Posts Tagged ‘Watchdog Journalism’

Why do liberal socialist media elites spend so much time uncovering government waste?

Monday, August 9th, 2010
cheLast week, Republican Senators John McCain and Tom Coburn released “Summertime Blues,” a report listing what they say are the top 100 wasteful stimulus projects across the United States.

There’s an interesting pattern buried in the 583 footnotes at the end of the report: More than 200 citations rely on stories published by news organizations. Many of the examples of questionable spending were first made public in news articles — including one by yours truly.

But wait a second. How is this possible?

I thought reporters are socialists who believe in Big Government. That’s what the Rush Limbaughs of the world claim. U.S. Rep. Lamar Smith of Texas even said liberal bias in the media is the greatest threat to America.

But if they’re right, why are journalists spending so much time uncovering examples of wasteful government spending, publicizing the details, and holding officials accountable?

Think about it. You can pick up a newspaper anywhere in the country and chances are, there’s a story about some taxpayer-financed boondoggle. And if you’re not reading it in a newspaper, you’re probably watching the story on TV, or reading it online in one of the countless investigative Internet sites that are sprouting up.

The journalists I work with are obsessed with this watchdog thing, and it gets annoying after awhile. They totally forget how we’re supposed to be liberal radicals. A reporter might be talking to me about the nuances of the Texas Public Information Act, and I’ll be like, “Dude, I’m just here for the free Che Guevara T-shirt.”

Memo to my bosses: I have yet to get my T-shirt, please get on that.

Some people might say the critics who get worked up about liberal media bias conveniently ignore all the investigative stories that poke a gaping hole in their claims.

I, for one, would never say that. It’s so much more fun to be part of a vast liberal media conspiracy.

(Photo credit: Podknox on Flickr)

Watchdog blog roundup for 7-26-10

Monday, July 26th, 2010
linotype keys

What others are saying about watchdog journalism:

  • A reporter’s vigilance in the Grim Sleeper case | James Rainey
    How a diligent reporter uncovered a serial killer.
  • Jobs of the Future: Government Reporter | Media Bistro
    U.S. Senate candidate and former journalist John Dougherty has an interesting campaign promise: if elected, he’ll give jobs to journalists to find abuse and waste in government agencies.
  • “What the audience wants” isn’t always junk journalism | Nieman Journalism Lab
    “What if sometimes ‘what the audience wants’ is more serious than what the news organization is giving them?”
  • Watchdog blog roundup for 7-8-10

    Thursday, July 8th, 2010
    Hand Press

    What others are saying about watchdog journalism:

  • Bring curtain down on the LeBron James Show | Mitch Albom
    “Note to journalism students. When we celebrate investigative reporting, it’s for issues like war crimes, nursing home scandals or police corruption. It’s not to report that LeBron James has opened a Twitter account.”
  • Follow an investigative project as it happens | What the Judge Ate for Breakfast
    “We invite you to follow us on our journey, as we look into how a 2001 law meant to protect people from being wrongly imprisoned is working. That law allows Kansas inmates convicted of rape and murder, especially in older cases, to have biological evidence tested for DNA, which may prove their innocence.”
  • Gaps in watchdog journalism reflected in news from trial | David Carr
    “Much has been made of the pullback in foreign bureaus by American news organizations, leaving brutal regimes uncovered and third-world corruption unchecked. But there are many domestic instances in which a police force or local government has turned on people in inappropriate ways and, given the growing gaps in accountability reporting, no one will be the wiser as time goes on. “
  • Watchdog blog roundup for 6-28-10

    Monday, June 28th, 2010
    linotype keys

    What others are saying about watchdog journalism:

  • Nonprofits filling need for investigative journalism | Media Notes
    “Investigative reporting is increasingly being outsourced, and these offices off K Street serve as a boiler room for research that the big boys are less able to afford.”
  • Google creating Newspass, a micropayment system | ReadWriteWeb
    “One of the biggest dilemmas for print and mainstream media today is how to transition from a free-for-all model to one where users actually pay for the content they consume.”
  • Spot.Us Case Study Shows Impact of Crowdfunding on Journalism | MediaShift
    “Five observations on how the crowdfunded process impacts journalism from the reporter’s and donor’s point of view.”
  • Will blogs replace newspapers? Only if blogs actually make money

    Thursday, June 24th, 2010
    bloggerConor Friedersdorf at the Atlantic offered a compelling example of the trait that differentiates a blogger or activist from a newspaper reporter:

    Time.

    Or more precisely, getting paid to spend the time to find out what’s really going on in your community.

    There are many talented bloggers out there. But the vast majority of them don’t get paid a steady paycheck to go down to City Hall, spend all day at council meetings, scrutinize campaign finance reports, and do all the things you need to do to hold officials accountable.

    Friedersdorf contrasted the work of a concerned citizen versus a newspaper reporter in California:

    Let’s expound on the difference between Richard Marosi, Los Angeles Times reporter, acting as a government watchdog, and Miguel Figueroa, a lampshade maker, trying to do the same thing. Consider the task of getting the credit card bills that document graft in Lynwood. They are public records: state law mandates that the city turn them over to anyone who asks.

