| Here’s
a story that tells you about an important transforming event in my life
and sets the stage for this discussion. When I was at NYU’s journalism
school, my first draft of a masters thesis was an in-depth report of media
bias during the Palestinian Intifadah of 1987. I wrote a 15 page opus itemizing
all sorts of media bias against Israel and I was quite shocked when my
professor sent it back filled with criticisms and essentially letting me
know that he thought my work was garbage. “Liberal self-hating Jew,” I
figured. The article was filled with quotes, facts and figures and yet
I knew that I wasn’t going to get a masters degree unless this guy passed
me. I decided to skip the debate and move to a less controversial topic
which turned out to be the Adversary System of Justice.
But the episode haunted me because I felt very
strongly about the issue and I had worked hard on that paper. I really
didn’t think it was garbage. But then when you really sat down and thought
hard about it, you had to conclude that it was. The professor took care
to note in the margins why the article was flawed. All my quotes, facts
and figures were based on third parties to incidents telling me what they
knew, and what they knew with deep conviction was that the reports in the
media were wrong. Some of them were famous but none of the people I talked
to actually witnessed anything. I had not witnessed anything. I couldn’t
back up one single thing in that entire paper. Even if I had gone to Israel
to “see things for myself,” it was a year after the incidents I was discussing
in my paper.
This episode comes to mind when I read columns
and letters in various newspapers or hear speakers at various forums complaining
about media bias. I’m not saying the media is perfect, but it behooves
us to question whether or not the critic is more or less biased than the
media he or she accuses. Most of these columns, letters and speakers are
embarrassing because they reflect the very faults they cite. It is an important
reason why media critics are often marginalized as kooks.
A few observations based on things I’ve read and
heard:
1. People are increasingly monitoring a wider variety
of sources for their news and information. However, these sources are tending
to represent specialized media with a clear agenda and the reader is less
likely to even look at items from categories not specifically of interest.
For example, instead of reading the New York Times for international news,
a person with a high interest for Israeli news might scan the day’s news
from Arutz 7, an information agency publishing in Israel focusing on news
about Israel and the Middle East with a right-wing outlook. A person with
a left-wing outlook would instead monitor daily newsfeed from the Haaretz
newspaper. Neither of these options would have been available a few years
ago. Left-wingers are not monitoring Arutz 7 and right-wingers do not read
Haaretz. Neither of them are likely to monitor English language sources
from its Arab neighbors such as the Jordan Times or the Daily Star in Beirut,
both available on the Internet.
2. Media critics often complain that Israel receives
too much media coverage but the fact is that’s the only subject they really
want to read about and they assume for themselves the role of guardians
over what the rest of the world might read about Israel in the media; the
average person might not even read or recall the Israel story in the New
York Times. The fact is that Israel does get a lot of newsprint; that’s
because news happens there, the press is free to cover it and lots of people
in America care about what happens in Israel because Jerusalem is central
to three religions. The impromptu march on the presidential palace and
inauguration ceremony of Mrs. Arroyo in the Philippines was great news
yesterday but CNN’s domestic service didn’t interrupt its sports magazine
to cover it live and that’s because Americans don’t care about the Philippines.
3. When partisan people do read mainstream media,
they increasingly appear to be doing so to confirm or critique that same
subject which they have already read in specialized media. If they read
something that doesn’t match what they read before or don’t find within
a detail they read before, they assume something is wrong with the article
and conclude bias exists. It may even prompt them to write a letter to
the editor. But very often those complaints selectively cite facts, overgeneralize
or refute specific articles without recalling other articles written around
the same time.
4. Firm believers in the rightness of their cause
want more than objectivity in the media; they want the media to take their
side. Objectivity itself is considered bias when you are sure that the
only moral position is yours. At a certain point, truth be damned if it
doesn’t match expectations. Last month I asked some people for their opinions
about an article that discussed the issue of Palestinian textbooks. The
article pointed to new developments on the subject that called into question
earlier reports that were cited by media critics. The reactions I got had
nothing to do with the merits of the article; instead I received criticism
aimed at the writer of the article for writing the article.
At one forum this month, a lady who criticized
the media as biased walked up to me and asked if I could recommend her
things to read because she said she wasn’t getting enough of a variety.
Then I mentioned a few titles and she quickly lost interest. She then proceeded
to tell me many of her radical opinions and that she herself wrote for
a newspaper. I asked her how she handled her stories. She said she wrote
features to avoid political subjects. I replied that I hoped she was fair
with her feature subjects. She didn’t like that comment but I just had
this feeling that this woman probably eats her feature subjects for lunch.
You don’t have to be political to be biased.
Such a situation is bound to breed excessive cynicism.
People are increasingly alienated because they think the media is biased,
but the problem is more that readers think they know better because they
are reading not to exercise their minds and explore ideas but to reinforce
their convictions.
