liesel wrote:
I mostly agree with Cashill's observation that part of the reason the media continues to demonize GZ is to "save face" or to cover up their prior lies. Where I differ slightly is that I suspect some, maybe even many, don't believe they were lying or wrong. Now they, the media and the Trayborg™ (but I repeat myself) seek to validate their ability to see the "truth" despite the obstacles placed in their way (such as the actual truth).
They desperately want to be proven "right", to view themselves as perceptive, even "smart" for seeing things as they do. "We knew it from the start," or "That's what we've been saying all along," etc. is frequently posted by Trayborg™ whenever some new bit comes along that conforms to what they want to believe. Before it, like their other mythical "proof" is also proven wrong.
We're all like that to a point, I suspect. We like to think we're open minded, will wait for all of the facts, etc., but even those who have a proven track record of doing just that aren't 100%, in my experience.
Thank goodness most don't take it to the extremes of the Trayborg™, including media. No wonder they're so bitterly unhappy.
Liesel - I tend to agree with you on this aspect to a very large extent.
The "media" is an amalgam of a lot individual entities with a lot of competing, and yet, collective agendas.
At ground zero of the news-reporting chain is the standard reporter. A lot of your standard reporters, take the line reporters for the Orlando Sentinel, are in one sense, glorified stenographers.
If Mr. Crump holds a news conference and spouts a bunch of misinformation, the stenographers duly report what Crump had to say and that is disseminated. It is not the job of these stenographers/reporters to apply their own commentary as an overlay and interpret the accuracy, or lack thereof, to what Crump said. If feasible, bearing in mind deadlines and other constraints, the reporter will get a reaction quote from an opposing side for inclusion in the article. Sometimes they do, sometimes they don't.
The editor will discuss with the reporter the status of an ongoing story at which, if not before, the reporter will express such reservation as he/she may have concerning the quality of Crump's statements. If opposing counsel holds a news conference, a similar stenographic reportage will be carried by the news outlet.
Opinion columnists, who normally answer only to the opinion editor, may weigh in with a column that digs into the Crump press conference. The editor may ask the reporter to check in on some controversial aspect of the press conference for a follow-up. The editor has a lot of discretion, yet still must answer to the publisher.
We have learned that the Orlando Sentinel editor was not interested in pursuing potentially explosive leads concerning Trayvon Martin's experiences in the Miami-Dade school system. So one can say that the O/S coverage was somewhat slanted, not by what they reported, but by what they chose not to look into when the issue was staring them in the face.
This slanting is not the fault of the reporter. It is the responsibility of the editor. Usually there is separation between the news-reporting section of the newspaper, and the editorial/opinion section. Sometimes there isn't, although theoretically there should be. The opinion columnists should provide context to the stories of the day. But it all depends on the editors and the editorial policy.
Even though the news/reporting business is made up of individual efforts, there is also a pack-mentality the permeates the production of news because at its essence, news-reporting and everything that flows from it is an economic enterprise. You have to sell papers, you have get hits on your website and if the competition is getting such traction from a developing news story, you have motivation to get some of that web traffic and newspaper sales for your enterprise.
The Zimmerman/Martin case provided a news event that was set off in the wrong direction by the dangling of the Crump/Julison narrative in front of a herd of hungry newshounds facing competition from the cable-driven 24 hour news cycle.
Thanks to the freedom of the internet, and to the efforts of citizen sleuthers providing true investigative journalism at a handful of websites, their collective efforts, which spanned the ideological spectrum, facts were brought forth that were vital to a successful defense for Zimmerman, and prevented what attorney West aptly put, a "tragedy from becoming a travesty."