NY Times Whines That 'Partisans Adopt Deceit As a Tactic,' Ignore Hidden Camera Hoaxes By NPR, ABC
The New York Times provided decent front-page coverage of the emerging scandal that took down top executives at National Public Radio, a hidden-camera sting that caught top fundraiser Ron Schiller making prejudicial remarks against Republicans in general and the Tea Party movement in particular. The backlash resulted in the resignation of Ron Schiller as well as NPR President and chief executive Vivian Schiller (no relation).
But Times media reporter Jeremy Peters took an incomplete look at the recent rash of hidden-camera hoaxes on Saturday under the strongly worded headline “Partisans Adopt Deceit As a Tactic for Reports.” Peters falsely implied that "gotcha" journalism had faded from view, ignoring two recent examples in the mainstream media, one from NPR itself.
Peters focused on three recent incidents, two involving conservatives taping liberal groups caught embarrassing themselves and getting results – Lila Rose’s sting of Planned Parenthood resulted in the firing of a clinic manager, and James O’Keefe’s hidden-camera hoax of NPR executives supposedly meeting with a Muslim group resulted in a boardroom meltdown. Also, a leftist journalist posed as billionaire philanthropist Koch to try and embarrass Republican Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin, to little effect.
The reporter in disguise has largely faded from mainstream American journalism. But the tactic is alive and well in the hands of passionate partisans.
As their pursuit of the “gotcha” moment has become part of the cost of life in the public eye, one question is how willing politicians will be to advance their agendas on the backs of these muckrakers 2.0.
In just the last month, surreptitiously recorded conversations have embarrassed NPR and Planned Parenthood, organizations long under assault from conservatives, as well as Gov. Scott Walker of Wisconsin, a Republican and target of the political left for his anti-union stance.
The latest episode came this week, when the conservative provocateur James O’Keefe released a video that included an NPR fund-raiser who makes disparaging remarks about the Tea Party. This led to the resignation of the radio network’s chief executive, Vivian Schiller.
....
Defensible or not, use of the tactics seems to be growing.
But in fretting over the journalistic ethics of these stunts, Peters ignored hidden-camera reports by mainstream journalists, including a recent one from NPR itself. The Media Research Center’s Alex Fitzsimmons noted an NPR correspondent employed the same tactics used by O'Keefe, going incognito for a sting operation aimed at exposing U.S. border agents who target Muslims for "interrogation" for the March 10 “Morning Edition." And MRC’s Scott Whitlock documented how the undercover ABC News show “What Would You Do?” searches for bigotry across America.
Peters rolled on, as if those sorts of programs were rarities in mainstream journalism:
By and large, American news organizations are wary of the toll stunts like Mr. O’Keefe’s can take on their credibility. Some attempts by mainstream media outlets to mask their reporters’ identities, in fact, have caused a backlash.
One of the most significant examples was the case involving ABC News and Food Lion, in which the supermarket chain sued the network, claiming fraud and trespassing. Producers for the program “Primetime Live” lied on job applications and obtained jobs in the back rooms of Food Lion stores, where they recorded employees engaging in unsanitary and dangerous practices like bleaching spoiled meat.
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Comments
Really
Submitted by John21 on Tue, 03/15/2011 - 3:20pm.
The NY Times has no credibility to speak about any tactics used by people seeking the truth. They quit doing that job a long time ago. I guess the DNC is unhappy with the latest NPR videos so they sent their trained Pekinese to attack the process.Undercover journalism is perfectly valid
Submitted by c5then on Tue, 03/15/2011 - 3:27pm.
It's just that journalism is practiced by very few today and instead we are left with political activists reading talking points on air. Wasn't it shows like "60 Minutes" and "20/20" that went mainstream with undercover reports?Madison and Jefferson and Franklin built a Republic - Roberts killed it!
Gotcha!
Submitted by JakeMo on Tue, 03/15/2011 - 3:29pm.
Seems odd to complain about deceitful journalism from your desk at the NYTimes.
Talk about "Gotcha" moments. How about the one in November 2008 that the NYTimes enthusiastically participated in?