Here’s where I come out on the issue of media bias:
1. I have the luxury of releasing articles at my
convenience here on globalthoughts. I can sit with a draft for a month
and tweak it 20 times before it gets posted. No matter what, I always look
at it later and find something to change. Something is always left out,
either intentionally or not. (After all, there is a limit to your patience
and I want you to read my postings to the end; at least I am not limited
by space or time as other media is.) Something is later proven wrong and
something just looks stupid a year later. Especially since I sit here and
constantly receive new information and specialize in a region that is inherently
unstable (ie: the Middle East), there is always the yen to reconsider the
story. Had I posted my article that discussed Ashcroft a few days ago,
it would have been less charitable toward him but I sat on it for a few
days to reconsider his virtues. Pity the correspondent for the daily paper
that has to turn in his article every day at 6. Does every analysis about
the Israel-Arab conflict have to recite an unabridged 50, 75 or 2,000 years
of history? Does every incident in this never-ending spiral of incidents
have to recite the incident that came before it (and the one before it)?
Does every report or on-air panel discussion have to have representatives
of all sides commenting? I personally recommend more humility to the critics;
to be so perfect requires one to be superhuman.
2. There is a problem, but it is more of ignorance
than bias. Too many journalists cover things they know too little about
and this is because (a) for-profit media doesn’t allocate resources for
training and education; (b) there is no licensing for journalists in the
American tradition – any idiot can declare himself a journalist; (c) editors
don’t themselves perceive the value of having reporters master their subjects.
Last year I spoke with A.M. Rosenthal who was editor of the New York Times
for 17 years. He saw no value to having foreign correspondents learn foreign
languages and study about the countries they were being sent to cover.
He said he learned all he needed to know about India while he was there
at the diplomatic cocktail parties. He edited and selected years
of news reports about the Middle East but never visited there.
3. People selectively remember and read what they
want to read. I read cover to cover everyday from multiple sources and
am constantly reminded of what I read and watch. In my opinion, there is
plenty of information out there on all sides of various issues for anyone
to make a case for whatever he or she wants to prove. Newspapers such The
New York Times and the International Herald Tribune are amazingly comprehensive
and on the ball. Magazines such as the Economist have an edge but they
offer brilliant analysis at the close of each week. The BBC World television
and radio services offer a view of the world the American networks don’t.
American television is a special genre which has its faults (particularly
that they are pressed for time) but I wouldn’t venture to say they are
biased in the sense that they are pushing a version of the facts. You may
not get the full picture each hour of television or day of newspaper but
if you monitor regularly you will.
If both sides are criticizing, either they are
both wrong or both right. Some Jews criticize CNN for anti-Israel bias.
Some Arabs criticize what they call ZNN – the Zionist News Network. Those
Jews reply that Arab criticism of CNN is just part of their propaganda.
So what gives? My feeling is that CNN (at least the domestic service we
watch in the US) is commercially driven and shallow but this is based on
the unsophisticated nature of the American audience. CNN and MSNBC started
out more hard-news oriented but became what they are in order to survive.
If you want serious news coverage, watch the BBC.
There are biases in the media – exciting pictures
for television and base instincts such as murder, sex and power. Story
lines such as the underdog against the established power; good vs. evil;
winner vs. loser; clean endings; search for parallel trends; come from
behind to victory. In my opinion, these are American biases driven by market
forces; the British media which doesn’t need commercial sponsorship to
survive is more likely to focus on future trends than build contrived contexts
(meaning neatly packaged story lines) around incidents of news.
So yes, there are biases and faults but they are
more institutional than sinister. I have always felt that the call for
objectivity is flawed because it begs too much from fallible humans and
is unrealistic. Anyone covering a story who knows his business should have
some opinions about it and I’d like to know what those opinions are so
that I can better judge the person’s work. I give you my opinions and analysis
and take care to make clear which is which. What we should expect is honesty
and good work – the reporter has a duty to tell us what he or she knows
(and what he doesn’t know) and to make best efforts to find out everything
worth knowing. The reporter should be equipped to know enough to sift between
fact and fiction and to realize what he should investigate. The editor
and publisher should also be committed to delivering the news his correspondents
send in and not filter it through his own prejudices or external considerations.
We forget that the ultimate power is not what the reporter writes but what
the editor decides to publish and how the story is presented to the reader/viewer.
As a writer, I know the difference.
These faults are deep-rooted and will not be corrected
in our generation, certainly when the causes stem from the fact that American
media delivers what the public wants to read and watch. The solution is
not to reform media but to educate those that monitor the media to become
smarter consumers. This will not happen as long as the most interested
consumers become more partisan than intellectually curious and honest who
accuse based on their “knowing” facts they really don’t know (and don’t
care that they don’t). Ultimately, this vocal but marginal sector becomes
cynical and aloof, humored but ignored by the media. They will be heeded
if they wield economic power but this is rare. Right-wing Jews are no match
for the oil and aerospace industries (although I have no basis to believe
these industries are influencing news coverage in America regarding Israel).
I and others occasionally speak before "informed" audiences who have opinions
bordering on certitude lacking factual foundation and it is demoralizing
that people can approach such important issues with knowledge a mile wide
but six inches deep.
It is possible to “know” a lot by reading and watching
and to still know nothing. I once asked Norman Podhoretz how he knew everything
he purported to know about the Arab World and what guided him through 35
years of editing Commentary Magazine, when he never traveled to the Arab
World and couldn’t name one Arab person that he knew personally. He said
“I know what I read.” I didn’t like Professor Rubin in 1988, but I have
eaten my humble pie and can fairly claim to know garbage when I see it
having produced a bit of it myself. The subject bears consideration by
all who “know.” |