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Ex-NPR Capital Hill reporter: I was lied to daily

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  • Ex-NPR Capital Hill reporter: I was lied to daily

    From the Department of It's Not Exactly Breaking News...

    http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0812/79998.html

    By PATRICK GAVIN | 8/22/12 2:44 PM EDT Updated: 8/23/12 1:42 PM EDT

    After 14 years at National Public Radio, Andrea Seabrook left in July and, to hear her talk about her experience covering Capitol Hill, it’s clear that she had one takeaway: It’s damn frustrating.

    “I realized that there is a part of covering Congress, if you’re doing daily coverage, that is actually sort of colluding with the politicians themselves because so much of what I was doing was actually recording and playing what they say or repeating what they say,” Seabrook told POLITICO. “And I feel like the real story of Congress right now is very much removed from any of that, from the sort of theater of the policy debate in Congress, and it has become such a complete theater that none of it is real. … I feel like I am, as a reporter in the Capitol, lied to every day, all day. There is so little genuine discussion going on with the reporters. … To me, as a reporter, everything is spin.”

    As a result, Seabrook is trying to do something about it. Her new project is DecodeDC, a website that will feature Seabrook’s blog posts and podcasts that aim to “decipher Washington’s Byzantine language and procedure, sweeping away what doesn’t matter so listeners can focus on what does.”

    “We need to stop coddling lawmakers, stop buying their red team, blue team narrative and ask harder questions of them,” Seabrook says in an introductory audio clip.Turns out plenty of people agree with her, including SoundCloud, which granted Seabrook’s project a fellowship to support her work.

    ”I am going to try to focus myself on the stories that none of the other reporters have time to cover,” she said. “NPR would have loved to have had any of these stories. .. The problem is, as a modern, esteemed news organization, NPR also feels that it needs to cover the daily news and the daily news as currently defined is what happened on the floor today, what’s the big debate in Congress, what’s your government doing. And I completely understand that. But our staff is so small on the Hill that it was impossible for me to do more than a story once in a while that agreed with how I felt it should be covered.”

    Seabrook’s confident that, even though she left behind an established news organization, “the media environment we’re in makes it very easy for me to leave and say there are so many means of distribution these days that really what matters is content, and if I can make great content than everything else will fall into place.” Seabrook says that a lot of public radio stations have already expressed an interest in airing her reports and stories.

    And she’s not out to malign those colleagues on the Hill still tracking down the day’s news.

    “There’s a lot of great work being done,” said Seabrook. “I think the problem is the Congress itself. And we’re all in the same positions, scrambling to figure out how the hell to cover these a*sholes.”
    Last edited by Slimprofits; August 23, 2012, 03:58 PM.

  • #2
    Re: Ex-NPR Capital Hill reporter: I was lied to daily

    I'm crushed . . . crushed . . . my belief in the system has been . . . I can't put it into words . . . .

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Ex-NPR Capital Hill reporter: I was lied to daily

      Please try to contain your sarcasm.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Ex-NPR Capital Hill reporter: I was lied to daily

        I'm happy to see any sign, no matter how faint, that a strong and effective press might come back to the U.S.

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        • #5
          Re: Ex-NPR Capital Hill reporter: I was lied to daily

          Originally posted by thriftyandboringinohio View Post
          I'm happy to see any sign, no matter how faint, that a strong and effective press might come back to the U.S.
          +1 even a small first step is better than none. I'll be interested to see what she comes up with.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Ex-NPR Capital Hill reporter: I was lied to daily

            ...If you’re doing daily coverage, that is actually sort of colluding with the politicians themselves because so much of what I was doing was actually recording and playing what they say or repeating what they say.

            Seabrook mentioned reporters and not also industry leaders, but this is related. Seabrook is in innocent who's own personal mission was the exact opposite of some of her colleagues.

            Project SHAME: Shame the Hacks who abuse Media Ethics

            Adam Davidson’s Journalistic Corruption: NPR Host Boosts for Wall Street, While Taking Undisclosed Banking Money
            By Yasha Levine and Mark Ames • Aug 8, 2012 •

            Adam Davidson is the co-creator and host of the popular economic news radio program Planet Money. On air, Davidson plays the role of an earnest, brainy reporter who’s doing his best to make sense of the complicated, jargon-filled world of finance to report business news in a way that NPR listeners can understand. However, behind the dweeby, faux-naive facade Adam Davidson presents to his listeners is a shrewd propagandist with a long, consistent history of shilling for powerful and destructive interests—and failing to disclose his financial ties to the companies and industries he reports on.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Ex-NPR Capital Hill reporter: I was lied to daily

              wonder if she'll pursue this one now that she's 'free' . . .

              NPR ran a sappy story yesterday about Bank of America donating foreclosed homes, which got a critical response in their comment section. Here’s a representative sample of the comments:


              This was a poorly researched, uncritical story by NPR. Why is it good thing to dispossess 2500 families from their homes and then give the houses to people deemed more needy by BofA? And why didn’t NPR mention that BofA acknowledged employing people who legally attested to the accuracy of foreclosure documents without reading them; and reached a multi-million dollar settlement with the Justice department for illegally foreclosing on military service members?

              The story really facilitated the “camo-washing” efforts by the banks to improve their public image. The story focuses on Bank of America’s donation of 2,500 homes over the next two years, mostly to Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans. But it leaves out a number of key details. First, it never mentions what the commenter says above, that BofA was one of several banks cited for illegally foreclosing on service members while they were deployed overseas, leading to a large settlement which included the donation of homes to veterans. That means that this action has nothing to do with a generous spirit but acts as the fulfillment of an obligation.

              But it gets worse. The foreclosure fraud settlement, also referenced above, included a system of “credits” for banks to pay off their penalties. One of the ways banks could get that credit is by… donating homes. So it’s entirely possible that they are getting credit for two separate settlements with the government by donating homes to veterans; both the foreclosure fraud settlement and the settlement on violations of the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act.

              The punchline is this: banks always donate some stock of homes as a matter of routine. It is meant to generate positive headlines like the one NPR gave them yesterday. If BofA didn’t have a settlement obligation to fulfill, they would still donate homes. And so the idea that donating homes represents a penalty just shows you how toothless the settlements really are. But BofA has managed to figure out how they can kill two of their settlement birds with one stone.

              But NPR completely missed the boat on that, preferring to buy the PR that BofA sold them.

              http://news.firedoglake.com/2012/08/...eclosed-homes/

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Ex-NPR Capital Hill reporter: I was lied to daily

                After Watergate I noticed a trend whereby reporters simply reported what they were told, without any investigation into the veracity of what they were told.

                The spirit of "Question Authority" is now being demonstrated by internet bloggers, not MSM reporters.

                Be kinder than necessary because everyone you meet is fighting some kind of battle.

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