The only deceitful tactics the NYT should be concerned
Submitted by no tingly legs on Tue, 03/15/2011 - 3:35pm.
about were the ones Jayson Blair used making them look like the utter fools they are.Excellent point!
Submitted by Galvanic on Tue, 03/15/2011 - 4:40pm.
This is the paper that foisted the faux-journalism of Blair on its readers despite warning from its own reporters and editors that something just didn't smell right.
What the Left resents is that they are regularly getting caught in Gotcha operations. ACORN, Planned Parenthood, and now NPR have all been caught in lies, and the Left has had difficulty defending them.
There is nothing wrong in partisan activities like this. The Left is free to use the tactics, and there have been a few attempts, like the bogus phone call to Gov. Walker from one of the "Koch brothers."
And as noted, ABC does it all the time.
So what's the beef?
And the rampant hypocrisy of
Submitted by Beukeboom on Tue, 03/15/2011 - 3:40pm.
And the rampant hypocrisy of the liberal MSM continues.20/20 used to do this every
Submitted by Utherpend on Tue, 03/15/2011 - 3:42pm.
20/20 used to do this every week, in fact Mike Wallace made a career out of it.Was it on 20/20.. the Muslim sting at the football game
Submitted by Gary Hall on Tue, 03/15/2011 - 4:03pm.
Was it on 20/20.. the Muslim sting at the football game? Seems that NB even covered one, where the network staged folks dressed up in Muslim garb (thank goodness Juan Williams wasn't at the game - ha) and attempted to show how uncomfortable the other fans would be.
Can't imagine that, in such a sting, that the NY Times would not be rather quick to point out who got caught.
How about a sting, in which undercover reporters, disguised as someone he trusts, try to find out if Obama is really being president?
(;~/ gary
I don't know about that one, Gary, but there . . .
Submitted by Galvanic on Tue, 03/15/2011 - 4:41pm.
. . . was one conducted at a NASCAR event, where they had hoped to captured some anti-Muslim behavior on tape, and were sadly disappointed.thanks Galvanic..
Submitted by Gary Hall on Tue, 03/15/2011 - 7:17pm.
.. I saw that locomoto (down below) posted that. and I remember that one, so I wonder if that was it. But, in my mind I was sensing it was years earlier. (;~> garyCoincidentally, or not '
Submitted by Miss_Me_Yet on Tue, 03/15/2011 - 3:57pm.
Coincidentally, or not ' Partisans Adopt Deceit As a Tactic ' describes to a T the business model of the New York Times of the past twenty years.
Liberals ... we can't live with them, they couldn't survive without us ...
Bias? What Bias?
Submitted by locomotivebreath1901 on Tue, 03/15/2011 - 4:23pm.
This is more of the same ol' propaganda crap from the MSM. It's simply a different day. CBS' 60 Minutes made its fame n fortune by doing 'gotcha' journalism. NBC News, just last year, employed a similar tactic in order to 'prove' NASCAR folks down South were a bunch of knuckle dragging bigots. It FAILED. "Dateline" uses "gotcha" journalism, as well. The fact is these indolent Liberal pr*cks at the "paper of record" don't object to 'gotcha journalism' per se. They simply object to 'gotcha' journalism being used to expose one of their comrades obvious Liberal bias and bigotry.LOL, just more NYT hypocrisy
Submitted by Liquid Nitrogen on Tue, 03/15/2011 - 5:11pm.
LOL, just more NYT hypocrisy and double-standards - the only time adopting deceit as a tactic is okay is when they do it. Really bad when they get beat at their own game.Is that right?
Submitted by Ashrak on Tue, 03/15/2011 - 5:41pm.
So NBC is partisan and deceitful when Chris Hansen does "To Catch a Predator" stings?
The line of separation between journalism and journ0lism is not in how one gets the story, it is whether or not the truth is told in the reporting of what was investigated.
Ashrak. good one.
Submitted by Gary Hall on Tue, 03/15/2011 - 7:20pm.
Indeed. I guess the MSM would call that one (the NASCAR sting, etc) a good public service. Exposing corrupt, intolerant and blatantly unethical executives at NPR is not a good public service. i get it. (;~> gary