Blogs at the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism

Posts Tagged ‘palin’

Will The Real America Please Stand Up?

October 31st, 2008 by Benjamin Fractenberg

“Latte-drinking Northeastern liberal elites” is a cliché you hear endlessly from people like Sarah Palin. It is used to show how out of touch us East Coasters are with “the real America”. The heartland, where everyone is a straight talker and free from the evils of moral relativism. The Norman Rockwell painting to our Sodom and Gomorrah, if you will.

I’m not sure which stereotype is more obnoxious and simplistic. But what really bothers me is the notion of the East Coast as un-American. It’s been a couple years since my high school civics class, but wasn’t this country founded by a certain 13 colonies, most of which were located in the Northeast!? Wasn’t it the Northeastern beliefs in religious tolerance, just taxation and federalism that helped form the bedrock of our American values? I know Palin is probably skeptical of that Charles Darwin character, but even she should be able to see how her own belief system evolved from our American Garden of Eden.

So, Sarah Palin, hate on us all you want, but just don’t forget where you come from. I know this must be hard for you, and a little like when Luke Skywalker discovered Darth Vader was really his father, but I promise we are all not that bad. In fact, you might find we actually have a lot in common. Many of us are quite religious and hate big government bureaucracy.

I would even be willing to drive you around our beautiful environs for a weekend. I think once you see the fall foliage and rustic quaintness of our New England towns you might even begin to like us a little. Heck, I bet I could get you to start drinking cappuccinos.

Just make sure you get in touch with me at least a week before you come. I wouldn’t want our trip to conflict with my monthly key party, vegan potluck or Noam Chomsky book club meeting.

So How Unbiased Can the Field of Journalism Be?

October 6th, 2008 by Rachel Geizhals

About 40 J-School students stayed in school to watch the vice presidential nominee debate last Thursday. From the cheers that accompanied Biden’s responses to the jeers that accompanied Palin’s, it was rather apparent that most students there were Obama/Biden supporters. Some students were even handing out and playing Palin BINGO (check it out at www.palinbingo.com). This was rather unsettling, because for a roomful of journalists who pride themselves on fairness and lack of bias, there was a notable lack of fairness and a fair amount of bias.

I know Lee Hernandez recently addressed the issue of a Republican in journalism school, and now we can put some numbers to his complaints. For the purposes of the mini-experiment, I emailed all of the students in the 2008 class.

First, we’ll calculate the responses, viewing them as a microcosm of the field of journalism as a whole  (I know this isn’t totally scientific, but let’s just accept it as such for now). Then we can address the issue of media bias. Just for the record, a 2005 study by UCLA (scientific and all!) concluded that media bias exists and is a pervasive issue. Duh, but it’s always good to have some support.

57 students responded to my questions. Of those 57, a whopping 47 – that’s 82 percent – of those support Obama/Biden over McCain/Palin. Of the others, five are unsure, 2 are leaning towards McCain/Palin, and 1 is a definite McCain/Palin supporter.

Admittedly, this poll of mine is not totally (to underexaggerate) scientific – it reflects only some students in one graduating class, in one school, in one location in the US (NY, to be exact). So maybe it’s just the J-School that’s overwhelmingly liberal. Or maybe it’s just our class.  Or maybe it’s just these 57 students.

Or maybe – and this is my inclination – it’s reflective of a larger problem within journalism.

Steve Boriss addressed media bias in a post about Tim Russert’s opinion of media bias in his blog, The Future of News. Boriss quoted Russert, who said, “If someone suggested there was an anti-black bias, an anti-gay bias, an anti-American bias, we’d sit up and say, ‘Let’s talk about this, let’s tackle it.’ Well, if there’s a liberal bias or a cultural bias we have to sit up and tackle it and discuss it. We have got to be open to these things.’”

While I appreciate the sentiment of tackling and discussing, I’m not sure it’s an effective way to end media bias on a political scale. In classes and lectures in the J-School, students and professors have pointed to specific news organizations that are known to be politically biased liberally or conservatively. So far, nothing reporters have done has significantly increased public trust in the media’s unbiasdness in the political arena.

In his blog Buzz Machine, Jeff Jarvis addressed this issue, concluding that bias is real, and journalists just need to practice transparency. Basically, let your audience know what your bias is, because everyone has biases and opinions of some sort, and those biases will affect your reporting. And even if you truly believe that you are the rare journalist who can totally and completely separate your personal opinions from your reporting, your audience doesn’t believe that. So you’re already missing some of their trust.

This, I believe, is the best way to go. All of us come from different political, economical, and sociological backgrounds. By saying up front what we are and what we believe – reporting with our biases, and not trying to report in spite of them or without admitting that they exist – maybe we can regain public trust.

I’ll start: I’m a Republican. I’m an Orthodox Jew. I support Israel’s right to exist. I don’t support gay marriage or gun control or government interference.

Who’s next?

From a Former Alaskan

September 16th, 2008 by Valerie Lapinski

Forgive me as I toss one more post on the heap of Sarah Palin musings.  (I’m excited to read Philip Gourevitch’s piece in the New Yorker about her blazing emergence from the murk of Alaskan politics. Please comment if you’ve read it!)  I’m trying to form a story idea about Alaskan women in politics, since there’s a chance I’ll be in Alaska around election time.

I think this piece on CNN yesterday makes a good attempt to depict the range of Alaskan women.

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The main point is clear – there’s not just one type of woman up there. There’s not just one type of anyone up there. Politics in Alaska are just as polarized as in the rest of the nation. There are conservationists vs. contractors. Commercial fisherman vs. charter fishermen. Subsistence hunters vs. aerial wolf shooters. And on and on.

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