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Press Think Good Reads

Press Think Good Reads

by digby

If you’re looking for an interesting read, try Jay Rosen’s year-end retrospective of his best work of 2010. These are the essays that informed me the most, but all are worthwhile:

The Quest for Innocence and the Loss of Reality in Political Journalism (PressThink, Feb. 21, 2010). “The quest for innocence means the desire to be manifestly agenda-less and thus ‘prove’ in the way you describe things that journalism is not an ideological trade. But this can get in the way of describing things! What’s lost is that sense of reality Isaiah Berlin talked about…” Wherein I finally nail down a key term in my criticism of the political press: its innocence agenda, which interferes with truthtelling. Clowns to the Left of Me, Jokers to the Right: On the Actual Ideology of the American Press. (PressThink, June 14, 2010) “That it’s easy to describe the ideology of the press is a point on which the left, the right and the profession of journalism converge. I disagree. I think it’s tricky. So tricky, I’ve had to invent my own language for discussing it.” An attempt to bring some clarity to the most confused and contentious of all debates in press criticism: the bias question. The Afghanistan War Logs Released by Wikileaks, the World’s First Stateless News Organization. (PressThink, July 26, 2010) “In media history up to now, the press is free to report on what the powerful wish to keep secret because the laws of a given nation protect it. But Wikileaks is able to report on what the powerful wish to keep secret because the logic of the Internet permits it. This is new.” I rarely claim that something is new. But I think it was warranted in this case.. The Citizens Agenda in Campaign Coverage (PressThink, Aug. 15, 2010) “The idea is to learn from voters what those voters want the campaign to be about, and what they need to hear from the candidates to make a smart decision. So you go out and ask them: what do you want the candidates to be discussing as they compete for votes in this year’s election?” An idea that has not been adopted by our political press because our political press prefers horse race journalism. Certainly the most viral thing I wrote in 2010, with over 200,000 views at my Posterous. The View from Nowhere: Questions and Answers. (PressThink, Nov. 10, 2010) “American journalism is dumber than most journalists, who often share my sense of absurdity about these practices. A major reason we have a practice less intelligent than its practitioners is the prestige that the View from Nowhere still claims…” This was the year that my construct, The View from Nowhere, went mainstream. From Judith Miller to Julian Assange (PressThink, Dec. 9. 2010) “Today it is recognized at the Times and in the journalism world that Judy Miller was a bad actor who did a lot of damage and had to go. But it has never been recognized that secrecy was itself a bad actor in the events that led to the collapse, that it did a lot of damage, and parts of it might have to go. Our press has never come to terms with the ways in which it got itself on the wrong side of secrecy as the national security state swelled in size after September 11th.”

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