Newsroom conservatives are a rare breed

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Hatch

Sicc OG
Mar 12, 2004
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http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0603/p02s01-usgn.html
from the June 03, 2004 edition
Newsroom conservatives are a rare breed
In national news outlets, only 7 percent of journalists call themselves conservative. Does that deepen a trust gap?


If you'd like to check out an endangered species, don't bother with a trip to the zoo. Just drop by the newsroom of your favorite newspaper or TV station and ask to see the conservatives.

According to a new survey, only 12 percent of local reporters, editors, and media executives are self-described conservatives, while twice as many call themselves liberal. At national news organizations, the gap is even wider - 7 percent conservative vs. 34 percent liberal.

The White House whine: 'It's all the media's fault'
That gap, which has grown wider in the past decade, does not necessarily prove that America's mainstream journalism is biased, as conservatives have long complained. But the survey does confirm that US newsrooms do not mirror the political leanings of the nation at large.

But in an election year, and an era of growing partisanship on the airwaves, the question of alleged media bias has currency. Some editors contend that at the very least, media outlets should acknowledge that ideologically unbalanced newsrooms are bad for journalism and, in a time of declining circulation and viewership, bad for business, too.

"We should acknowledge that maybe the biggest problem is that most of us think too much alike and come from the same backgrounds," says David Yarnold, editor of the opinion pages at The (San Jose) Mercury News. "Find the pro-lifers in a newsroom. That's harder than finding Waldo."
Many editors and news executives argue that the goal of balanced reporting can be reached, and generally is, through professional ethics. Even those who are alarmed by the survey don't necessarily advocate a political litmus test in hiring.

Still, the survey shows a sharp disconnect in viewpoint between the press and the public. The nonpartisan Pew Research Center found the gap between journalists and other Americans particularly wide on social issues. The sample of 547 journalists and executives in a wide range of print and broadcast organizations, found that 88 percent of those surveyed at national media outlets think society should accept homosexuality; about half the general public agrees. And while about 60 percent of Americans say morality and a belief in God are inexorably linked, only 6 percent of national journalists and executives surveyed believe that.

But if editors and recruiters are thinking more about ideological balance, newsrooms remain distracted by budget cutbacks and continued embarrassment over the another gap: a severe shortage of minorities relative to the general population. To make things more complicated, no one wants to put a "Bush or Kerry?" question on an application form, and some journalists assume conservatives simply aren't interested in joining their ranks.
Then there's the matter of changing attitudes in a profession that prides itself on the ability of reporters to set their personal views aside."Most journalists try to do a fair job and are quite careful to make sure that their personal point of view doesn't overwhelm the story," says Jeffrey Dvorkin, ombudsman at National Public Radio. "In talk radio and cable television, the goal is to be opinionated. But the majority of journalists feel opinion gets in the way of doing good journalism."

Indeed, the Pew study doesn't prove that news stories themselves are biased - although it found that most national journalists think the media are giving President Bush a free ride.

Some analysts also note that publishers and station owners are anything but icons of the left. "Journalism in general in the United States tends to be fairly conventional and traditional. Even if [reporters] individually see themselves as liberal, the framework in which they work isn't necessarily a liberal structure," says Aly Colón, head of the diversity program at the Poynter Institute, a journalism think tank.

Still, many Americans say a liberal bias does exist. In a Gallup poll last fall, 45 percent of Americans said the news media are too liberal, while 14 percent said too conservative. (Some 20 percent of Americans now call themselves liberal, versus 33 percent who say they're conservative.)

Gallup also found TV news and daily papers near the bottom - on par with Congress and labor unions - in its ranking of public confidence in US institutions.

Mainstream US media outlets nowadays scrupulously try to avoid taking political stands outside editorial pages, unlike their newspaper ancestors in the 18th and 19th centuries or their contemporary European cousins.

Even so, reporters exert plenty of influence over their coverage, and some critics say they can't help missing parts of the big picture if they look at things the same way. And the trend toward a liberal viewpoint appears, if anything, to be rising. In 1995, 22 percent of journalists told Pew they were liberal, and 5 percent conservative. Now it's 34 and 7 percent, respectively.

Journalists are often blind to their bias, says Bill Cotterell, political editor at the Tallahassee [Fla.] Democrat. "It starts when we decide to cover one story and not another, and decide some people are kooks and not worth calling," says Mr. Cotterell, a registered Democrat. "I get the feeling that [journalists] don't think they're biased unless they sit down, hold a meeting and take a vote to support this side and oppose the other."

What to do? Tom Rosenstiel, director of the Project for Excellence in Journalism, suggests that news organizations reach out to Christian colleges and woo people from other walks of life, like the military. "Just look around," he says.

Editors can also try to recruit reporters from different parts of the country and from a variety of backgrounds, says Peter Bhatia, executive editor of The [Portland] Oregonian. Mr. Yarnold, the San Jose opinion editor, adds that job interview questions can draw out whether applicants are ideologues or critical thinkers.

It may help that the news industry isn't a stranger to diversity campaigns. Through internships and other outreach programs, media outlets routinely make special efforts to hire minorities. The diversity efforts have had mixed success, however. According to a new survey by the American Society of Newspaper Editors, minorities hold only 13 percent of newsroom jobs at American newspapers surveyed, up from just 4 percent in 1978.
 
