Archive for January, 2008

gender, religion and objectivity

Posted in Uncategorized on January 29, 2008 by prosebeforebros

The article “The Gender Gap: Women Are Still Missing as Sources for Journalists” gives statistics of the female representation as media sources, but doesn’t offer an explanation as to why women are not sought as primary sources as often as men. It’s puzzling why cable news is the least likely to portray female sources. Are women more likely to be taken seriously in print? The article also doesn’t mention a correlation between the sex of the reporter in relation to the sex of a chosen source. Are men more likely to pick men as sources, or are both sexes skewed towards a bias which leads male and female reporters to list a man as an authority on a subject?

The fact that “Help Wanted on the Religion Beat” was written by a woman gives a smack to the face of the previous article. Author Julia Duin considers herself an authority on religion, which is interesting since most monotheistic religions have traditionally viewed women as less capable, second-class citizens. In many religions, women were not allowed to study religious doctrines. “Help Wanted” begins with a passive sentence: “With concern about values registering high in exit polls last election, the question was raised as to why journalists didn’t shed more light on such concerns and the people who hold them.” She uses the rest of the article to answer that question and say that newspapers should hire experts on religion, not transfer writers from other departments “who know little about it.” Duin stresses the importance of hiring a knowledgeable writer to cover the religion beat.

The problem with having a religion beat is that religion is subjective. It’s difficult to write about objectively because it’s often based upon intangible ideas held as truths, not textbook facts. I have doubts that during the aforementioned election journalists didn’t report on values affecting an election because they were unknowledgeable about religion, as Duin claims. It doesn’t take someone with a Ph.D. in religion to interview a voter about the affect of his or her values on his decision and toss it into an article. Since religion is so subjective, newspapers are probably more at risk for liability since one religious group is bound to be offended.

In the article “Taboo Topics in Journalism Today” Cliff Kincaid lists topics he thinks are unable to be written about objectively. The catch is that the whole article is written under the guise of objectivity. The Web site that the article is published on is aimg.org, which stands for “Accuracy in Media,” and its slogan is “For fairness, balance and accuracy in news reporting.” This reeks of Fox News’ “Fair and balanced” slogan, concocted to counteract the fact that audiences know Fox News is blatantly skewed toward the conservative right. The first sentence of this article gives away Kincaid’s bias: “The old media, with their documented and demonstrable liberal bias, have lost much of their clout.”

One of the topics Kincaid thinks is impossible to be written about objectively is the theory of intelligent design. He claims since the theory has “possible religious implications” that the liberal media side automatically side with “secular humanists” who don’t want the theory discussed in schools.

Does this author ever reread his own work? It’s not that it could be “possible” that intelligent design is based on religious teachings, it just is. The theory is based on the idea that humans were designed by an intelligence—that intelligence being God. It’s stems from a Christian concept and to blame the media for not reporting on the theory as a legitimate alternative to Darwin’s theory of evolution is also to say that the author favors Christianity. To teach a concept such as intelligent design in school, which originates from religious concept, is to blur the line between church and state and to impede upon other religious beliefs.

Another of Kincaid’s topics he says cannot be written about objectively is abortion. He says “the harmful effects of abortion” cannot be written about objectively since “abortion is considered a sacred right of women that should not be challenged.” Throwing the word “sacred” into the sentence implies ridicule, yet this claim is completely ridiculous. Of course the harmful effects of abortion can be written about objectively. I’m sure people would want to know the harmful effects. Yet this doesn’t mean it should be written in a manner as to sway public opinion on the right to undergo an abortion.

I understand that Kincaid would classify me as a part of the liberal media, but I’m not pretending to pass off this piece as objective. His story might have held more heft had Kincaid actually written a fair and balanced story, citing a female authority as a source when discussing abortion since an abortion is something he will never have. His biased views on intelligent design directly addresses the “Help Wanted” article in that it is difficult if at all possible to keep one’s personal views out of articles on religion. The last sentence of Kincaid’s article is: “The trouble is that the opinion journalism is being provided under the cover of objective reporting.”

Need I state the obvious?

 

Case Study: “Jimmy’s World”

I really didn’t have a problem with Jimmy’s language sounding too adult in this story. It’s probably unlikely that a kid who has been using heroin for 3 years would have a sharp mind, but I have known 8-year-olds to say grownup sounding things heard from adults. For example, Jimmy says, “So, I pretty much pay attention to math because I know I got to keep up when I finally get me something to sell.” In my experience, young children tend to repeat things that sound positive. It’s quite possible that Jimmy could have heard about needing math from someone passing through the house, trying to give Jimmy an incentive to learn.

Still, so many other parts to the story do not make sense. As Professor Rodgers mentioned in class, why would an adult who paid for heroin shoot it into a child? Isn’t that throwing money down the drain? And in school, we students have always been taught that you can get addicted to heroin from using it once. Why did it take Jimmy six months to form an addiction?

Story idea:
Gainesville tap water tastes like chlorine. Is it safe to drink? The New York Times published a story on the safety of drinking hot tap water.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/29/health/29real.html?_r=1&ref=health&oref=slogin

College students often don’t see a need to buy a filtration system. This story could be on the importance of drinking filtered water and safety hazards of drinking unfiltered and hot tap water. Older homes and apartments use lead pipes, which increases lead in water.

According to the Times story which cited the Environmental Protection Agency, boiling water doesn’t remove lead and can actually increase the concentration.

To be an effective story, the focus would have to be on the harmful effects of drinking tap water. A sidebar would be useful to draw in readers and add visual interest.

