Sunday, February 11, 2007

The Trouble with Big Media Journalism

If you're a journalist, and a very senior White House official calls you up on the phone, what do you do? Do you try to get the official to address issues of urgent concern so that you can then relate that information to the public?

Not if you're NBC Washington bureau chief Tim Russert.

When then-vice presidential chief of staff Scooter Libby called Russert on July 10, 2003, to complain that his name was being unfairly bandied about by MSNBC host Chris Matthews, Russert apparently asked him nothing.

And get this: According to Russert's testimony yesterday at Libby's trial, when any senior government official calls him, they are presumptively off the record.

That's not reporting, that's enabling.

That's how you treat your friends when you're having an innocent chat, not the people you're supposed to be holding accountable.
Link.

Brown nosing instead of reporting may not actually be attractive to the audience. Maybe that's why the audience is shrinking? Russert-style ersatz journalism is great for Big Media's owner but maybe not so wonderful or necessary for the audience.... WaPo wants it both ways -- it publishes stuff like this buried at the website not in the paper, let alone prominently.

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