May 13, 2002
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www.socialistworld.net
#2
Wow, an article from the same website you bashed when I posted links to it. I guess when they talk about subjects in favor of your political beliefs; it's a great site!

Anyways, sure, I agree that more journalists are liberals, mainly, because that profession is more attractive to liberals than conservatives. I imagine, that most political journalists want to reveal the real story and not exclude damaging information, something conservatives have a problem with.

Another thing to keep in mind is that it really doesn’t matter how many liberal journalists there are when the companies they work for wont publish their work.

See nefar’s thread: The myth of the liberal media
 
Jul 10, 2002
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so what if 7% of media journalist are conservative, 95% of the broadcasters and publishers are, and guess what they are the ones who determine what gets out.
 

Hatch

Sicc OG
Mar 12, 2004
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#5
2-0-Sixx said:
Wow, an article from the same website you bashed when I posted links to it.
i just found it ironic that even the journalists at the Christian Science Monitor see the obvious LIBERAL BIAS
 

Hatch

Sicc OG
Mar 12, 2004
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#6
Jomodo said:
so what if 7% of media journalist are conservative, 95% of the broadcasters and publishers are, and guess what they are the ones who determine what gets out.
where did you pull that number out of??? oh nevermind i know.

http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0603/p02s01-usgn.html
only 12 percent of local reporters editors, and media executives are self-described conservatives, while twice as many call themselves liberal. At national news organizations, the gap is even wider - 7 percent conservative vs. 34 percent liberal.
 
Jul 7, 2002
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Hatch said:
where did you pull that number out of??? oh nevermind i know.

http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/0603/p02s01-usgn.html
only 12 percent of local reporters editors, and media executives are self-described conservatives, while twice as many call themselves liberal. At national news organizations, the gap is even wider - 7 percent conservative vs. 34 percent liberal.

thats like saying, thats the workers in a car factory determine the fate of the company, and image....lol (N)

this is the only thing conversative says that theres a liberal bias in the media, any real study on the media will prove otherwise.
 
May 27, 2002
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#8
What about the fact that many people who are played off as "objective hosts" (Chris Matthews, Tim Russert) have previously WORKED for the DNC. However, when a Sean Hannity wants to do something, he is always delegated to the role as the "token conservative". Companies as a whole do not want to portray conservatives as "objective", no matter how hard they try, but will leap to make obvious liberals appear "objective".

(If they even keep them on the air at all - hence Michael Savage)
 
Sep 22, 2003
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#9
THA RIPPA said:
What about the fact that many people who are played off as "objective hosts" (Chris Matthews, Tim Russert) have previously WORKED for the DNC. However, when a Sean Hannity wants to do something, he is always delegated to the role as the "token conservative". Companies as a whole do not want to portray conservatives as "objective", no matter how hard they try, but will leap to make obvious liberals appear "objective".

(If they even keep them on the air at all - hence Michael Savage)
Savage got his own show cancelled, sorry.
 
Dec 25, 2003
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#10
"These homosexual sodomites need to burn in hell."

lmfao.

Are you surprised he got cancelled?

I used to listen to Michael Savage. I used to think he was really on the ball. When I was like...15. My government teacher, a self-described Republican who worked for Republican members of the state senate even said himself "That guy is off the deep end. That show is nothing more than entertainment. I'm surprised people actually listen to it for anything more than a laugh."

I used to be a major self-proclaimed "Republican" myself, until I saw what flag-waving, non-thinking, jingoists Republicans are. I'll settle for "conservative moderate", or some such. Anything but being identified with the idiots who call themselves Republicans.

When I was a Republican I used to see "liberal bias" in news.

Then again, How can you not be biased against an idiot like Bush? How can you not be biased against an epithet spouting, communist paranoid old man like Michael Savage?

Now that I look at it, the only real bias is the idiots who vehemently defend one party or the other, claiming "Republicans" or "Liberals" are the right ones. Keep getting hung up on your faulty ass party bullshit. You'll never get anywhere.
 
Dec 25, 2003
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#11
THA RIPPA said:
What about the fact that many people who are played off as "objective hosts" (Chris Matthews, Tim Russert) have previously WORKED for the DNC. However, when a Sean Hannity wants to do something, he is always delegated to the role as the "token conservative".
That's because Sean Hannity is a straight up tool. Bush could have an IQ of 2 (which he does), could send to national debt to astronomical proportions(which he did), start a war on false pretenses against the wrong people (which he did), and ignore important issues while focusing on the irrelevant ones (which he has done), and Sean Hannity will support him.

Even O'Reilly who is by all accounts fairly conservative will sometimes back a Democrat instead of a Republican. (As if party labels matter, anyways) Sean Hannity is just a Repub-Horn tootin good ol boy! How can you not label him a token consevrative? If it's not Republican, he doesn't want to hear it! Sean Hannity is about as interested in other viewpoints and other ways of thinking as Michael Savage is with third world factory conditions.

If they even keep them on the air at all - hence Michael Savage)
Bahahaha. Michael Savage was an idiot, who ran an idiot show. Are you surprised he was cancelled?