After Donald Trump's rant at BuzzFeed and CNN at his news conference last week, there were calls for the news media to unite against the president-elect's bullying. The theory was that if we don't present a united front, Trump will outflank reporters who have legitimate questions by signaling them out for abuse.
"United we stand, divided we fall" is a nice sentiment, but I trip over the particulars. Who is the "we" in that statement? Is it the weak, sad lamestream media of Trump's tweets? Is it the brash web newcomers like BuzzFeed and Huffington Post? Does it include the bloggers who regularly write and rant on politics and public policy? Should it include news sources with their own political slant, such as FOX, MSNBC and the Breitbart News Network?
For me, it is not a philosophical issue. It's a question I have to deal with as a teacher of journalism at Bryn Mawr College. My students are the very definition of modern media consumers. They are cafeteria consumers: picking and choosing what information to ingest from myriad sources.
In class, I don't even try to define the maze that is today's news media. I have found it more useful to define what journalism is. For this I draw on a book called "The Elements of Journalism" by Bill Kovach and Tom Rosenstiel, veterans of the New York Times and Los Angeles Times, respectively, who went on to work in journalism research and advocacy.
At the beginning of the new century, Kovach and Rosenstiel, in assessing the emerging (and chaotic) media environment, gathered fellow journalists, academics and others to try to get a handle on journalism. They had a feeling that journalists had grown uncertain about their status and their mission.
They emerged from this process with a clear message: Best not to concentrate on the medium, but the product. They were humble enough not to take on journalism globally, but just America. Their findings can be expressed in this definition:
American journalism is independent, fact-based, verified reporting that serves the public.
Each word has a deeper meaning. For instance, I usually have a large cadre of international students take my class — students from China, Pakistan, India and Russia, to name a few countries. To them, independent means not state-owned or controlled. Closer to home, it means reporting that is not ideologically or politically driven or, more mundanely, based on selling your soul to a politician or a publicist to get access.