One thing that old-school journalists seem to have stuck in their heads is this idea that the news is a lofty, high-minded organization that tells readers what they should think about. Take this fuddy-duddy, and 35-year veteran of the business:
His name is Mark Whicker. He's a sports columnist for the Orange County Register. And he doesn't get why so many people were offended by his most recent attempt at journalism. And he doesn't actually care.
Whicker has been getting flack ever since the OCR published a column in which he informs a woman kidnapped, raped and held prisoner for 18 years of all the unimportant sports-related happenings she missed out on while she was squirreled away in the backyard of a sex offender.
Then Whicker writes an unapologetic apology in which he expresses his failure to understand what was so offensive about making light of the woman's horrific experience as a segue into a column about nothing.
He apologizes not for the content of the column, but for its disconnecting effect with long-time readers of the OCR. Clearly this expresses the fact that he does not get why his column was the most distasteful thing anybody's read in a long time.
Whicker goes on to tell Poynter Institute reporter Mallory Jean Tenore that the only reason so many people were disgusted was because of the Internet. Well, welcome to the world we write in Mr. Whicker. Lots of people have access to your disappointing work and they will tell everyone they know if its bad enough. It's the way of the modern world.
What I don't understand about Whicker's responses is how obvious it is that he still doesn't get it. What's so wrong with using a real person's personal tragedy as a jumping off point for a column about the last 18 years in sports?
Looking from an ethical standpoint, let's begin with the simplest question: How many are harmed and how many are helped? The content potentially harmed the woman and her family while the content helped Whicker gain notoriety. Should journalists publish something for personal gain? Uh, no.
What benefit was there in crafting his column around this woman's awful experience? You know, I'm having a hard time with this one.
Those two questions right there should have stopped this man from writing the column in the first place. But he's so out of touch he can't even see what the problem is. Young journalists all over the U.S. are looking at this guy to be fired or voluntarily resign, his words were so offensive and his "regret" so insincere.
Move over buddy, it's time to make room for someone who remembers their ethics classes. I say Mr. Whicker should revisit the Society of Professional Journalists' Code of Ethics. I think minimizing harm and being accountable are especially worth review.
Thursday, September 10, 2009
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