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Introduction to Public Affairs Reporting

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... of Outrage, researched death row prisoner Anthony Medill. ... American publisher William Randolph Hearst. When a dog bites a man, that's not news. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Introduction to Public Affairs Reporting


1
Introduction to Public Affairs Reporting
  • Why do we do it?23 February 2004PAR JOURNALISM
    2004

2
Public Affairs Reporting
  • Journalism as a professional career can be
    exciting, but it isnt always safe.
  • One Tongan journalist living in New Zealand was
    jailed in 1996 for contempt of Parliament and his
    newspaper was banned for five months in 2003.
  • Several journalists in Australia were jailed or
    fined in the 1990s for contempt of court for
    refusing to divulge sources.
  • In Queensland, two journalists went before the
    courts in 2000 and could have been jailed for
    interviewing prisoners without permission.

3
Public Affairs Reporting
  • According to RSF, 25 journalists were killed in
    2002 because of their work, at least 692 were
    arrested and 1420 were physically assaulted or
    threatened.
  • 389 media outlets were censored.
  • On 1 January 2003, 118 journalists were in
    prison.
  • One of the most publicised murders of a
    journalist happened in 1996 when Irish reporter
    Veronica Guerin was assassinated on behalf of
    drug dealers she had been investigating.
  • Remote? Personal experience.

4
Public Affairs Reporting
5
Public Affairs Reporting
  • Reporting involves two vital skills gathering
    news and writing it.
  • Ideally, a reporter will have a good measure of
    both.
  • In reality, it isnt uncommon for a reporter to
    be adept at writing, but be a poor news gatherer.
  • Alternatively, she or he may be a magnet for news
    and information but not so gifted at writing.
  • Broadly speaking, news gathering is more valued
    than news writing.
  • On deadline, the news exec prefers the gatherer.

6
Public Affairs Reporting
  • News is NOT found in the newsroom.
  • News is also NOT found on the internet.
  • News is found on the footpath, in boardrooms, in
    public records and even in the pubs.
  • Good reporters have many contacts, professional
    and social. They will talk to ANYONE.
  • As professional observers, they see differences
    whereas others see similarities.
  • Some journalists have the insights and ability to
    break through agendas with new angles into
    running news stories that stir people!

7
Public Affairs Reporting
  • An example of this is John Pilger.
    An Australian journalist based in the
    UK for many years, he has been an
    investigative reporter who has broken new ground
    on many stories such as Pol Pots genocide in
    Kampuchea (now Cambodia), Indonesian oppression
    in East Timor before it became independent, and
    more recently the global double standards over
    Israel and Palestine.
  • He also made a ground-breaking programme on the
    new rulers of the world globalisation.
  • Video clip.

8
Public Affairs Reporting
  • Quote from John Pilger (The New Rulers of the
    World)on the so-called global economy
  • The attacks of September 11, 2001, did not
    change everything, but accelerated the
    continuity of events, providing an extraordinary
    pretext for destroying social democracy.

9
Public Affairs Reporting
  • Quote from John Pilger (The New Rulers of the
    World)
  • The undermining of the Bill of Rights in the US
    and the further dismantling of trial by jury in
    Britain and a plethora of related civil liberties
    are part of the reduction of democracy to
    electoral ritual that is, competition between
    indistinguishable parties for the management of a
    single-ideology state.

10
Public Affairs Reporting
  • Quote from John Pilger (The New Rulers of the
    World)
  • Central to the growth of this business state
    are the media conglomerates, which have
    unprecedented power, owning press and television,
    book publishing, film production and databases.
    They provide a virtual world of the eternal
    present, as Time magazine called it politics by
    media, war by media, justice by media, even grief
    by media (Princess Diana).

11
Public Affairs Reporting
  • The skills you pick up from the Public Affairs
    Reporting course are the same skills needed for
    much investigative reporting.
  • Who can tell us about the Watergate scandal that
    brought down an American president?
  • This is regarded as an icon of investigative
    journalism and is still the topic of debate even
    until today.
  • It became the subject of a famous film, All The
    Presidents Men, based on a book by the reporters
    Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein. Clip

12
Public Affairs Reporting
  • It is the story of how two Washington
    Post journalists stumbled upon a huge
    conspiracy of political corruption
    involving President Nixon himself.
  • No comparison with the Bill Clinton and the
    Monicagate scandal. (Resignation, 40 jailed.)
  • It started with a little court case about a
    burglary on a Democrat Party office in the
    Watergate building in June 1972.
  • It took 18 months of plugging away by the
    reporters, trawling through records trying to
    gets scraps of info to build up the jigsaw puzzle.

