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Media and government. A.k.a. media versus government: Notes on an adversarial (or not) relationship. www.newstrust.net. Adversaries or friends?. John Peter Zenger trial (1735) ended prosecutions for seditious libel Criticism of government is a key role for the press. The debate.
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Media and government A.k.a. media versus government:Notes on an adversarial(or not) relationship
Adversaries or friends? • John Peter Zenger trial (1735) ended prosecutions for seditious libel • Criticism of government is a key role for the press
The debate • Merrill says media and government should not be adversaries. Dennis says they should. But do they really disagree?
The debate • Merrill says media and government should not be adversaries. Dennis says they should. But do they really disagree? • They both say they should be adversaries when warranted, but should not be permanent enemies
The debate • Merrill says media and government should not be adversaries. Dennis says they should. But do they really disagree? • They both say they should be adversaries when warranted, but should not be permanent enemies • First Amendment = no obligation
Post-9/11 considerations • Country was afraid, and media took a more patriotic tone
Post-9/11 considerations • Country was afraid, and media took a more patriotic tone • Support for war in Afghanistan was strong
Post-9/11 considerations • Country was afraid, and media took a more patriotic tone • Support for war in Afghanistan was strong • Support for war in Iraq was more controversial
The so-called fourth estate • Can the media really function as a pseudo-branch of government?
The so-called fourth estate • Can the media really function as a pseudo-branch of government? • Seymour Hersh says political opposition is the key to media opposition
Anonymous sources • William Safire says it’s how the media overcome the government’s vast powers
Anonymous sources • William Safire says it’s how the media overcome the government’s vast powers • Do journalists have the right to protect their sources?
Anonymous sources • William Safire says it’s how the media overcome the government’s vast powers • Do journalists have the right to protect their sources? • Should they?
Media and elections • Horse-race coverage demonstrates the limits of objectivity
Media and elections • Horse-race coverage demonstrates the limits of objectivity • Polls, fundraising numbers
Media and elections • Horse-race coverage demonstrates the limits of objectivity • Polls, fundraising numbers • Civic or public journalism sought another way
Media democracy • Dennis focuses on internal workings • Ombudsmen • Transparency • Leadership
Media democracy • Dennis focuses on internal workings • Real democratic movement is outside and online • Media blogs • Independents like Josh Marshall • Political activist sites
The right to know • Do Merrill and Dennis disagree?
The right to know • Do Merrill and Dennis disagree? • Freedom of information laws, a.k.a. “sunshine laws”
The right to know • Do Merrill and Dennis disagree? • Freedom of information laws, a.k.a. “sunshine laws” • No special privileges for media
Civic (public) journalism • Media involvement in community • Issue-oriented election coverage • Public meetings to discuss coverage, priorities • Reporting on issues important to public
Civic (public) journalism • Media involvement in community • Criticized for moving away from objectivity and adversarial role
Civic (public) journalism • Media involvement in community • Criticized for moving away from objectivity and adversarial role • Jay Rosen has moved on • PressThink.org • NewAssignment.Net