This is a quotation from the summer that, in a shortened form, reappears in a more recent blog post from Jay Rosen, a journalism professor at NYU. (I saw this today, posted to Facebook by journalist Marc Cooper.) I post this for my students:
(P)ower-seeking and truth-seeking are different behaviors, and this is what creates the distinction between politics and journalism. The work of the journalist cannot be done without a commitment to the act of reporting, which means gathering information, talking to people who know, trying to verify and clarify what actually happened and to portray the range of views as they emerge from events.
A primary commitment to reporting therefore distinguishes the work of the journalist. Declining to express a view does not. Refusing to vote does not. Pretending to be ideology-free or “objective” on everything does not. Getting attacked from both sides? Nope. But a commitment to reporting does.
As I constantly tell my students: It is about the reporting. It is only about the reporting. The reporting is what distinguishes the ideologue from the journalist.
Send me an e-mail.
Diamond truth!