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Journalism’s Trust Problem Is About Money, Not Politics

Independent 2024/10/5
Shell

Journalism faces a credi­bility crisis. Only 32% of Americans report having “a great deal” or “fair amount” of trust in news report­ing – a historical low.

Journalists generally assume that their lack of credibility is a result of what people believe to be reporters’ and editors’ political bias. So they believe the key to improving public trust is to ban­ish any traces of political bias from their reporting.

That explains why newsroom leaders routinely advocate for maintaining “objectivity” as a journalistic value and admonish journalists for sharing their own opinions on social media.

The underlying assumption is straightforward: News organiza­tions are struggling to maintain public trust because journalists keep giving people reasons to dis­trust the people who bring them the news. Newsroom managers appear to believe that if the pub­lic perceives their journalists as politically neutral, objectively minded reporters, they will be more likely to trust – and perhaps even pay for – the journalism they produce.

Yet, a study I recently pub­lished with journalism scholars Seth Lewis and Brent Cowley in Journalism, a scholarly pub­lication, suggests this path of distrust stems from an entirely different problem.

Drawing on 34 Zoom-based interviews with adults repre­senting a cross-section of age, political leaning, socioeconomic status and gender, we found that people’s distrust of journalism does not stem from fears of ideo­logical brainwashing. Instead, it stems from assumptions that the news industry as a whole values profits above truth or public ser­vice.

The Americans we inter­viewed believe that news orga­nizations report the news inac­curately not because they want to persuade their audiences to support specific political ideol­ogies, candidates or causes, but rather because they simply want to generate larger audiences — and therefore larger profits.

Commercial Interests Undermine Trust

The business of journalism depends primarily on audience attention. News organizations make money from this attention indirectly, by profiting off the ad­vertisements – historically print and broadcast, now increasingly digital – that accompany news stories. They also monetize this attention directly, by charging au­diences for subscriptions to their offerings.

Many news organizations pur­sue revenue models that combine both of these approaches, despite serious concerns about the like­lihood of either leading to finan­cial stability.

Although news organizations depend on revenue to survive, journalism as a profession has long maintained a “firewall” be­tween its editorial decisions and business interests. One of jour­nalism’s long-standing values is that journalists should cover whatever they want without wor­rying about the financial implica­tions for their news organization. NPR’s Ethics Handbook, for ex­ample, states that “the purpose of our firewall is to hold in check the influence our funders have over our journalism.”

What does this look like in practice? It means that jour­nalists at the Washington Post should, according to these prin­ciples, feel encouraged to pur­sue investigative reporting into Amazon despite the fact that the newspaper is owned by Amazon founder and executive chairman Jeff Bezos.

While the effectiveness of this firewall in the real world is far from assured, its existence as a principle within the profession suggests that many working journalists pride themselves on following the story wherever it leads, regardless of its financial ramifications for their organiza­tion.

Yet despite the importance of this principle to journalists, the people we interviewed seemed unaware of its importance – in­deed, its very existence.

Bias Toward Profits

The people we spoke with tend­ed to assume that news organi­zations made money primarily through advertising instead of also from subscribers. That led many to believe that news orga­nizations are pressured to pursue large audiences so that they can generate more advertising reve­nue.

Consequently, many of the people interviewed described journalists as being enlisted in an ongoing, never-ending strug­gle to capture public attention in an incredibly crowded media environment.

“If you don’t get a certain num­ber of views, you’re not making enough money,” said one of our interviewees, “and then that doesn’t end well for the company.”

People we spoke with tended to agree that journalism is biased, and assumed that such bias exists for profit-oriented rather than strictly ideologically oriented reasons. Some see a convergence in these reasons.

“[Journalists] get money from various support groups that want to see a particular agenda pushed, like George Soros,” said another interviewee. “It’s profits over journalism and over truth.”

Others we spoke with under­stood that some news organiza­tions depend primarily on their audiences for financial support in the form of subscriptions, donations or memberships. Al­though these interviewees saw news organizations’ means of generating revenue differently from those who assumed that the money mostly came from adver­tising, they still described deep distrust toward the news that stemmed from concerns about the news industry’s commercial interests.

“That’s how they make mon­ey,” one person said about sub­scriptions. “They want to entice you with a different version of the news that is not, I personally believe, overall going to be accu­rate. They get you to pay for that and – poof – you’re a sucker.”

Misplaced Concern About Bias

In light of these findings, it ap­pears that journalists’ concerns that they must defend themselves against accusations of ideologi­cal bias might be misplaced.

Many news organizations have pursued efforts at transparency as an overarching approach to earning public trust, with the im­plicit goal being to demonstrate that they are doing their work with integrity and free from any ideological bias.

Since 2020, for example, The New York Times has maintained a “Behind the Journalism” page that describes how the newspa­per’s reporters and editors ap­proach everything, from when they use anonymous sources to how they confirm breaking crime news and how they are covering the Israel-Hamas War. The Wash­ington Post similarly began main­taining a “Behind the Story” page in 2022.

Yet these displays do not ad­dress the chief cause for concern among the people we interviewed: the influence of profit-chasing on journalistic work.

Instead of worrying quite so much about perceptions of jour­nalists’ political biases, it might be more beneficial for newsroom managers to shift their energies to pushing back against percep­tions of economic bias.

Perhaps a more effective demonstration of transparency would focus less on how journal­ists do their jobs and more on how news organizations’ finan­cial concerns are kept separate from evaluations of journalists’ work.

Cable News As A Stand-In

The people we interviewed also often appeared to conflate televi­sion news with other forms of news production, such as print, digital and radio. And there is ample evidence that television news managers do indeed appear to privilege profits over journal­istic integrity.

“It may not be good for Amer­ica, but it’s damn good for CBS,” said CBS chairman Leslie Moonves of the massive cover­age of then-presidential candi­date Donald Trump in 2016. “The money’s rolling in.”

With that in mind, perhaps dis­cussions about improving trust in journalism could begin by ac­knowledging the extent to which the public’s skepticism toward the media is well-founded – or, at the very least, by more explicitly distinguishing between different kinds of news production.

In short, people are skeptical of the news and distrustful of journalists, not because they think journalists want to brain­wash them into voting certain ways, but because they think journalists want to make money off their attention above all else.

For journalists to seriously address the root causes of the public’s distrust in their work, they will need to acknowledge the economic nature of that distrust and reckon with their role in its perpetuation.

Jacob L. Nelson is Associate Profes­sor of Communication, University of Utah.

Culled from THE CONVERSATION (https://theconversation.com), June 26, 2024.

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