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Tuesday, May 05, 2009
Debra J. Saunders :: Townhall.com Columnist
News Biz: Unbiased and Out of Business
by Debra J. Saunders
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Why are most newspaper reporters and editors liberal? I've been working in the business for more than 20 years, and I can't give a quick, definitive answer to the question. But I do think a contributing factor is that editors, like other managers, tend to hire and reward staffers who think as they do. They see their positions as neutral, which is human nature -- and is reinforced by the fact that the folks in the desks around them vote the same way they do.

When they read about complaints of media bias, editors write the criticism off because they see reporters every day trying to cover stories fairly and succeeding. They fail to notice that their shared ideology limits what they see as stories.

Which is why, I believe, that Fox News Channel ratings are so high. As the New York Times reported, CNN reached 271,000 viewers aged 25 to 54 in prime time in April, less than half of Fox News' 668,000. In the first quarter of 2009, Fox News beat CNN and MSNBC combined in the Nielsen ratings.

Liberals mock the news network's "fair and balanced" slogan. But if you read your average newspaper, then tune into Fox News or listen to conservative talk radio, it evens out. People hungry for a conservative outlook in print aren't going to find it in the news or features pages. Liberal newspapers helped build conservative media.

I should note that there's a world of difference between Fox during the day and Fox after dark. Primetime programs feature conservative hosts trading on their opinions, while Fox daytime features straight reportage.

The network's full-tilt promotion of the TEA (Taxed Enough Already) party protests on April 15, alas, undercut the whole network's credibility as reporters covered events at which Fox News biggies like Sean Hannity and Glenn Beck were star speakers. Not fair. Not balanced.

CNN execs have responded to the success of Fox News by noting that their own audience numbers and profits are up. They also argue that their brand is purer because, as CNN president Jon Klein told the New York Times, "There are several networks that reside in the cable news category, but only one that reliably delivers the news unbiased."

Well, not quite. It turns out CNN has its own TEA Party baggage. Covering a protest in Chicago, veteran reporter Susan Roesgen lost her cool. She interviewed a man protesting high taxes and government debt with his 2-year-old and began to argue with him: "Do you realize that you're eligible for a $400 credit?" Roesgen asked him. And: "Did you know that the state of Lincoln gets $50 billion out of the stimulus (package pushed by President Obama)?" It was as if Roesgen thought she were White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs. Continued...

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A Deeper Explanation?
I wonder if the explanation isn't deeper.

When I was an engineering undergraduate, I observed that the engineers tended to be politically conservative, while the liberal arts majors tended to be politically liberal. I thought then that maybe it had something to do with engineering being, necessarily, rooted in physical reality.

Somewhere since, I've read that societies with beautiful languages -- e.g., Arabic (or French) -- tend to more disconnection from hard reality and absorption into verbal fantasies. "But it sounds so good!"

Or perhaps we've made the mistake in Journalism that we made in Teaching. The teachers colleges focused intently on pedagogy -- how to teach. The unintended nasty side effect was that we graduated many people who were very skillful at getting ideas out of their heads and into the students', but who had no ideas inside their head that were worth knowing! I wonder if Journalism programs haven't made the same mistake: With the exception of sports reporters, few journalism graduates know very much about the subjects they report on. (And television has aggravated that, with news "readers" whose prime job qualification seems to be their well coiffed hair-do.)

Reporters deal heavily in words. And they believe in words. Too often, those words construct a fantasy. And most graduates of Journalism schools -- in spite of their preening to the contrary -- never acquired the critical skills to question whatever some slick & smiling politician tells them.

Cronkite said

I remember when Cronkite said that the reason that most journalists were liberal, was because when they first got into the business, their first jobs were to cover the streets, and they saw all the poor people, the ones who need government help.

I thought they would have seen the idiots who dropped out of school, who were dealing drugs, who were robbing stores, and on and on.

Remember, a Liberal sees what he believes, a Conservative believes what he sees.

Or something like that. Do I remember that old “saw” correctly?
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