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Two weeks ago, the Washington Post announced with much fanfare that it was hiring Sally Buzbee to be the newspaper’s new editor. Arguably the second most important newspaper in America, the top Post position carries with it enormous responsibility. Buzbee will soon join the Post in June after she finishes up her current position as senior vice president and executive editor at the Associated Press, the world’s largest news outlet.
But suddenly Buzbee and the AP are facing a barrage of questions after the wire service fired a young reporter, Emily Wilder, last week. She became the target of a concerted right-wing smear campaign because of Pro-Palestinian tweets she had posted in college. (Wilder is Jewish.)
The episode is not only troubling for the AP, it’s also a problem for the Post, as it prepares for Buzbee’s arrival. The last thing the paper wanted during this key transition period, which followed an extensive, high-profile search for a new leader, was to be grappling with doubts about Buzbee’s leadership. But after watching the Winter debacle unfold last week at the AP, it’s impossible to not question the editor’s newsroom guidance. Post reporters must be wondering how many of them will soon be thrown under the bus by management if GOP activists target them with bogus claims of “bias.”
The stunning termination of Wilder came just 16 days after the Stanford University graduate was hired. Her AP bosses told her she had violated the company’s social media policy, although they would not detail how. Her college tweets became newsworthy when conservative news outlets, including Federalist, Washington Free Beacon, and Fox News, began highlighting them and accusing AP of having an anti-Israel bias. Note that the entry-level Wilder was working out of the AP’s Arizona bureau and her journalism output had nothing to do with the Middle East.
Wilder was initially assured that her previous tweets were not a problem and that the AP would stand by her, but was subsequently fired. The move came just days after the AP’s bureau in Gaza was bombed by the Israeli military as part of the May fighting that erupted in the Middle East. The Israeli government insisted the building housed Hamas operatives, but has not provided definitive proof in order to justify leveling the AP building. Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) pointed to Wilder’s employment and tweeted, “Not a surprise from a media organization that shared office space with Hamas." He also suggested the AP colluded with Hamas and allowed reporters to be used as “human shields.”
It’s clear the AP found itself in the middle of a contentious, international national standoff when the Wilder story, and the manufactured claims of bias, began to gain traction. Rather than defend its targeted reporter, AP caved to the right-wing mob, thereby encouraging to take aim at more journalists in the future.
“It feels like AP folded to the ridiculous demands and cheap bullying of organizations and individuals,” Wilder said. “What future does it promise to aspiring reporters that an institution like The Associated Press would sacrifice those with the least power to the cruel trolling of a group of anonymous bullies?” she asked.
Added Columbia Journalism School professor, Emily Bell, “If news organizations cave in to pressure from bad faith campaigns, if they cancel workplace contracts on the basis of student activism or errors of judgment, then the field will miss out on some great reporters. Newsrooms are too often unprepared for this predictable onslaught.”
The whole sordid chapter represents a black eye for the AP and raises real questions about its leadership.
Whether Buzbee directly ordered Wilder’s firing is unclear. But Buzbee is a high ranking executive of the news operation and everyone there must have known terminating Wilder would generate lots of news. More significantly, Buzbee has remained silent as the controversy has escalated and the AP has been widely denounced within journalism circles for giving in to disingenuous, right-wing trolls who aren’t seeking fairness, but instead want media scalps as trophies.
It was clearly Wilder’s college tweets that prompted AP’s review of her online content. But in justifying her firing, the AP insists she was fired "for violations of AP’s social media policy” for tweets posted this year.
None of this is believable and it all reflects poorly on the AP. If the Associated Press did have a problem with a new hire regarding a tweet or two, the normal course of action would be for an editor to counsel that person and warn them about the social media policy. It’s completely irrational to fire someone hired just 16 days earlier because of a minor social media guidelines transgression.
It’s obvious the AP did not want to defend Wilder and did not want to do battle with bogus GOP allegations, so the wire service took the cowardly way out.
And soon, the AP’s executive editor will be taking over the Washington Post newsroom.
📺 GOOD STUFF:
Last month I wrote about the need for CNN to cut ties with Republican commentator Rick Santorum after his racist comments about how white European colonists miraculously created this nation out of whole cloth: "We birthed a nation from nothing.”
Over the weekend, CNN terminated Santorum’s contract.
