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I was so excited reading this post by Jay Rosen, I wanted to get up and dance around the room. I have been puzzling and mulling and aching for some semblance, beyond the wonderful progressive/liberal blogs that I read, of real thoughtful courageous reporting. At least now someone is talking about it.
Mister ombudsman, I have a wish for NPR. The wish is that it will someday permit its reporters in comparable situations to level with their listeners by saying: "Having investigated this and talked to a lot of people, having done the reporting and thought about it a lot, I would like to share with you some of the conclusions I have come to. I do not present them as facts. For they are not facts. Nor do they represent the position of NPR. As you know, NPR doesn't take positions. Rather, these are my own takeaways, an NPR reporter's "key lessons learned," the conclusions I feel most strongly about, because they came through so powerfully in my reporting. Here, then, is what I think I know about this story, after thoroughly investigating it. You are welcome-indeed, you are encouraged-to argue with me. And I could be wrong. But fair warning: I have reasons for saying what I am about to say...."
There is no such thing as objectivity.
* There is such thing as fairness.
* But everyone sees everything through their own filter. Acknowledge that, let it liberate you. Let it regulate you.
* We are not guided by political identification, by ideology or dogma. But every decision we make, from what to cover to how to cover it, is made through our own subjective judgments.
* We are guided by an ability to be transparent and independent, to clearly assess what's going on in our community and have the courage to plainly state the truth.
Don't be boring. People don't spend their free time on boring things.