Journalistic scandal

Journalism scandals are high-profile incidents or acts, whether intentional or accidental, that run contrary to the generally accepted ethics and standards of journalism, or otherwise violate the 'ideal' mission of journalism: to report news events and issues accurately and fairly.

As the investigative and reporting face of the media, journalists are usually required to follow various journalistic standards. These may be written and codified, or customary expectations. Typical standards include references to honesty, avoiding journalistic bias, demonstrating responsibility, striking an appropriate balance between privacy and public interest, shunning financial or romantic[1][2] conflict of interest, and choosing ethical means to obtain information.

Journalistic scandals are public scandals arising from incidents where in the eyes of some party, these standards were significantly breached. In most journalistic scandals, deliberate or accidental acts take place that run contrary to the generally accepted ethics and standards of journalism, or otherwise violate the 'ideal' mission of journalism: to report news events and issues accurately and fairly.

Common characteristics

Journalistic scandals include: plagiarism, fabrication, and omission of information; activities that violate the law, or violate ethical rules; the altering or staging of an event being documented; or making substantial reporting or researching errors with the results leading to libelous or defamatory statements.

All journalistic scandals have the common factor that they call into question the integrity and truthfulness of journalism. These scandals shift public focus and scrutiny onto the media itself. Because credibility is journalism's main currency, many news agencies and mass media outlets have strict codes of conduct and enforce them, and use several layers of editorial oversight to catch problems before stories are distributed.

However, in some cases, investigations later found that long-established journalistic checks and balances in the newsrooms failed. In some cases, senior editors fail to catch bias, libel, or fabrication inserted into a story by a reporter. In other cases, the checks and balances were omitted in the rush to get an important, 'breaking' news story to press (or on air). Furthermore, in many libel and defamation cases, the publication would have had full support of editorial oversight in case of yellow journalism.

See also

Name Role Outlet
Mitch AlbomcolumnistDetroit Free Press
Mike BarniclecolumnistBoston Globe
Christine Bersola-BabaoFilipino broadcast journalist
Jayson BlairjournalistThe New York Times
Rick BraggjournalistThe New York Times
Joan Juliet BuckjournalistVogue
Janet CookejournalistThe Washington Post
Mike DaiseycontributorPublic Radio International's This American Life
Ben DomenechbloggerThe Washington Post
Kevin DeutschjournalistThe New York Daily News
Walter Durantyforeign correspondentNew York Times
Sabrina ErdelyreporterRolling Stone
Michael FinkelreporterNew York Times
Michael GallagherjournalistCincinnati Enquirer
Michael GartnerpresidentNBC News
Stephen GlassjournalistThe New Republic
Adnan Hajj photographs controversy
Neil HarmanjournalistTimes of London
Johann HaricolumnistThe Independent
Jack KelleyjournalistUSA Today
Tom KummerSwiss journalist
Jonah LehrerjournalistThe New Yorker
Lara Loganreporter60 Minutes
Lilia LucianocorrespondentNBC News
Mary Mapesproducer60 Minutes
Judith MillerjournalistThe New York Times
Chris MortensenreporterESPN
Christopher NewtonWashington, D.C. bureau reporterAssociated Press
Gerald Posnerchief investigative reporterThe Daily Beast
Dan Ratheranchor, contributorCBS Evening News,60 Minutes II
Ruth ShalitjournalistThe New Republic
Patricia SmithjournalistBoston Globe
Juan Thompsonreporterwebsite The Intercept
Takashi UesugiJapanese journalist
Gary WebbreporterSan Jose Mercury News
Margaret WentejournalistToronto Globe and Mail
Brian WilliamsanchorNBC Nightly News
Fareed ZakariaeditorForeign Affairs

Notes

  1. JOE POMPEO (28 June 2018). ""EVERY BONE IN MY BODY WANTS TO DEFEND ALI WATKINS": SEX, PRESS FREEDOM, AND THE COMPLICATED CASE OF A TIMES REPORTER". Vanity Fair. Retrieved 6 July 2018. [S]taff members who develop close relationships with people who might figure in coverage they provide, edit, package, or supervise must disclose those relationships to the standards editor, the associate managing editor for news administration, or the deputy editorial page editor. In some cases, no further action may be needed. But in other instances staff members may have to recuse themselves from certain coverage. And in still other cases, assignments may have to be modified or beats changed. In a few instances, a staff member may have to move to a different department—from business and financial news, say, to the culture desk—to avoid the appearance of conflict.
  2. Lia Eustachewich (3 July 2018). "New York Times reassigns reporter in leak scandal". New York Post. Retrieved 6 July 2018. “for a reporter to have an intimate relationship with someone he or she covers is unacceptable.”
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