SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Objectivity in Newspaper Reporting 
Newspapers have traditionally been expected to maintain fair and impartial methods of storytelling. 
But that concept is possibly more theory than absolute practice, especially in contemporary society. 
Readers' interests have changed, as have the variety of media platforms, most notably the inclusion 
of the Internet with its near-instantaneous-snippets of information from all around the globe. 
Fair and balanced storytelling is still the goal of most newspaper journalists. Their traditional 
purpose is to attempt to provide readers with facts with which the public can form opinions and 
make decisions regarding political elections, civic matters and, in general, the truth of who did what, 
when, where, how and why. 
But some journalists are calling into question the necessity to maintain such a rigid guideline that 
may not be possible, may not be so truthful at all, and may be no longer as relevant in an age when 
information is so readily available around the clock. 
Limitations of Objectivity in News Reporting 
By the very nature of what often motivates a person to become a reporter s/he is a compassionate 
sort of person. 
They do the leg work because they care to keep the public in the know about society's happenings. 
They care to play a role in a community that can, ultimately, effect positive changes by making 
readers aware that, say, a politician is corrupt or a school teacher is abusive or that a homeless 
shelter is particularly fantastic at aiding those in need. 
That such a caring person maintains any notable degree of objectivity as a newspaper reporter 
attests to that individual's professionalism, and ability to maintain honest amazonaws.com credibility 
as a messenger in the community. 
So, whether or not a news story, or its author, is fully objective is often not about poor intentions by
an individual or an editorial staff. A lack of objectivity is often a consequence of any number of 
circumstances. 
Chuck Klosterman, a journalist (Esquire, GQ, the Washington Post) and book author (Fargo Rock 
City, Killing Yourself to Live) revealed the reality of so-called journalistic objectivity in his book Sex, 
Drugs and Cocoa Puffs: 
"Everybody seems to be concerned that journalists are http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stuff_(magazine) 
constantly trying to slip their own political and philosophical beliefs into what they cover. This 
virtually never happens. And I am not being naive when I say this; it really doesn't happen. There are 
thousands of things that affect the accuracy of news stories, but the feelings of the actual reporter is 
almost never one of them. The single most important impact of any story is far less sinister: Mostly it 
all comes down to (a) who the journalist has called, and (b) which of those people happens to call 
back first." 
Personal Viewpoint in the Media 
The New York Times reported on Arianna Huffington, founder of The Huffington Post, when she 
addressed what she calls the false neutrality in the media. Katharine Q. Seelye of The Times wrote: 
"One of the worst things the old media do, the author, liberal pundit and founder of 
HuffingtonPost.com said, is present two sides of a story as if the two sides had equal value, creating 
a false neutrality that often does not exist. They fall back, she said, on 'the illusion of neutrality 
instead of ferreting out the truth.'" 
The bottom line is reporters are human beings, not machines; and even when two sides of an 
argument are included in a story, the degree to which that creates equality is subjective. 
The subjects of news stories are also humans, acting in human ways that often include colors of right 
and wrong. All the more difficult it can become to maintain true objectivity in newspaper reporting.
You might also like... 
How to Avoid Libel 
Understanding what constitutes libel isn't much use if a journalist cannot effectively apply thos...

More Related Content

PPTX
Objectivity
PPT
Mac201 Objectivity and impartiality 2014
DOCX
Task 2!
PPTX
PPT
What is news?
PPTX
Journalism
PPTX
Fall 2020 JOU 1000 First Class Presentation for week of October 12, 2020
PPTX
Comms239 presentation
Objectivity
Mac201 Objectivity and impartiality 2014
Task 2!
What is news?
Journalism
Fall 2020 JOU 1000 First Class Presentation for week of October 12, 2020
Comms239 presentation

What's hot (18)

PPTX
EN2120 News Writing and Reporting
PPTX
What is news
PPT
Investigative Journalism- African Elections Project
PDF
What is news?
PPT
News basics
PDF
What Is News - JNL-1102, Reporting and Writing I, Professor Austin, National ...
PPTX
Sharifi, Najib - Conflict Sensitive Journalism
PPTX
What Makes it news?
PPTX
Conflict Sensitive Journalism
PPTX
Types of news
PPTX
The centrality of emotion in journalism
PPT
Journalism Ethics
PPTX
ethics of journalism
PPTX
The emotional politics of Donald Trump
PPTX
How to handle sensitive issues in news reporting
PPT
Peace Journalism
PDF
Chapter 1
PPTX
Conflictsensitivejournalism
EN2120 News Writing and Reporting
What is news
Investigative Journalism- African Elections Project
What is news?
News basics
What Is News - JNL-1102, Reporting and Writing I, Professor Austin, National ...
Sharifi, Najib - Conflict Sensitive Journalism
What Makes it news?
Conflict Sensitive Journalism
Types of news
The centrality of emotion in journalism
Journalism Ethics
ethics of journalism
The emotional politics of Donald Trump
How to handle sensitive issues in news reporting
Peace Journalism
Chapter 1
Conflictsensitivejournalism
Ad

