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- <text id=90TT0765>
- <title>
- Mar. 26, 1990: Shopping In The News Bazaar
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Mar. 26, 1990 The Germans
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PRESS, Page 64
- Shopping in the News Bazaar
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>From the White House press room to the corner bar, manipulation
- is central to the reporting game
- </p>
- <p>By Ellis Cose
- </p>
- <p> "No mother believes her child is going to die," cried
- Elizabeth Glaser. "But after two years of struggling, [we] had
- to face the reality that our daughter was going to die." Those
- poignant words, spoken last week before the House Budget
- Committee, were intended to prod the Federal Government into
- spending more money on researching pediatric AIDS. The witness,
- wife of TV star Paul Michael Glaser (Starsky and Hutch), had
- contracted the HIV virus from a blood transfusion nine years
- ago and passed it along to her infant daughter Ariel and son
- Jacob. Since Ariel's death in 1988, the Glasers have devoted
- much of their energies to publicizing the plight of
- AIDS-infected children.
- </p>
- <p> No one could question the worthiness of the Glasers' cause,
- the depth of their tragedy or the sincerity of their
- commitment. Yet their ability to generate headlines clearly
- resulted from Paul's celebrity status. Were the Glasers
- manipulating press coverage? Of course they were, although
- their motives were above reproach.
- </p>
- <p> Attempts to influence news reporting, however, are not
- always prompted by such laudatory aims. Professional publicity
- experts have made a multibillion-dollar industry out of copping
- column inches and airtime for everything from smokers' rights
- and rap records to haute couture and the Trump bust-up. And the
- White House has raised press manipulation to a virtual art
- form, often for the narrowest political motives. The Reagan
- Administration, led by the Great Persuader himself, was
- notorious for its spin control. Last week the Reporters
- Committee for Freedom of the Press, a Washington-based watchdog
- group, issued a report detailing nearly 100 instances of news
- orchestration, press restrictions and disinformation by the
- Bush Administration.
- </p>
- <p> Not that the reporter is always an acquiescent pawn:
- manipulation is a two-way street. In a series of New Yorker
- articles that was recently published in book form, writer Janet
- Malcolm argues that the journalist's power to play God with a
- source's life inevitably leads to treachery. She examines the
- case of best-selling author Joe McGinniss, who ingratiated
- himself (and shared a book contract) with Jeffrey MacDonald,
- a physician accused of brutally murdering his wife and
- children. But instead of writing the exculpatory tome that
- MacDonald had been led to expect, McGinniss produced a work of
- pitiless condemnation. Malcolm uses this example to argue that
- journalists are reprobates who hoodwink helpless patsies and
- publicly betray them.
- </p>
- <p> Although few journalists aim to become intimate friends of
- homicidal psychopaths, most have felt ambivalent about the
- reporter-source liaison. That relationship is one in which
- loyalties are fragile, trust is withheld and manipulation by
- both the reporter (who controls access to the mass public) and
- the source (who controls access to information) is normal.
- </p>
- <p> Even among the most sophisticated players, manipulation can
- be a dirty word. Take the case of William DeJohn and Jay
- Winsten. As officials of Harvard University's Center for Health
- Communication, they recommended mass-media campaigns to steer
- youths away from drug abuse. But they ran into trouble when the
- New York Times described their two-year study--which
- advocated staged news events and the distribution of video
- press releases to be aired on TV news programs--as "the
- manipulation of print and broadcast news." A TV network
- executive contacted by the reporter denounced the scheme, and
- center director Winsten found himself furiously backpedaling.
- </p>
- <p> To be sure, Winsten was not promoting anything so egregious
- as the phony drug bust that the Bush Administration staged in
- front of the White House last year. He was suggesting speeches,
- press conferences and strategies aimed at helping health
- professionals "compete for news coverage." His 45-page study,
- in fact, was largely devoted to a review of widely used public
- relations and advertising practices. Nonetheless, Winsten
- decided to drop the recommendation for video news releases from
- his report, not wishing to alienate the journalists on whose
- goodwill much of his program's success would depend.
- </p>
- <p> It is difficult to find heroes and villains. The
- journalistic world is not like some slave market, in which the
- roles of exploiter and exploited are clear-cut. It is more like
- a chaotic bazaar, filled with news peddlers trying to get
- public exposure and journalists seeking dramatic stories,
- quotes or facts. Some vendors come to the bazaar for sport: New
- York hoaxer Alan Abel, for example, specializes in planting
- false news items, like last fall's stories about the bogus $35
- million lottery winner. Others show up because it is their job.
- Writing in the Gannett Center Journal, Scott Cutlip, a dean
- emeritus of journalism at the University of Georgia, cited
- estimates that 40% of the news comes from public relations
- specialists (who, at 150,000 strong, outnumber the country's
- 130,000 journalists). Still others try to hawk their stories
- for money, a trade-off that most respectable publications
- resist, although "checkbook journalism" is all too common these
- days.
- </p>
- <p> In such a world, it is difficult to condemn an honest
- trader. The Harvard researchers have every right to lay their
- wares on the table and present them in the most appealing
- light. The role of the press is not to denounce such efforts
- but to ensure that despite the attractive presentation of
- merchandise, news standards remain intact.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-