• Journalists grapple with the media's role in losing the trust of the pu

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Sat Apr 9 16:27:26 2022
    XPost: seattle.politics

    from https://sg.news.yahoo.com/journalists-grapple-with-the-medias-role-in-losing-the-trust-of-their-audience-234523160.html

    Journalists grapple with the media's role in losing the trust of the public

    Jonah Goldberg
    Stephen F. Hayes
    Jon Ward

    At a conference on disinformation held in Chicago, journalists grappled
    on Thursday with the media’s role in losing the trust of the public.

    “The mainstream media — sometimes I hate that term — did a lot of things that led conservatives to think they're not going to treat us fairly,”
    said Stephen Hayes, co-founder of the Dispatch, a right-leaning news
    website launched in 2019, during a panel discussion at Disinformation
    and the Erosion of Democracy, the conference hosted by the Atlantic
    magazine and the University of Chicago’s Institute of Politics.

    Hayes was a contributor at Fox News until late last year, when he and
    his colleague Jonah Goldberg, another Dispatch co-founder, quit in
    protest over the increasing radicalization of Fox opinion hosts like
    Tucker Carlson. At the conference, Hayes again spoke about his
    objections to Carlson’s “deeply, deeply irresponsible” programming. He cited Carlson’s “Patriot Purge” program — which argued that the riot of Jan. 6, 2021, at the U.S. Capitol was a “setup” meant to entrap
    law-abiding Trump supporters — as what he considered the last straw that prompted him to leave the network. (Yahoo News has published a thorough examination of Carlson’s claims on that program, and the lack of
    evidence for them.)

    In separate appearances at the conference Thursday, Hayes and Goldberg
    both spoke at length about how failures by the news media to treat conservatives fairly — especially at key inflection points in American politics — make the job of fighting disinformation much harder, because
    they alienate many of the same Americans most vulnerable to lies and manipulation by bad-faith actors.

    “If you want to get to a place where we really understand the roots of
    some of this, it's important that people say, ‘Hey, this is how roughly
    half the country — the politically active types — see this, and this is
    one of the reasons that explains why there's so much mistrust,'” Hayes said.

    President Biden on a walkway on a plane with his son Hunter, in a mask, carrying Beau.
    President Biden, his son Hunter and grandson Beau board Air Force One in
    March 2021. (Joshua Roberts/Reuters)

    Jim Rutenberg, a New York Times media columnist who moderated the panel
    with Hayes, CNN’s Brian Stelter and Lauren Williams of Capital B, all discussed a profound existential question concerning the status and
    future of mainstream journalism.

    “If our business is first and foremost about reflecting the world
    accurately [and] if our likely readers ... don't trust us, then we can't accomplish our job,” Rutenberg said.

    Rutenberg also noted that the issue of how the media and big tech
    companies handled the story of Hunter Biden’s laptop in 2020 had been “a theme running through” the day’s multiple conversations.

    Goldberg, in an earlier panel, put the Hunter Biden laptop story into a
    broader context. To prove his point about the media’s mistreatment of conservatives, Goldberg recalled the Dan Rather “Memogate” scandal in
    the fall of 2004. Rather, a veteran CBS News anchor, reported on
    documents purporting to show that President George W. Bush had received political favors to avoid getting drafted into combat service in
    Vietnam. The documents were later shown to be inauthentic.

    In retrospect, Goldberg said, that mistake helped reveal a pervasive
    double standard on display in the media coverage of Hunter Biden’s
    laptop, whose contents are alleged to have contained evidence of
    potentially illegal business dealings. In the laptop case, the approach
    used by the media and big tech was to be skeptical of a story that could
    hurt a Democratic presidential candidate just before an election.
    Equally, with Memogate, Rather and CBS News were insufficiently
    skeptical of a story that could have boosted the support for a
    Democratic presidential candidate just before an election.

    “Have more conservatives in your editorial rooms,” Goldberg said when
    asked what media institutions need to do better. “Dan Rather would not
    have climbed up the jackass tree and fell down, hitting every branch on
    the way, over the Memogate story, if they just had one person in the
    room who didn't want that story to be true, right?”

    “It was too good to check, and so everyone was all in on saying, ‘We've
    got the story, we're going to nail George W. Bush,’” Goldberg said. “And if you had just one person in the room who says, ‘I really don't want
    this story to be true,’ and they'd asked painful questions, ‘60 Minutes’ wouldn't have done that.”

    Goldberg also mentioned the media’s coverage of the allegations of
    sexual assault made against Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh.

    “You had all sorts of people starting from the position that his
    accusers were telling the truth, even though they could not verify any
    of it,” Goldberg said. He noted that the media’s lack of skepticism
    toward and the elevation of accusations against Kavanaugh from a number
    of women who later backtracked or admitted their accusations had been fabricated is something that has “united the right, to this day.”

    Hayes summed it up this way: “You see that, and it becomes a pattern.
    You get to the point where conservatives say, ‘I don't trust any of it.’”

    Former President Barack Obama, who spoke at the conference on Wednesday, lamented the “breakdown” of the journalistic consensus on how to cover
    the news and the rise of misinformation in the age of social media.

    “What we’ve seen is a breakdown of that consensus, and what we’ve seen
    is a shift in technology and who controls these platforms in ways that
    are not transparent. And that has contributed to anger, a sense in which
    we are no longer operating by the same rules or on the same facts,”
    Obama said.

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