The good, the bad and the ugly: deciphering truth in the era of independent journalism

in #journalism7 years ago

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I work for the “legacy media.” Specifically, a newspaper that’s been in circulation for over 160 years. It’s a small paper, but very much an institution in the city it serves.

But times are getting tough for small newspapers like mine. We’re losing staff, we’re losing money and our beats are growing ever wider. More subscriptions are canceled than renewed and readers complain about having to pay for content online.

New media is taking over and that’s a good thing, even if it means changes in my industry. More voices are being heard, more stories are being told and more ground is being covered.

I went to school for journalism, but I didn’t need to. I learned more in one year on the job than I did in four years of college. All it takes to be a good reporter is a drive to pursue truth, a knack for storytelling and enough courage to challenge those in positions of authority.

People are starting to realize this, and we’re beginning to see an uptick in folks who identify themselves as reporters but hold no affiliation with any recognizable outlet.

This is fine, good even, but it requires a little more work on the part of the readers that I’m finding they’re often not willing exert.

Even on the local level, legacy media outlets are being challenged by smaller alternative publications that seek to provide a freer sort of journalism than we can with our wings clipped by corporate restrictions.

But those same outlets sometimes turn around and hire publicly partisan individuals to serve as editors, they shine bright lights on preferred candidates, telling people who to vote for without labeling it as opinion.

They often publish rumors without the slightest effort to confirm them and play the news like a campaign ad. The stories are shared and discussed as gospel on social media.

Being a journalist involves a lot of leg work. Some independent journalists do that legwork and do it well. Others just want to play the game any way they can.

It’s up to readers to know what to look for: sources, specifics and confliction. Where does the information come from? What are the details that will affect readers? What does the other side say?

It’s important to remember that reporters are human, we have our ideas, our leanings and our beliefs. It’s hard not to have bias when you feel so strongly about something, but you have to be your own harshest critic.

Good journalists realize that not everyone sees things as they do and make a point to present all sides of the story and compare those statements to the available documentation. We must constantly question our perceptions.

Readers also need to accept that good journalism doesn’t come free. Before I came to my current paper, I worked for another paper that ceased publication. Circulation had hit an unsustainable low and print subscriptions never really took off.

When the announcement was made that we’d close, the public lost it and went crazy on the corporate managers, never stopping to ask what could have been if they were willing to pay for the product.

In the Wild West that is the internet, everyone is free to share stories and ideas and I can’t stress enough how beneficial this is for a society. As the media landscape adapts to this new freedom, wonderful new reporters will rise to prominence, but so will some not-so-wonderful ones.

The moral of the story is this: learn to identify good journalism and support it. You’ll miss it when it’s gone.

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Journalism in the mainstream has become the propaganda arm of the status quo. It's literally the 'Ministry of Truth' from Orwell's "`1984'. Truth today is "fake news". The only real journalists left are independent. Sad that so many journalists seem to have sold out. What happened to all the great anti-war journalists that did so much good work during the Bush fiasco, ...er presidency?

I promise there are some of us out there still trying to do good work. It becomes harder with newsrooms getting smaller and smaller. I find at the local level there’s less partisan bias as a whole, but as the establishment media dies, the hole is filled by fringe groups or party arms trying to pass themselves off as news. On the national level the amount of selling out is terribly disheartening. I think media literacy is an important thing to teach but where do you even start these days? No one knows what to believe.

It takes perspicacity to discern the difference between truth and lies, and sometimes the expert liars add much truth in what they say... but it only takes a little poison to 'poison the well'.

Agents are both in the mainstream and alternative media - who can discern?

Even in local media... I see a trend... trust us! Deadly storms coming! Criminals breaking into your cars! You need us to tell you how to put on your shoes, download our app, (with advertising).

So do we give up on journalism as an institution because no one can be trusted or do we work on ways to enhance the individual’s ability to effectively scrutinize what they read/watch?

No, just be aware of what's going on and separate the wheat from the chaff.

Well how can they be aware of what’s going on if they can’t trust anything they read or hear? I totally empathize with your point but I’d love to explore ways to improve the general public’s ability to separate fact from fiction and whole truths from half truths. It seems to be something we struggle with as a society.