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Transcript

Balanced news coverage?

Whew, there's a concept. Here's where to find it

Frustrated by the media coverage of the election? Boy, am I with you. Look, I spent a third of my career working as a journalist. And then became a Republican Congressman. Add in an MBA and that makes me unicorn of sorts.

What is frustrating you with media coverage today is not driven by some weird cabal of the right or left. It is driven by economics. And by a demographic and geographic bubble.

Flip the channel between Fox and MSNBC and you’ll discover parallel universes. Places I choose not to visit. Faced with mounting economic pressures, even the mainstream media has been forced to tilt. Could anything be smugger than the Washington Post cutline “Democracy dies in Darkness.”

Since Craigslist destroyed classified advertising which accounted for 45% of newspaper revenue, papers fold weekly. National news magazines have disappeared. The print industry is desperate for subscribers. Meanwhile consumers are cutting the cord, eroding revenues for CNN and every other platform.

So where are we today? Only 31% of Americans trust the media. 36% have no trust. 33% don’t have much all. That’s from a Gallup poll this month. When I graduated from Northwestern in the post-Watergate era it was at 71 percent.

And then there are the nagging questions of fairness when only 7% of journalists identify as Republicans. Longtime Politco media columnist Jack Shaffer took a deep dive after the 2016 election. If you want to know why the Washington and New York press corps missed Trump’s election, consider these facts.

“Nearly 90 percent of all internet publishing employees work in a county where Clinton won, and 75 percent of them work in a county that she won by more than 30 percentage points. When you add in the shrinking number of newspaper jobs, 72 percent of all internet publishing or newspaper employees work in a county that Clinton won. “

As Jack concluded ‘“so when your conservative friends use “media” as a synonym for “coastal” and “liberal,” they’re not far off the mark.”

Since I spent 8 years as a Member of Congress and 13 years as a journalist, listeners and readers ask me all the time where can I find solid political coverage that is not slanted?

I’d suggest two things. Look at the website “All Sides” which rate major news outlets for bias. The site was founded by three Silicon Valley veterans who were crestfallen that rather than bringing people together, the internet was driving us apart. The website plays it straight.

If you are looking for balanced, old fashioned, both sides of an issue reporting, nobody does a better job than “Tangle News” founded by veteran political journalist and podcaster Issac Saul. In episode 3 of our Lost in the Middle Election Countdown specials we get his insights on the state of the election and our mutual concerns about America’s mainstream press. You can find the full episode and our other reporting on the Lost Political Middle: America’s Political Orphans.

Lost in the Middle: America's Political Orphans
Lost in the Middle: America's Political Orphans
44% of American voters self-identify as centrists. 71 million bewildered, frustrated political orphans. We'll explore how we got into this mess. But we'll also tell you uplifting stories of people around the country trying to change the current zeitgeist.