    But a newspaper reporter has the time a lampshade maker doesn’t to go down to city hall during business hours; if the City Clerk wants to charge for photocopies, the reporter can expense it to the newspaper, whereas the lampshade maker pays out of pocket; should the City Clerk refuses to hand over the documents, the reporter can have an attorney at the newspaper draft a convincing letter, and write an article in the newspaper hammering the city for breaking the law; should the city clerk dally further, the reporter can have an LA Times attorney sue the city, and write another scathing story; and if the lawsuit drags on, he can stick it out, though that is seldom necessary, because when your legal adversary is correct on the merits, buys ink by the barrel, and cultivates a reputation for sticking things out, you rarely put them to the test.

    Miguel Figueroa did far more than most Southern California residents ever would merely by pursuing the matter — it took him two years to get the credit card records. What did he do next? He called Richard Marosi, who launched an investigation, documenting enough abuses to sell his editors on a front page story, and creating enough of a public stir to take on the crooks in Lynwood. What would have happened if there weren’t any LA Times reporter assigned to that beat?

    Probably nothing.

    (Photo credit: Mike Licht on Flickr)

    Watchdog blog roundup for 6-15-10

    Tuesday, June 15th, 2010
    Hand Press

    What others are saying about watchdog journalism:

  • For Salon Reporter, a Long Commitment to Arlington Burial Story | Media Decoder
    Salon reporter Mark Benjamin explains how and why he wrote stories about burial errors at Arlington National Cemetery. “The idea that a mother and father might be out there praying over a headstone over a grave that may not contain the remains of their kid is pretty hard core,” he said. “I have seen wives and girlfriends in the cemetery literally hugging those headstones.”
  • Bill Buzenberg on Center for Public Integrity’s aim to “catalyze impact,” fundraise in a competitive field | Nieman Journalism Lab
    “Nonprofit news organizations may be all the rage, but they’re not a new animal. Last week, 20-year-old Center for Public Integrity announced a round of recent hires.”
  • An NYT Win on a Countrywide Mortgage Scam | Columbia Journalism Review
    “The Federal Trade Commission slapped a $108 million fine on Countrywide/Bank of America earlier this week. Tough investigative business journalism made that possible.”
  • California Pulitzer Prize-winning paper becomes L3C | Shop notes
    A group of journalists, educators and community leaders bought the Point Reyes Light newspaper. “The most interesting aspect of the sale is that the Light will operate as a low-profit limited liability company, or an L3C.”
  • Watchdog blog roundup for 6-3-10

    Thursday, June 3rd, 2010
    linotype keys

    What others are saying about watchdog journalism:

  • Lost Remote: The future of investigative journalism: Identifying problems before they become problems.
  • Buzz Machine: Jeff Jarvis says the Federal Trade Commission is on a misguided quest to save newspapers, not journalism.
  • Bay Citizen: A new nonprofit news organization with a twist: It will provide content for the New York Times.
  • Watchdog blog roundup for 5-13-10

    Thursday, May 13th, 2010

    linotype keys

    What others are saying about watchdog journalism:

  • Nieman Journalism Lab: Profile of OpenFile, a collaborative news site in Toronto that gets its story ideas from readers.
  • Hitsville: Bill Wyman argues that nonprofit news sites won’t work because they don’t give readers what they want: fluff.
  • Texas Tribune: After its first six months, the nonprofit Texas Tribune has attracted 1.3 million visits from 190 countries.
  • Watchdog blog roundup for 4-27-10

    Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

    What others are saying about watchdog journalism:

  • Claudia Ricci: How much would you pay Jim Hummel to uncover government corruption? Hummel, a former newspaper and TV reporter, is trying to make an online news site work.
  • Reflections of a Newsosaur: A non-profit news model that might work: MinnPost.
  • The Independent: A new British nonprofit, the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, is focusing on unearthing big stories. “Lots of newspapers take the first whiff of a story and run with it,” says managing editor Iain Overton. “I’ve had to forcibly restrain myself from thinking, ‘sod it, let’s publish on the first thing we find’ because, though the whiff may be there, or even the stench, what I want to see is the decomposing corpse.”
  • Nieman Journalism Lab: As more news organizations team up with nonprofit ventures to produce investigative stories, Laura McGann explores the challenges and limitations of collaboration.
  • Hannah Jane Sassaman: The true value of the Fourth Estate: Paying for important but expensive journalism. The Philadelphia Daily News series Tainted Justice, which won a Pulitzer Prize this year, cost $164,000.
  • WisconsinWatch: A journalism ethics report calls for standards of openness in nonprofit newsrooms. “The report stresses that nonprofit journalism centers must remain true to their goals, be transparent about who is funding them, establish guidelines for handling conflicts of interest and communicate with potential supporters to maintain public confidence in these emerging experiments in journalism.”
  • Watchdog blog roundup for 4-21-10

    Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

    What others are saying about watchdog journalism:

  • Jane Podesta: Lou Grant-style editor J. Todd Foster didn’t cut back on investigative journalism at his small newspaper, which won a Pulitzer Prize.
  • Nieman Journalism Lab: High-quality investigative journalism can’t rely on just one or two sources of cash. Texas Tribune Founder John Thornton says news ventures must rely on “revenue promiscuity.”
  • David Eaves: Debunking five myths about old and new media.
  • Bronstein at Large: Phil Bronstein interviews Bill Gates about social media, the future of investigative journalism, and how he likes the iPad.