Similar to Objectivity in Newspaper Reporting (20)

PPTX
Task 10
DOCX
Mediaethicsfinalpaper
PPT
Week 2
PPT
What is Newsworthy?
PPT
What is News? Traditional Journalism Basics
PPTX
Nuj work
PPTX
Responsible Journalism
PPTX
Nuj power point 2
PPTX
Responsible Journalism
PPTX
49cedVox Pop.pptx
PPTX
PPTX
Nuj presentation
PDF
Media In The Media
PPT
Role Of Media In Shaping Public Opinion
PPT
Media 102
PPT
Ethical issues
PDF
Being a Reporter
PDF
The Professional
PPTX
Campus Journalism chpte - Chapter 1.pptx
Task 10
Mediaethicsfinalpaper
Week 2
What is Newsworthy?
What is News? Traditional Journalism Basics
Nuj work
Responsible Journalism
Nuj power point 2
Responsible Journalism
49cedVox Pop.pptx
Nuj presentation
Media In The Media
Role Of Media In Shaping Public Opinion
Media 102
Ethical issues
Being a Reporter
The Professional
Campus Journalism chpte - Chapter 1.pptx
Ad

Objectivity in Newspaper Reporting

  • 1. Objectivity in Newspaper Reporting Newspapers have traditionally been expected to maintain fair and impartial methods of storytelling. But that concept is possibly more theory than absolute practice, especially in contemporary society. Readers' interests have changed, as have the variety of media platforms, most notably the inclusion of the Internet with its near-instantaneous-snippets of information from all around the globe. Fair and balanced storytelling is still the goal of most newspaper journalists. Their traditional purpose is to attempt to provide readers with facts with which the public can form opinions and make decisions regarding political elections, civic matters and, in general, the truth of who did what, when, where, how and why. But some journalists are calling into question the necessity to maintain such a rigid guideline that may not be possible, may not be so truthful at all, and may be no longer as relevant in an age when information is so readily available around the clock. Limitations of Objectivity in News Reporting By the very nature of what often motivates a person to become a reporter s/he is a compassionate sort of person. They do the leg work because they care to keep the public in the know about society's happenings. They care to play a role in a community that can, ultimately, effect positive changes by making readers aware that, say, a politician is corrupt or a school teacher is abusive or that a homeless shelter is particularly fantastic at aiding those in need. That such a caring person maintains any notable degree of objectivity as a newspaper reporter attests to that individual's professionalism, and ability to maintain honest amazonaws.com credibility as a messenger in the community. So, whether or not a news story, or its author, is fully objective is often not about poor intentions by
  • 2. an individual or an editorial staff. A lack of objectivity is often a consequence of any number of circumstances. Chuck Klosterman, a journalist (Esquire, GQ, the Washington Post) and book author (Fargo Rock City, Killing Yourself to Live) revealed the reality of so-called journalistic objectivity in his book Sex, Drugs and Cocoa Puffs: "Everybody seems to be concerned that journalists are http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stuff_(magazine) constantly trying to slip their own political and philosophical beliefs into what they cover. This virtually never happens. And I am not being naive when I say this; it really doesn't happen. There are thousands of things that affect the accuracy of news stories, but the feelings of the actual reporter is almost never one of them. The single most important impact of any story is far less sinister: Mostly it all comes down to (a) who the journalist has called, and (b) which of those people happens to call back first." Personal Viewpoint in the Media The New York Times reported on Arianna Huffington, founder of The Huffington Post, when she addressed what she calls the false neutrality in the media. Katharine Q. Seelye of The Times wrote: "One of the worst things the old media do, the author, liberal pundit and founder of HuffingtonPost.com said, is present two sides of a story as if the two sides had equal value, creating a false neutrality that often does not exist. They fall back, she said, on 'the illusion of neutrality instead of ferreting out the truth.'" The bottom line is reporters are human beings, not machines; and even when two sides of an argument are included in a story, the degree to which that creates equality is subjective. The subjects of news stories are also humans, acting in human ways that often include colors of right and wrong. All the more difficult it can become to maintain true objectivity in newspaper reporting.
  • 3. You might also like... How to Avoid Libel Understanding what constitutes libel isn't much use if a journalist cannot effectively apply thos...