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Brill, Mote, and Beam
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If Steven Brill's object is
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to make the media look absurd, he got off to a roaring start. On the front page
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of the New York Times last Sunday was a story that said the first issue
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of Brill's Content would report that Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr
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had leaked information about his investigation to the press--including the
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Times . Now if the question of whether Starr leaks to the Times is
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important enough for the front page, you might wonder why the Times
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needed Brill to raise the subject. And who knows better than the Times
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whether Starr leaked to the Times ? Yet the Times cites Brill and
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then cites its own Washington editor, Michael Oreskes, saying the Times
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does not discuss its sources. And all this contortion was induced by Brill's
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having leaked his own forthcoming article to the Times .
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But if
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Brill's goal is to offer a socially useful critique of media misbehavior, he is
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doing less well. There are two problems with Brill's Content . The first
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is that though the editor seems to envision a magazine that will hold the press
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accountable to a wider public, he has created one that is unlikely to interest
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anyone outside the media. The second problem is that though Brill deserves a
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Pulitzer for self-righteousness, he simply isn't a careful enough journalist
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himself to be criticizing others.
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Let's start with the magazine. After hearing it disputed
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for so many days, potential readers will be fooled into thinking something
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scintillating is going on. In fact, what will strike most people when they
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finally get their hands on Brill's Content is how boring it is. Dullness
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is a problem for media magazines in general, the prototype being the ever
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worthy, always soporific Columbia Journalism Review . CJR is
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filled with articles you'd say only people in the business could possibly want
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to read, except that they're too mundane even for people in the business. "New
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Guild contract at the Milwaukee Sentinel " is the sort of thing
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CJR does. You will find praise for that five-part series on
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Pennsylvania's neglected infrastructure, and a spank for local TV news
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directors who can't seem to put anything but crime on the air.
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Brill is hoping for an
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audience beyond the industry, but most of his magazine--the first issue,
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anyhow--amounts to little more than CJR on steroids. There's a long
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feature lauding the New York Times for its fine reporting on
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mismanagement at the Columbia/HCA health care conglomerate, and another rapping
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60 Minutes for a flawed story--aired 10 years ago--on alleged
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spontaneous acceleration in Audis. There's a "Heroes" column about the reporter
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at Chicago magazine who exposed the Beardstown Ladies for inflating the
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returns of their investment club. Seems he had to go in for sinus surgery the
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day the Wall Street Journal picked up his scoop. Crazy ... If I were a
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better person, perhaps I would read stories like this through to the end.
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What is pernicious is Brill's
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attitude that he's the only guy in the world with the guts to point out other
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people's mistakes. His maximum opus on the first three weeks of Monica Lewinsky
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scandal coverage is intended to be a devastating case study of media
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malpractice. This 24,000 word story charges reporters with just about every sin
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in the book, and commits most of them itself. Here are 10 journalistic no-nos
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that stand out in Brill's piece:
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1)
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Overhyping to the Point of Dishonesty
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Brill
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contends the press has allowed itself to be used by Starr to make Clinton look
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guilty. But to prove that Starr has leaked grand jury information to the
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media--which, by the way, Brill doesn't do--is not to demonstrate that
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journalists have been irresponsible. By my reading, Brill does not document a
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single error of fact made in the national publications he analyzes--the New
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York Times , the Washington Post , Time , and
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Newsweek --and he presents only a few cases in which any of them even
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misplayed a story in a significant way. He ignores the tough coverage Starr has
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received. To conclude, as Brill does, that the press is now "an institution
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being corrupted to its core" wildly overreaches the evidence he presents.
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2)
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Misquotation
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Susan
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Schmidt, a Washington Post reporter, claims she did not tell Brill that
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she "heard from Starr's office something about Vernon Jordan and coaching a
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witness." The quote is damaging because it implies Schmidt revealed the
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identity of an anonymous source. For another example from a nonjournalist who
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claims plausibly to have been misquoted by Brill, see "Chatterbox." We cannot know for sure who is right, because Brill
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did not tape-record his interviews.
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3)
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Self-Contradiction
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Later in
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the piece, Brill writes that Schmidt and another reporter "declined all comment
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on their sources." Well, did she or didn't she?
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4)
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Distortion
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Brill
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accuses Newsweek of suppressing critical exculpatory information about
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Clinton in its initial story published online. He cites a passage in the Linda
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Tripp tapes in which Tripp asks Lewinsky if the president knows she is going to
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lie in her upcoming deposition in the Paula Jones case. Lewinsky answers "No."