13
Public Affairs Reporting
  • Even student journalists get in on the act with
    investigative stories.
  • In 2001, a group of journalism students from the
    School of Journalism at Northwestern University
    under the leadership of Prof David Protess, the
    author of The Journalism of Outrage, researched
    death row prisoner Anthony Medill.
  • In trying to track down witnesses who could clear
    this man and identify the real killer, the
    students did painstaking searches of public
    records, phone books, equivalent of the electoral
    register and so on. Medill was pardoned and set
    free.
  • .

14
Public Affairs Reporting
  • In Sydney, the students of UTS exposed
    skulduggery over the Olympic Games.
  • In Fiji, the students of the University of the
    South Pacific reporting on the coup exposing some
    of the people in the shadows behind the crisis
    and also some of the fugitive gunmen and militant
    leaders involved in the Solomon Islands crisis.
  • There have also been many investigative style
    stories in New Zealand such as the Winebox affair
    in the 1990s, Metros Unfortunate Experiment
    about cervical cancer treatment (or lack of it)
    at the National Womens Hospital in the 1980s.
  • .

15
Public Affairs Reporting
  • PAR involves plenty of smaller stories which
    can be local bombshells in the community, dug out
    of council agendas, or drawn from government
    bodies through use of the Official Information
    Act.
  • Some of you may have ideals about how journalism
    exposes and highlights issues having an impact on
    your readers and listeners.
  • Remember that old definition News is something
    someone somewhere doesnt want people to know
    all the rest is advertising!
  • .

16
Public Affairs Reporting
  • The importance of a local story Grey Lynn flood
    2 February 2004
  • .

17
Public Affairs Reporting
  • The reporting work involved is 90 routine.
  • And it comes with knowing your way around the
    sources of information
  • The public records
  • The courts
  • The local councils
  • The agendas of local government meetings
  • Government departments

18
Public Affairs Reporting
  • Who has read the Herald today?
  • What stories fit into the public affairs
    category?
  • This course is an introduction to the skills that
    you need to
  • Gather public affairs stories
  • How to report them safely, legally speaking
  • These skills are fundamental to good journalism
  • Talking about exposes such as Watergate or health
    issues, have a think about what affects you on a
    day-to-day basis

19
Public Affairs Reporting
  • Our lives are regulated by laws set down by layer
    upon layer of government. Examples
  • If you drove to AUT today, you have a drivers
    licence. Recently you may have had to pay for one
    as part of user-pays.
  • Public awareness through journalism stopped plans
    to store lots more personal information on this.
  • Your car or the bus that brought you, had to
    be registered and have a warrant of fitness.
  • You got here safely deaths on buses are rare in
    NZ, but not in other countries, eg Nigeria.

20
Public Affairs Reporting
  • If you came by bus how easy was it to catch?
    How convenient the timetable? How much does it
    cost you? These issues are all debated in public
    forums at local council meetings.
  • Britomart Transport Centre is it working?
  • It is because of journalists like you that people
    become aware of the issues.
  • Only through journalists keeping people informed
    did we retain services with deregulation.
  • There are more than one million people in
    Auckland alone. But how many of them can fit into
    a courtroom to see justice done?

21
Public Affairs Reporting
  • How many could go to a local council meeting to
    hear discussions that will affect their lives?
  • Back to AUT. You dont smoke in the Faculty of
    Arts building or this one because of laws
    preventing you from smoking in public buildings.
  • You go outside because this is a public health
    measure designed to keep in check the costs of
    the governments health budget.
  • If you own a house your rates are based on its
    value (or that of its land). Water rates are
    separate.
  • You will want to know whether rates are going up
    or down.

22
Public Affairs Reporting
  • Even if you are renting a flat or a house, rates
    will still affect you because your landlord will
    need to pass any increase on to you as tenants.
  • When decisions are made about regulations or
    legislation that affect the way that we run our
    lives, we need to know.
  • When decisions are made that affect how much
    well be paying in taxes and rates and user
    charges, we need to know.

23
Public Affairs Reporting
  • This is what public affairs reporting is about
  • What do all the decisions, processes,
    regulations, overspending, underspending, mean to
    us the ordinary readers or listeners?
  • What does it mean in the places we feel it most
    _ our heart, our health and in the chequebook?
  • Public affairs reporting is also important for us
    as journalists because of our important role in a
    democratic society.
  • It is through our reporting and our
    investigations that people learn how the country
    is governed.

24
Thoughts for the day
  • The first rough draft of history
  • Washington Post editor Ben Bradlee
  • Anything makes a reader say gee whiz!
  • American publisher William Randolph Hearst
  • When a dog bites a man, thats not news. But if
    a man bites a dog, its news.
  • New York Sun city editor John B. Bogart
  • News is not what young, well-educated, urban,
    white males judge uninteresting.
  • French journalism professor Claude-Jean Bertrand
    (1994)

25
Thoughts for the day
  • The role of a journalist is to comfort the
    afflicted and afflict the comfortable.
  • Introduce course outline
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