The reporter should begin chasing contacts for this story by calling the Gainesville Water Department at 770-538-2466.

The Web site for the UF Water Reclamation Facility appeared to be dated, but a quick walk over to the center could provide some helpful resources and leads to people sources.

you aren’t hip, that isn’t news

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on January 29, 2008 by prosebeforebros

News implies something… new. The Gainesville Sun published a story yesterday about teenagers robotripping — tripping off of Robotussin cough syrup. This isn’t a new concept. People always seem to pat reporters on the back when they crack a story about some new fad teenagers are into. Well, congrats on cracking the code to a younger generation, you’ve really crossed the gap. Robotripping was popular when I was 16, which means this story is at least 5 years old.

Why haven’t reporters yet found a way to crack into the secret lives of teens? I imagine all one would need to do is skim some live journal entries or get some scrubby-looking kid with ripped up jeans and a red Hot Topic mohawk to give you an update. When Tom Wolfe came out with “I Am Charlotte Simmons,” a novel about a sheltered college girl who gets introduced to the hookup culture, the media went wild. OK, I give Wolfe props for doing research on the topic, but I am confident that there are plenty of others more qualified to expose this subject. Do you honestly believe that the college kids Wolfe attended parties with spilled every raunchy secret about our promiscuous, Roman bathhouse generation to a kindly 70-something-year-old southern gentleman?

Well my goodness, I do declare!

A bird-eat-dog world and hyperlocal blogging over tea

Posted in Uncategorized on January 16, 2008 by prosebeforebros

At first I couldn’t really see what “Skeptical Editing” by Reid MaCluggage had to do with the other four readings, especially the Wikipedia entry for the “Newspaper Preservation Act of 1970.” I’m still not even if it Professor Rodgers intended for students to draw correlations between the readings, but I feel inclined to do so, and so I will.

“Skeptical Editing” introduced some obvious but important points. Editors do need to be trained in scouting out more than just the series comma error. This was made especially evident in class when we discussed the “Eagle Snatches Dog” story. Yes, it was a funny story and we all laughed, but the fact that such fiction could be printed and passed of as truth is not so laughable. A story about an eagle snatching up a “Chihuahua-like dog” may not be important in the interest of national security for example, but the other examples MaCluggage provided just make editors seem lazy.

I was not surprised to read that it was President Richard Nixon who approved the “Newspaper Preservation Act of 1970.” Although the entry reports that newspapers would share advertisers while retaining individuality, I know that media has to screen content based on the interest of their advertisers in order to continue operating the business. In the story “Meet the new face of hyperlocal journalism,” Debbie Galant talks about a writer who fell to the pressure of advertisers requesting to read blogs before publication with the intent to encourage the writer to gloss content in the company’s favor. This is when it becomes important for editors to edit critically. Technology allows media to get a story out to the public fast, but the privilege also allows for less editing time.

“‘Potemkin Village’ Redux” was only interesting to me because it called out fallacies of grassroots journalism. The concept of the article was more exciting than the piece itself. In reading about the weaknesses that the author, Tom Grubisich, found in the 10 sites, it taught about what to avoid if the reader were to make his or her own community site. The “Common Sense Journalism” article gave solutions to the problems found among the 10 Web site in the “Potemkin Village” article.

The articles for this week made me think about the hierarchy of writing. Literature elitests have thought of journalism as the lowest form of writing, and journalists to be turned off by bloggers. As Galant mentioned in the interview with the Online Journalism Review, “…we are a serious threat to our traditional competition in the local market” – local competition being newspapers. I can’t find much of an appeal to writing a blog about local news since the audience would be quite limited, but I suppose after reading some about grassroots blogging, I could see it as a backlash against globalization.

Case Study, “Eagle Snatches Dog”

As mentioned in the abstract, I was shocked to find the story was fictional. I was embarrassed to find that Professor Rodgers was the editor, couldn’t believe that he was so nonchalant about admitting the publication was a product of his doing. Since he’s teaching students to analyze everything carefully, it made me curious to know who taught him. Sometimes people do get carried away in wanting to believe a story is true, as in the case of the book “A Million Little Pieces” by James Frey, which was originally marketed as a memoir.

I really didn’t find the story to be all that interesting. Large birds are known to swoop up rodents and other small animals. Also, there’s a fact error in the lead. Without obtaining a statement from the eagle, it is not known if its hunger was satisfied with the consumption of the dog.

Story Idea

Ann Romney, wife of presidential candidate Mitt Romney, visits in Gainesville, Fla. today at 1:30 p.m. for tea. However, an article in the Alligator released information today of University of Florida President Bernie Machen’s endorsement of presidential candidate John McCain. Was it intentional that the Alligator or Machen should release the story on the same day? A reporter should be sent today to the tea event to interview the owner of Conestogas, obtain information on why Romney decided to visit Gainesville, and obtain points of view from attendees..

Conestogas
14820 Main Street
Alachua, FL 32615
386-462-1294

The reporter should interview Machen to find out why he felt the need to announce his endorsement, and if McCain or his party has been in contact with the president since the announcement. If the reporter is able to obtain the information, it could be useful to find out if and how much the president has donated to the McCain campaign.

Information about the schedule of visits can be found at this Time Magazine link:
http://thepage.time.com/2008/01/22/candidates-comment-on-35th-roe-v-wade-anniversary/

http://alligator.org/articles/2008/01/22/news/uf_administration/machen.txt

To follow up, the reporter should attend McCain’s visit to Gainesville on Sunday. More information on the event could most likely be obtained from the author of the Alligator’s article, Deborah Swerdlow.