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Extraordinary timesand we are living in an extraordinary timedo not necessarily call for extraordinary measures on the part of the press, as comforting as a full berserking might make many of us feel. The opening minutes of the Trump administrationthe lies told by press secretary Sean Spicer about the size of the inauguration crowd, the presidents whopper at CIA headquarters claiming the media made up his feud with the agency, presidential counselor Kellyanne Conways notion that alternative facts support Trumps imaginary numbershave stirred bladder-emptying panic among some in the press corps.
But the Trump administration cannot by itself pollute the river of truth with its bogus tweets, its press conferences in which no questions are allowed, or by Conway jibber jabber. Extraordinary times like these call for normal measures: The meticulous, aggressive, and calm presentation of the news. One of our examples should be the Washington Posts David Fahrenthold. Fahrenthold could have assessed the Trump candidacy by filling Twitter with angry comments or by setting himself on fire. Instead, as everybody knows, he excavated the self-dealing garbage dump that was the Trump Foundation as if he were an archeologist and published a series of patient stories that resulted in a penalty against the foundation and its planned closure.
Reporters tend to be emotional souls, which gives them an advantage when hauling a load of bricks up a ladder for their ungrateful, demanding editors and indifferent readers. Emotion fuels their sense of justice and motivates them to keep on keeping on. CNNs Brian Stelter says he hears from readers that reporters should boycott Spicers press briefings in protest of his misrepresentations. Others, such as media scholar Jay Rosen, are stating that the press corps should perhaps think about avoiding interviews with Conway if all shes going to do is contradict Trump rather than speak for him.
Boycotts and bans may fill a journalists heart with vengeance, or at least keep it from being bruised. But their maker designed reporters to be resilient, to take disparagement, derision, scorn, and sneering from lying government officials in stride. And for good reason. To quote from Jon Ronson once again, Its good for journalists to feel demeaned. It means were onto a story. Rather than treat the Spicer, Trump, Conway ingenuities as an excuse to pout and leave the field, the experienced members of the press will be propelled by the weekend to pick up their mobiles and notebooks and go maximum Fahrenthold on the administration.
http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2017/01/journalism-media-donald-trump-214682
democrank
(11,112 posts)Where warranted, reporters who are able to should pursue penetrating, deliberative investigations of the Trump administration and present their findings in a straightforward way. We should pay less attention to exactly what Melania`s gloved hands were doing and more attention to the activities of Trump people like National Security Advisor Mike Flynn.