From one of the few credible voices left in journalism, commenting in a story on what media people consider to be the story of the year:
Geneva Overholser, the Curtis B. Hurley Chair in public affairs reporting, Missouri School of Journalism, Washington bureau
“This was the year when it finally became unmistakably clear that objectivity has outlived its usefulness as an ethical touchstone for journalism. The way it is currently construed, “objectivity” makes the media easily manipulable by an executive branch intent on and adept at controlling the message. It produces a rigid orthodoxy, excluding voices beyond the narrowly conventional.
“And it leads to a false balance of `on the one hand, on the other hand’ stories that make the two `hands’ appear equal even when factual weight lies 98 percent on one side. Objectivity’s most effective use today is as a cudgel in the hands of those who wish to beat up on the media.”
Good story. Go read the whole thing.



