Rumors were rampant in mid-April when North Korea’s communist despot Kim Jong Un disappeared from public view at a surprising time, when the entire benighted citizenry of that country is required to worship his grandfather Kim Il-Sung as some kind of Marxist deity. In a country this shackled, a reliable news media would tread lightly, we would expect. That expectation would be wrong.
Two weeks ago, CNN anchor Jim Sciutto – a former chief of staff to our ambassador to China under President Obama – tweeted “Breaking: The US is monitoring intelligence that North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s health is in grave danger following a surgery, a US official with direct knowledge tells me.”
Direct knowledge? Think again.
MSNBC anchor Katy Tur threw more tinder in the box, tweeting “North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is brain dead, according to two U.S. officials. He recently had cardiac surgery and slipped into a coma, according to one current and one former U.S. official.”
How many times in the Trump era have we witnessed one or two “senior U.S. officials” feeding the media a "bombshell” story that turned out to be wrong? The nation’s top media outlets just say “trust us” when they hide the identities of their sources, because this information is so crucially important. Debacles like this underline why the public should be skeptical of this daily lack of transparency.
Tur later took her tweet down. Sciutto’s still sits on the Internet.
After North Korea’s version of Pravda put out photos of the dictator cutting a ribbon at a fertilizer plant, the story changed. Our anonymous analysts in U.S. intelligence believe he is alive and well. The primary debunker of these rumors was the South Korean government, which insisted Kim never actually even had any surgery.
Former CNN producer Steve Krakauer has a newsletter, and he asked “Speaking of accountability in the media -- what is the penalty when a journalist gets a story monumentally wrong? The truth is it depends what the story is, and who the journalist is.” This was not an accountability moment.
It doesn’t matter that Sciutto has launched other collapsing stories, like when he claimed last September that President Trump caused the government to withdraw an important intelligence asset from Moscow in 2017. Soon after, The New York Times reported its CIA sources said it "made the arduous decision in late 2016 to offer to extract the source from Russia" — weeks before Trump even took office.
But a NewsBusters tally of CNN’s live, on-air coverage found a staggering 181 minutes spent on Sciutto’s initial report, subsequent follow-ups, and attempts to defend his faulty allegations. On the day this fraudulent story was breaking, Brian Stelter touted it in CNN’s “Reliable Sources” newsletter, even as he began that edition by attacking Trump (as usual) under the headline “War on Truth, Chapter 9/9/19.”
In her Trump-campaign memoir “Unbelievable,” Tur groused at Trump and his fans in this passage: “journalism, honestly pursued, is difficult and uncomfortable….but rather than deal with journalism, we despise journalism….I don't get why protesting a broken political system also means you need to protest the very notion of objective truth.”
Journalists like these should stop pompously protesting that they are a special class of humanity that represents “objective truth” and try harder to actually report some.