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- <text id=89TT2877>
- <title>
- Oct. 30, 1989: Dog-Bites-Dog Journalism
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Oct. 30, 1989 San Francisco Earthquake
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PRESS, Page 87
- Dog-Bites-Dog Journalism
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A personal view of the perils of underchecking stories
- </p>
- <p>By Laurence I. Barrett
- </p>
- <p> Most journalists occasionally encounter what might be
- called the Insider's Lament. Anywhere non-newsies can corner
- them, someone carps along this line: "Dammit, on subjects I'm
- personally involved in, you guys often get it wrong." The critic
- usually adds that if he had been consulted, all would have been
- right. How a journalist responds to this generic complaint
- depends partly on his tact and hubris quotients. Insiders with
- their own strong views, after all, tend to cavil about competing
- ideas and stories they consider less than comprehensive. But
- when I run into the I.L. these days, I find myself saying, "I
- know what you mean."
- </p>
- <p> Explaining this sympathy requires one of those shoe-on-the-
- other-foot tales. Perhaps dog-bites-dog is a better label. Like
- many Washington-based agents for large news organizations, I am
- mentioned in other publications now and then. Our work is
- parsed by press critics; we get into contretemps with the
- powerful; we serve as filler for the growing number of gossip
- columns. All this is, in principle, legitimate. Those who groan
- reflexively when needled or critiqued simply confirm the
- aphorism about journalistic skins being thinner than the average
- American adult's. What stokes my personal I.L. is the frequency
- of error in these items. The venerable practice of checking
- ostensible facts with the story's subject seems to be declining.
- </p>
- <p> Granted, these worrisome conclusions rest on totally
- unscientific research. A few recent mentions prompted an
- inspection of my ego folder of clippings going back several
- years. Some of the contents were unsettling. Having no reason
- to believe that I was being singled out for special hazing, I
- decided that purveyors of the I.L. have a larger point than the
- news business should tolerate.
- </p>
- <p> The Washington Times, for instance, recycled a story from
- MediaWatch, a right-wing newsletter. MediaWatch's conviction is
- that the national press corps is a left-wing cabal bent on
- discrediting conservatives. In that spirit, it took TIME (and
- me) to task for coverage of a controversy involving Republican
- National Committee chairman Lee Atwater. MediaWatch is of course
- entitled to its ideology. But in parroting the MediaWatch
- article as fact -- including the erroneous assertion that no
- TIME reporter had sought Atwater's side of the story -- the
- Washington Times neglected to check with the target of the
- criticism. The paper dutifully ran a correction.
- </p>
- <p> Political bias is only one element of the unchecked-error
- syndrome. Another could be labeled the pseudoauthoritative
- dodge. Washingtonian, a prosperous, glossy monthly, does an
- annual salary survey. This fall's version, listing hundreds of
- names linked to specific monetary figures, appears to be based
- on serious research. Eight TIME staffers were cited. Mystified,
- several of us agreed that the figures were wrong (by 30% in one
- case) and that none of us had been consulted by Washingtonian.
- The writer, Robert Pack, explained, "You don't call hundreds of
- people and ask them what they make because they won't tell you."
- Pack insisted that he had knowledgeable sources for his numbers.
- A Washingtonian editor, however, acknowledged that such stories
- are "ball-park estimates."
- </p>
- <p> Then there is the boner buried in commentary. A classic
- example of that appeared in a Washington Monthly review of a
- book of mine back in 1983. The critic mentioned that I ate
- breakfast with Ronald Reagan at the White House and "spent
- weekends with the President at Camp David." Neither assertion
- was true (not one cornflake with Reagan, not one hoofbeat at
- Camp David). These and similar inaccuracies supported the punch
- line that excess access might have warped my perspective. The
- reviewer later explained that he'd lacked the time to check the
- information.
- </p>
- <p> In fact, the Monthly often scolds the rest of journalism
- about unsound practices, with access being a particular bugaboo.
- It dutifully acknowledged the errors two months later -- after
- others had repeated them. Editor Charles Peters now says his
- writers usually do check with people they criticize. "The time
- you don't do it," he adds, "is when everyone knows what the
- other guy would say. Even then, it should be done."
- </p>
- <p> That exploratory phone call, of course, is no guarantee of
- accuracy. New York magazine inquired whether I had reviewed a
- manuscript for possible serialization in TIME. Yes, I had; no,
- we wouldn't. But the item relating this routine transaction
- attributed a direct quote to me ostensibly delivered to
- "colleagues." The remark, never uttered, was not checked either
- with me or with the editor to whom I had reported. Later, the
- New York Times Book Review picked up the unfounded quote. The
- news section of the same Sunday edition carried an editors' note
- pointing out that the original gossip-page item in New York had
- been denied.
- </p>
- <p> For the sake of balance, I must report that many clips in
- my ego folder are unexceptionable. National Review, for
- instance, recently hollered indignantly about the tilt of
- something I'd written. Fair enough; my prose was quoted
- accurately. Still other stories are both factually correct and
- somewhere between benign and laudatory. (These will be suitably
- framed and hung on my office wall as soon as time permits.) But
- there are enough unalloyed clinkers in this little collection
- to raise disturbing questions. If Washingtonian didn't get my
- pay right, how many other numbers in that story were wrong? If
- the New York Times -- ostensibly the newspaper of record --
- adopts a dubious item from a gossip column, how many other
- colorful anecdotes are published without being checked for
- accuracy?
- </p>
- <p> More broadly, if too many news organizations neglect to
- check their facts, how long before the Insider's Lament becomes
- everyone's? In a business whose cardinal asset is credibility,
- that notion should be unsettling.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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