From HuffPost:
But on Saturday, a CNN senior executive told HuffPost that the network quietly ended its contract with Santorum this week. This executive, who requested anonymity to speak openly, said the decision to cut ties with Santorum came after he went on one of the network’s shows, “Cuomo Prime Time,” to explain himself shortly after he made his racist comments. He blew it, said this executive, and after that, nobody at the network wanted to keep him around.
👨🏻🌾 FUN STUFF — BECAUSE WE ALL NEED A BREAK
Alan Jackson, “Where the Cottonwood Grows”
I’ve joked here before that in my previous life I think I was a farmer and have rural roots running through my bones, as the only way to explain my lifelong affection for country music.
This latest from Jackson, who has posted 30-plus No. 1 country songs over his career and who just released his first album in six years, instantly puts a smile on my face. It’s a simple, upbeat, two-stop ditty about the joys of young love along a riverbank. A little fiddle here, a little steel guitar there, and Jackson’s honeydew voice produces an instant “repeat” candidate for me.
I can still recall the words you said
And the plans we dreamed as we looked ahead
But the fork in the river took us separate ways
As the years went by, I can't forget those days
🎙 Click here to listen to the music that’s been featured on PRESS RUN, via a Spotify playlist.
Click hereto listen via Apple Music.
Why would anyone take their cues from Tom Cotton?
When I was living in San Jose, CA, The Associated Press CEO/President Dean Singleton bought the multiple Pulitzer Prize-winning San Jose Mercury News from McClatchy (in the strange leveraged buy-out of Knight-Ridder).The Merc took a hard-right nose-dive, former award-winning journalists fled and/or were purged. The paper today is a faint echo of its prior self, stripped of assets and no longer housed in San Jose or even Santa Clara County; they even stripped the “San Jose” out of the title.
What I’m getting at is that the AP has all the same systemic problems as the rest of the media: it is as aligned with conservative politics as it’s CEO is. As one friend who used to work at the Merc told me, “the fish rots from the head."
Apparently, it's not enough to be Jewish, you also have to kiss Netanyahu's ass or be accused of being anti-Israel. Having pro-Palestinian views doesn't automatically mean you're anti-Israel, though you would never get that impression listening to anyone in this country, in seems. Having criticisms for Netanyahu's government doesn't automatically make you anti-Semitic, either.
I’ve been gratified that some pro Israeli Dems are criticizing Netanyahu for his cruel policies and the cravenness of his over sized ego, at the same time supporting the equity and quality of life issues of the Palestinians. This is a shift from the hard right sensibilities of AIPAC to J Street, imo. It’s also great to have a Palestinian in the Congress! Finally, a living, breathing representative from the other side, Rashida Tlaib. Ironic to me that each cause is a mirror image of the other.
Totally off topic but need to get it off my chest. MSNBC’s Andrea Mitchell, who I generally respect, made this former guy - like comment on the air last week, “they’re saying Biden was caught ‘flat footed’” when Israel and Hamas were bombing one another. No he wasn’t. If the reporter doesn’t know for sure, keep your mouth shut. Quiet diplomacy behind the scenes worked. Andrea didn’t have the scoop right, and hasn’t yet taken responsibility for being wrong.
oh agreed. reporters really have little idea what goes on behind scenes when it comes to diplomacy,
Great point, but is that a result of needing to put out "news content" 24/7? They're putting out information prior to the story actually developing to it's full conclusion. Since Biden's administration seems to be operating at a high level, that means they are going to take their time to go through the proper channels.
You would think Trump was in office for longer than 4 years with the way the media now thinks the President needs to act. As if the President tweeting random thoughts and nonsense for 4 years, often times contradicting the departments in charge of the information, was the standard way a functioning government should act.
Nothing will change while news outlets like the AP, WPO and NYT are more interested in profit than the truth. It is a sad commentary on our democracy that is dying right before our eyes. It's a given that Buzbee will continue the Dems in disarray narrative while whitewashing the chasm of the Republican Party. It was the people that got rid of Trump, gained the House and the Senate. It will be the people who decide if news is to continue in this manner. Cancel your subscriptions folks. Money is the only thing that this corptoratocracy that we live in understands.