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Michael Isikoff, the Newsweek reporter whom Brill criticizes, notes,
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first, that the full exchange is equivocal--Lewinsky also tells Tripp the
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president doesn't think she is going to tell the truth. Second, the
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Newsweek online story stated that the tapes offer "no clear evidence" to
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support or undermine Tripp's allegations. And third, in the issue it published
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the following Monday, Newsweek included the full excerpt--which is where
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Brill found the out-of-context quote he claims Newsweek ignored.
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5)
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Neglecting Contradictory Evidence
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In
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building his case that much of the information could have come only from Starr,
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Brill ignores a highly plausible alternative explanation: Most if not all could
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have come from the lawyers of various witnesses sympathetic to the president.
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Lawyers for the Clintons, Betty Currie, White House steward Bayani Nelvis, and
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others are operating under what is called a "joint defense agreement." They
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pool data about what their clients have told Starr's grand jury. This means
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there are lots of lawyers with access to information about what various
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witnesses said and a variety of motivations to leak that information. Noting
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this possibility isn't just a matter of fairness--it's an issue of basic
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intellectual honesty.
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6) Giving
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Only One Side of an Argument
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Brill
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asserts that leaks from Starr's office were obviously illegal. "There are court
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decisions," he writes, "that have ruled explicitly that leaking information
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about prospective witnesses who might testify at a grand jury, or about
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expected testimony, or about negotiations regarding immunity for testimony, or
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[about] the strategy of a grand jury proceeding all fall within the criminal
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prohibition." Nowhere does he note court decisions that have ruled the
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opposite, or acknowledge that the question is far from settled.
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7)
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Faking Scoops
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Almost
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all the criticism of the press in Brill's piece is familiar, much of it to the
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point of cliché. Items about "witnesses" retracted by the Dallas Morning
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News and the Wall Street Journal Web edition have been endlessly
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hashed over. So have various nuances that Brill presents as revelatory. Both
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the Washington Post and
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Slate
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, for instance, have reported
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that the source for the erroneous Dallas Morning News item about a
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Secret Service witness was Joseph DiGenova. Brill reinvents the wheel in this
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way numerous times. And while we're at it, is it really a revelation that Starr
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talks to reporters? At televised press conferences he has held in Little Rock,
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he can be seen calling on journalists by their first names, suggesting that he
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knows some of them pretty well and that he doesn't regard this as a secret.
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8)
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Sabotage Through Blind Quotes
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Defending
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the New York Times story on Currie, "one Times reporter" is
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quoted by Brill as saying that "this was not some Sue Schmidt jam job." Schmidt
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is the reporter covering the Whitewater-Lewinsky beat for the Washington
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Post . To allow her competitors to snipe at her under cover of anonymity
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seems exactly the sort of thing Brill started his magazine to nail other
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journalists for doing. And what's a "jam job," anyway?
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9)
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Conflict of Interest
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Howard Kurtz reports in the
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Washington Post this week that Brill and his wife donated $2,000 to the
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Clinton-Gore campaign in 1996. Most publications forbid journalists from making
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campaign contributions, certainly to people they're writing about. But whether
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or not Brill thinks such a prohibition makes sense--I look forward to 20,000
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words on the topic in a future issue of Brill's Content --he should have
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disclosed this fact, as he acknowledged when busted.
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Don't get
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me wrong. Reporters, especially TV reporters, have been far from blameless in
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Flytrap. In the heat of competition, stories have run that shouldn't have. But
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the best reporters covering the scandal have done an extremely good job in a
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vexing and unfamiliar situation. At times, they have behaved almost heroically.
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When first offered a chance to listen to the Tripp tapes, Isikoff refused,
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passing up what might have been the scoop of the decade out of concern that
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doing so would put him in an ethically compromised situation. Brill disparages
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these compunctions, noting that Isikoff had to run off to "CNBC, where he was a
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paid Clinton sex scandal pundit." Actually, Isikoff notes, it was MSNBC, where
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he was under contract to discuss the campaign finance scandal. That makes
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10) Errors of Fact . But more to the point, is there anybody who thinks
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that Steve Brill, back before he was a press scold, would have passed up the
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chance to hear those tapes?
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Steven Brill .
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If you
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missed the link to Slate 's Chatterbox, where a nonjournalist claims he
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was misquoted by Brill in the "Pressgate" piece, click here.
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