can the post maintain its legacy

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Can the Post maintain its legacy? Meg. Dave. Tom. Arianna. Hsin- hsin

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Page 1: Can the post maintain its legacy

Can the Post maintain its legacy?

Meg. Dave. Tom. Arianna. Hsin-hsin

Page 2: Can the post maintain its legacy

Legacy of the Washington Post

As we’ve explored in class, the Washington Post’s investigative journalism during the Watergate scandal spoke truth to power

and is regarded as a striking example of proactive

journalism.

Does the Post continue to live up to this high journalistic

standard in times of crisis?

Page 3: Can the post maintain its legacy

Living up to the Legacy• Strengths &

Weakness of the Post

• Case Study: Japan

• Case Study: Conflict in the Middle East

• Case Study: America and future Crises

• