Last week’s column on NPR’s aversion to hiring Republican reporters in its newsroom (87 Democrats/no Republicans) struck a nerve with readers.
Most asked a simple question of me. What news sources should I trust? A suggestion for you a little bit later on. First let me give you some context.
If you are looking for old fashioned, balanced reporting today, it’s tough.
Let me explain how we got here. The answer is pretty simple. It’s all about economics. Journalism today is a brutal business.
Let’s talk about print first.
There is no way to tell exactly where it happened, but the death spiral of newspapers started with a used car purchase somewhere in America in 1995. It might have been an ‘84 Oldsmobile for all we know. That’s when the first transaction happened on Craigslist.
For anyone under 30 this is a mystery but for years huge, classified sections in Sunday’s newspapers are where most people shopped for cars, houses and jobs. Classifieds were a $19B business before Craigslist. Then 90% of that advertising disappeared.
And then the business got worse.
At the same time, subscriptions were dropping because readers were scrolling through online sources which were free, and which were more convenient. The arrival of mobile devices accelerated that trend.
Paul Gillen is a former reporter who started a website called ominously “Newspaper Death Watch. “It wasn't one event”, he told me, “but it was a sequence of events triggered by the Internet, that between about 1995 and 2010 virtually destroyed the industry. 2006 was the best year the industry ever had. The year before, I wrote an opinion piece, predicting that the newspaper industry was about to enter a cataclysmic death spiral. And I sent it to several newspapers. It was rejected by all of them; I thought they're whistling past the graveyard here.”
Newspapers in recent years have been closing at the astonishing rate of two a week.
Then cable tv suddenly found itself in a streaming world and its revenues plummeted.
“I would say within the last 18 months to two years cord cutting has accelerated so much, and people have dropped their subscriptions so much that the you need to focus on your core viewer who is going to keep paying,” said Michael Socolow who is a Media professor at the University of Maine, and whose dad was legendary broadcaster Walter Cronkite’s producer.
“So, you find MSNBC going further to the left, you find Fox News going further to the right, because those are the demographics that are willing to pay to keep their cable and to buy the advertising.”
Here’s the bottom line. To survive I believe most outlets have taken several steps to the right or left. My guidance is to assume there is media bias and be an informed viewer and reader. So how to make sense of it?
I would point you in the direction of a website called All Sides.
Its founders came out of the early tech world at Microsoft and they were frustrated because rather than the internet bringing people together it was sorting them in to warring camps.
Julie Mastrine runs the All-Sides bias project which has been analyzing stories since 2012. They like to use three person panels to review material: one Republican, one Democrat and one Independent.
It scores coverage based strictly on the language in the reporting. What they’ve established is a media chart you can see on their website.
They use multiple touch points to score bias. Here is one example.
“But we do train our bias reviewers on what to look for that can show bias and word choice is probably one of the biggest indicators of bias. A really obvious example of that would be, is the media outlet, calling immigrants illegal aliens? Or are they calling them unauthorized migrants or asylum seeking migrants, or something like that? So, some of the language that we see from the left on that issue kind of softens the issue and kind of obscures the illegality of the act, and then the word choice we see from the right focus is more on the illegality of what's going on.”
The research splits the media into five silos: far left (MSNBC is here), left (New York Times), center (Reuters and the BBC), leans right (Wall Steet Journal) far right (Fox and Newsmax).
And she is delighted when both political camps call foul!
“Mostly we get people who are grateful for what we're doing. I'd say that's the overwhelming amount of feedback. People know that they're in a very messy and polarized media environment,” she told me recently. “I think they're grateful for people who are out there trying to give a meta analysis and help people sort through all the muck and noise. One day we get accused of being left wing, and then the next day right ring. We figure we're doing a good job if we're getting accusations from both sides, and kind of angering both sides in different ways.”
Granularly, I still believe reporters stick to the facts but the secret sauce is who assigns the story and what’s the angle? Read Uri Berliner’s column on NPR and look at the three stories he cites: The Biden laptop, the origins of Covid and the Mueller report.
As for me? I start my day by watching the BBC, CNBC and then reading the Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, and the Milwaukee Journal for local flavor (i.e the Packers. I am after all a team owner).
I know political orphans in particular are frustrated with today’s news coverage. Voters who are subscribers to our website www.lostmiddle.com continually write about where to find objective news coverage.
My admonition to you and them is to approach any news source with eyes very wide open.