Home » Not the media’s finest hour–reporting urban legends as fact

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Not the media’s finest hour–reporting urban legends as fact — 11 Comments

  1. I have a slightly different view: some of the MSM reporting is quite good, like this MSNBC story; however, they rarely if ever investigate with the purpose of debunking their own inaccuracies.

  2. “To me, the talk of “dozens of murders,” “old people dying like flies”, etc. sounded like nothing so much as the early reports of an “Israeli massacre” by Agence France, Reuters, BBC, et. al. that came from Jenin in the spring of 2002 (to cite only one of many examples.)”

    Except the media never describes the results of Palestinian actions as massacres, unless they actually ARE massacres. Even then, they downplay the Palestinian actions, portraying them instead as some form of righteous vengenance for some media-imagined offense on Israel’s part.

    The media has shown, repeatedly, that they will happily ignore the “if it bleeds, it leads” principle when Israelis are being murdered. They aren’t sensationalists, they are actively propagandizing for the enemies of democracy.

  3. Anyone who has closely observed “reporting” on Israel/Arab/Palestinian events over the past 30 years should have felt a sense of deja-vu over the initial, wildly-exagerated reports in the wake of Katrina.

    To me, the talk of “dozens of murders,” “old people dying like flies”, etc. sounded like nothing so much as the early reports of an “Israeli massacre” by Agence France, Reuters, BBC, et. al. that came from Jenin in the spring of 2002 (to cite only one of many examples.)

  4. meander,
    “Maybe,sadly,it’s just human nature regardless of color to give in to thinking the worst.”

    I agree,”thinking the worst” is often taken a step further by the news media by showing and writing about it in a sensational way. The old reporter’s credo comes to mind “IF IT BLEEDS, IT LEADS”. Sensationalism has always paid dividends in ratings and readership. Why stop giving the viewers/readers what they historically have always wanted?
    No racism here, just economics.

  5. It is interesting that some of the most hysterical and unflattering rumors about black behavior were publically spread by blacks like Nagin and Campass. And how about the ridiculous posting on the Huffington Post about blacks resorting to cannabalism after a few days ( that offensive statement was subsequently removed by it’s black author). I don’t know what conclusions to reach but it sure seems like blacks were as quick or quicker to jump to wrong conclusions so I sure don’t believe it’s fair to accuse whites of racism. Maybe,sadly,it’s just human nature regardless of color to give in to thinking the worst.

  6. warm, you’re definitely being too PC. Those rumors weren’t just spread by the media, or by its supposedly racist white audience. New Orlean’s mayor helped spread them himself, telling the media that people at the Convention Center were standing there watching “hooligans killing people, raping people.” And, along with other comments on lurid violence in New Orleans, the city’s police chief, Edwin Compass, told Oprah Winfrey that “some of the little babies (are) getting raped” in the Dome. Both of these men are black. For that matter, most of the terrified people trapped in New Orleans who believed and spread those rumors were black themselves.

    Do you suppose they “like stories about black people going nuts and killing each other”?

    I don’t think so. I think that, just like the rest of us, they were frightened and bewildered by an unprecedented situation, and they gave in to a normal human tendency under such conditions to believe and to spread dire rumors. That tendency isn’t assigned to any race, and it isn’t a marker of racism. You can watch it operate in any situation where human beings, regardless of color, are under stress.

    Not that this excuses the media. It’s supposed to be the job of professional journalists to remember this particular risk and to rise above it, and they failed miserably. But please put away racism as an explanation for this particular problem — or if you won’t, then explain why the same Americans you seem to think were chortling over the tales of black people attacking one another in New Orleans were digging so deeply into their wallets to help those people at the very same time.

  7. Not to be too PC, but I think the American public likes stories about black people going nuts and killing each other. The offending coverage of Katrina reminds me alot of the coverage of pretty much anything that happens in Africa.

  8. Seeing themselves made fools of in the US, isn’t going to stop them from being the dupes of terroists.

  9. I hope the news in your last link(“too much else”) has something to do with the Times sinking credibility due to their lack of journalistic standards. And even leftists may be thinking, “why should I pay for the Times when I can get the same partisan propaganda for free on the internet?” I feel sorry for those workers that had nothing to do with the content of the Times in the last few years but I say good riddance to everyone in the “newsroom.”

  10. I suppose there are two positions from which to be abashed.

    One is abashed for one’s profession, even though one had nothing to do with the wild reports.

    The other is to be abashed that one passed on the wild reports.

    Of the abashed journalists you mention, how many are in each group?

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