Ted Koppel I knew (by Fred Branfman, on Salon.com)
  2. Today's media, more McCarthy than Murrow: stiff criticism of Koppel's 9/1 interview with FEMA then-Director Michael Brown (includes link to video of interview)