home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=93TT1144>
- <title>
- Mar. 15, 1993: When Reporters Break the Rules
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 15, 1993 In the Name of God
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PRESS, Page 54
- When Reporters Break the Rules
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Many journalists realize they have stepped over the line only
- after they fall on their face
- </p>
- <p>By WILLIAM A. HENRY III - With reporting by Ratu Kamlani/New
- York
- </p>
- <p> When the Gallup organization polled the public in May 1991,
- less than a third of Americans described journalists as having
- high ethical standards. If the same poll were conducted now,
- the results would probably be worse. Ever since NBC last month
- admitted to significant distortions in a report about safety
- problems in some General Motors trucks, the media have been
- awash in shame and penitence.
- </p>
- <p> USA Today disciplined its Western editor and apologized in
- print last week for a "misleading" picture that showed armed
- Los Angeles youth-gang members ready to retaliate if police
- officers were again acquitted of beating Rodney King. A former
- TV reporter and camera operator in Alexandria, Minnesota,
- admitted to furnishing alcohol to a minor to illustrate a story
- on teen drinking. NBC itself went back on air with another
- admission of error, this time for using footage of fish
- supposedly killed during clear-cutting of timber on government
- land. In reality, one shot depicted a different forest while
- another showed fish that were not dead, only stunned by
- researchers for testing. In the most dramatic act of contrition,
- NBC News president Michael Gartner acknowledged that the GM
- controversy would not die and abruptly resigned last week,
- saying he hoped to "take the spotlight off of all of us."
- </p>
- <p> To reporters, this spate of confessions is proof that the
- system of self-regulation works--proof that a combination of
- conscience and competition keeps the press honest. Gartner's
- acting successor, Don Browne, even argues that NBC's pain is
- resulting in moral renewal in newsrooms around the country.
- Says Browne: "Journalism will not be diminished but
- strengthened. Because we made one mistake on Dateline NBC,
- hundreds of mistakes will not be made elsewhere." News consumers
- may be somewhat more skeptical and wonder if journalism has any
- rules at all. The honest answer: not really.
- </p>
- <p> Individual journalists may have highly developed ethical
- sensibilities. But journalism as a whole, unlike law or
- medicine, has no licensing procedure, no disciplinary panels, no
- agreed-upon code of behavior. Practices that are perfectly
- acceptable to some major news-gathering institutions--such as
- going undercover to expose wrongdoing--are forbidden at
- others. At most places, no sin is automatically a firing
- offense. Editors insist on treating each case individually,
- which usually translates into permissively. Says USA Today
- editor Peter Prichard: "It depends on the circumstances, the
- individual case, the history, all sorts of things."
- </p>
- <p> Even at news outlets with an internal code of conduct--such as NBC, where the document runs to 50 pages, or ABC, where
- it is about 75--the rules are commonly described by managers
- as mere guidelines. Says Richard Wald, who has held senior news
- posts at both networks: "That's why we don't have a list of
- firing offenses. Ethics is not laid down in tablets--it is
- judgments made over years, and some points are susceptible to
- change."
- </p>
- <p> Falsifying the facts is the most absolute taboo. But
- journalists are deeply divided about what qualifies. Many
- reporters believe it is legitimate to tighten a quote from an
- interview subject, on the theory that the speaker is appearing
- in print and would have been more concise if he had written his
- remarks. Others see that as fabrication. Everyone opposes
- plagiarism, but opinions differ as to whether that only means
- borrowing passages wholesale or also includes picking up facts
- and quotes without attribution after other reporters have put
- them in the public domain.
- </p>
- <p> All the recent lapses involved pictures, and while today's
- journalists generally consider it wrong to stage news
- photographs, past generations were more lenient. As Don Hewitt,
- creator of CBS's 60 Minutes, points out, many supposedly
- legitimate pictures are less than spontaneous. Says he: "What
- about a photo in the newspaper described as a meeting at the
- U.N.? No matter what the caption says, you know damned well it
- was a photo session before the meeting."
- </p>
- <p> The most conspicuous clash is over the technique of
- impersonation--failing to reveal that one is a reporter, or
- outright pretending to be something else, to expose wrongdoing.
- Network TV regards impersonation as a vital tool. ABC's
- PrimeTime Live, for example, won only praise from its peers for
- setting up a bogus medical clinic to lure brokers "selling"
- patients. But many print-news organizations view impersonation
- as lying.
- </p>
- <p> The absence of settled answers does not mean journalists are
- uninterested in ethical questions. "The problem," says Los
- Angeles Times managing editor George Cotliar, "is that people
- look at what NBC and USA Today have done and assume that's the
- norm." As the humiliation at both places showed, it's not.
- Journalists may not always be sure what is right. They can
- usually see what is clearly wrong.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-