I have been wondering about this pick. I have read previous complaints about AP reporting — like this one:
https://www.mediamatters.org/associated-press/associated-press-misses-boat-bidens-airplane-travel
oh that dreadful Biden Travel piece. ugh, so bad
sorry about the double post
I have been wondering about this pick. I have read previous complaints about AP reporting — like this one
https://www.mediamatters.org/associated-press/associated-press-misses-boat-bidens-airplane-travel
Why does the media always seem woefully unprepared and blindsided by the Right's anti-free speech/anti-press attacks? They happen all the time. No amount of placating the mob will convince them to stop. Ever. Going along to get along is complicity, pure and simple. Grow a damn spine.
sadly, bc media live in fear of GOP and "bias" attacks. they have real career implications....as Wilder can not attest
Shades of Alexi McCammond at Teen Vogue. As Lou notes, it’s all about the $$$$; no integrity, no courage. I was optimistic when Buzbee was hired not knowing much about her but figured she’d bring a woman’s sensibilities to the position. Very disappointed to learn about Wilder’s firing, particularly because of the content of her online post. Is no one allowed a position on controversial topics particularly when one is young? Gads.
my hope is that the Wilder episode was one that became so intense bc dealing w/ foreign go'vt etc that it doesn't truly reflect her leadership. but we'll see at the Post
Unfortunately, Buzzbee sounds like a perfect fit for the beltway media environment, where it's always good news for Republicans. Can't wait to hear what childish insults Trump will come up with over her name.
I think longtime readers of WaPo are concerned about the paper and it's coverage of the Biden Administration. Maybe the retirement of Marty Baron? Not sure why it's happening--but it IS happening.
Apparently the current favorable framing is that the paper rejected two white male deputies in favor of this pick. My problem there is the suggestion that the only suitable candidate worked for an arguably conservative organization, now embroiled in cancel controversy.
i'm def concerned about Post's coverage of Biden. during Trump yrs i thought it was the NYT that regularly failed. but the roles now seem to have switched
This is nothing new for the AP. Media Matters documents their Republican bias.
folks remember Ron Fournier? you're right the problem goes back a long way
Sure do remember that stenographer!
'Control of the press' Another step from Hitler's playbook. What step are we at now?
Do you know any examples of countries that have managed to defeat this kind of propaganda onslaught? I know that Finland has a decades long successful effort to teach its citizens to think critically about the information they hear, something we desperately need but that is a strategy to avoid getting to the dangerous point where we now find our country.
https://edition.cnn.com/interactive/2019/05/europe/finland-fake-news-intl/
Critical thinking IS taught in schools, at least in the northeast. I taught kindergarten kids how to think critically 40 years ago and as a Principal in MA it was an essential and universal piece in all the K - 12 curricula and part of the evaluation process for teachers. So I’m guessing you get what you pay for locally when the resources/mindset required are not seen as important and thus, critical skills are not taught. Hate to say it but not all educators think critically so how can they teach this life long skill? Civics is another story.
Of course it's not all school systems. I live in the northeast too and we have some excellent school systems with outstanding curriculums however civics has not been a part of it. But if you look nationwide, we have some dreadful school systems, especially in the south where Republican legislatures don't want to pay for education. This is why a large portion of retirees from the north move to the south because they don't want to pay for school systems since their kids are all grown up and no longer attend school. These folks don't get how good school systems, yes, that cost them more in taxes, ultimately make their home value so much higher.
My point exactly, tho I once was one of those retirees/snowbirds spending half my time in FL. Lots want their grandkids well educated. Tried to keep my liberal mouth shut when w/all those conservatives, not always successful.
It wasn't taught in the schools I attended. All the teachers cared about was having a winning football and basketball teams. They didn't care about anything else.
A problem for sure. Too many schools like yours. No argument there.
George Carlin, in one of his final pieces, humorously talked about how a critically thinking electorate is not in the best interest of Republicans. He may not have called out the party by name but you knew who he was talking about. It's true that there is a fine line between humor and tragedy. George was so ahead of the curve. I've always said at the root of our problem is the lack of critical thinking taught in our schools. A democracy is dependent on highly educated people. Dumbing down our curriculums, no longer teaching civics, has been a strategy of the Republicans for decades. Divide and conquer while keeping the people stupid.
Plus the Christian Right's insistence on pushing conservative "Christian values" at the expense of everything (and everyone) else, including the long term existence of our country.
Hear, hear! You are spot on! Oh how I miss Carlin’s intellect, wit, and insight. “Think of how stupid the average person is, then realize that half of them are stupider than that.” - George Carlin
Read This: "White Ignorance Is Bliss—and Power" in today’s Daily Beast, willful ignorance vis a vis critical thinking discussion.
Re the Alan Jackson: Also a fan and former performer of the country music, I can see 1,000 two-steppers get up for this one.
Re WaPo: If Buzzbee is involved, those in the know must come forward. It would be like dying in darkness.