Writers Challenged to Spread the News: Journalism is Vital to a Free
Society
by Evelyn Cunico, Freelance Writer
Journalists must do their best to demonstrate to their fellow citizens that a free press, sustained by tens of thousands of hard-working, honest journalists is the keystone of the continued welfare of a free society. We can accomplish this crucial educational task by:
John R. McClelland, Associate Professor of Journalism, Roosevelt University,
delivered this vital message to an audience of journalists at the May 15, 2004
Mate E. Palmer Communications Awards Program sponsored by the Illinois Woman's
Press Association at the Chicago Athletic Association.
The real purpose of the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution is to give
protection from government to the people's freedoms of religion, speech, assembly,
petition, and the press. "And it is no accident that the press is the only
business thus given First Amendment protection," McClelland said.
"Credibility and the trust of readers are our most precious and fragile
assets," McClelland told his audience. "It is up to us to help our
fellow citizens see that, although our field is far from perfect, the journalism
profession is vitally important to our society."
As different types of media have proliferated, the public has come to see all
media as the same, with no distinction between conscientious journalism, on
the one hand, and huckster glitz, on the other, according to McClelland. People
often are not aware that there are many different types of media, with different
objectives and different ways of attaining those objectives. For example, many
persons do not know the difference between fantasy tabloids, like The National
Enquirer, and conscientious newspapers, like the The New York Times,
or Chicago's metro dailies, at their best.
According to McClelland, our fellow citizens often do not distinguish between
"reality TV," and gritty reality on TV. Many persons believe that
"infotainment" and information are one and the same.
Trends in newspaper journalism, which base priorities on improving the quarterly
bottom line, have widened information gaps among the general citizenry. For
example, "resources are shifted from vital services, such as reporting
on state government, to profitable news products, such as descriptions of trendy
fashions in new-home design," said McClelland.
The trend toward one-newspaper towns, following mergers or hard economic times,
has eroded community awareness of current events. Reductions in news staffs
have affected not only school beats and other local community services, but
also statehouses and foreign news bureaus.
"Online news is not yet as easy to handle as paper, and it does a poor
job of giving visible priority ranking of material via placement and headline
size," noted McClelland. "The Internet is vast and can be easily searched.
Alarming, however, is the finding that many citizens are gullible about electronic
information that does not carry credible attribution."
"There will always be a need for solid news reporting everywhere, from
the neighborhood firehouse to world capitals," McClelland said.
So, what can journalists do to help our fellow citizens see, know, and understand
events? McClelland advises that:
McClelland left us with the personal challenge to "Do your bit. Help the public to see that, journalism, however imperfect, provides a public service that is vitally important to a free society."
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