More activism, less credibility: What CNN's defamation loss says about journalism today
"Your credibility with me ... is about none.”
Those words to CNN counsel by Judge William Henry also clearly spoke for the Florida jury which, on Friday, awarded $5 million for Navy veteran Zachary Young and approved an additional amount, still to be determined, for punitive damages.
The CNN loss is only the latest in a series of media cases that have reversed decades of case law where the media largely prevailed under highly protective legal standards. It says a great deal about the state of modern journalism and its unrelenting efforts at self-destruction.
In "The Indispensable Right," I discuss the radical shift in American journalism that occurred with the rejection of neutrality and objectivity in favor of advocacy journalism. J-schools now teach that objectivity is a dated concept. As former New York Times writer (and now Howard University journalism professor) Nikole Hannah-Jones has explained, “All journalism is activism.”
After interviewing more than 75 media leaders, Leonard Downie Jr., former Washington Post executive editor, and Andrew Heyward, former CBS News president, detailed how media leaders view neutrality and objectivity as dated concepts that inhibit social and political agendas.
The public's response to this trend has been both predictable and pronounced. The famous "Let's Go, Brandon" incident after a NASCAR race, after all, was more of a criticism of the media than of Joe Biden — a "Yankee Doodling" of the press for its distortion of facts.
Revenue and ratings for media outlets have plummeted, although........
© The Hill
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