Someone wants people to think he didn't actually make a mess of this interview and what we get to see is fake.
It would be intriguing to see edited Vs unedited but he will have to release the unedited version after for that to work.
Someone wants people to think he didn't actually make a mess of this interview and what we get to see is fake.
The balance is the tricky part. Not to be overtly biased one way or another is the general aim I assume, just to expound on the facts, but undoubtedly the writer's bias will always leak in. However, adding an alternative perspective to some news item that does not need it is where they open themselves for criticism. They are introducing a counter-narrative or sometimes a false equivalence where none really exists. And to be fair this is an issue far wider than the NYT.
(I'm talking about non-news pieces here and not op-eds).
Do you think there is a general lack of trust in the media or are you thinking of the US in particular?
It would be intriguing to see edited Vs unedited but he will have to release the unedited version after for that to work.
It would be intriguing to see edited Vs unedited but he will have to release the unedited version after for that to work.
Quite possibly. Doesn't make it any less an interesting comparison.Accusing the edited version of being dodgy before it's even released is a sure sign he's totally fudged the interview. That and he stormed out half way through.
Someone wants people to think he didn't actually make a mess of this interview and what we get to see is fake.
A master of the pregnant pauseGreat speech by Obama this evening. Completely deconstructed Trump’s charade of a presidency.
It would be intriguing to see edited Vs unedited but he will have to release the unedited version after for that to work.
I read that earlier. No punches pulled.
The NYT is a strange cat. I keep a subscription going as some of the reporting is incredible, but they just as easily pump out ridiculous puff pieces regarding this current US administration which is hard to square with their investigative reporting.
Different editors or how are they structured (you being an eye tea kay)?
The opinionists are normally fully separate from the newsroom, at least in a newspaper of NY Times' size. I doubt the barriers are watertight even there though, and often the opinion pieces are based on reporting (like this particular editorial is a very good example of). So in a way you could argue the regular reporters set the premise for the opinionists, which they've certainly done with their reporting on Trump.
Being a regular journalist you obviously have to adhere to certain standards of fact checking and balance in your reporting, while opinionists can present more personal, one sided views.
In my experience the public have a hard time separating opinion pieces and regular journalism, which I think is a contributing reason for a general lack of trust in the media.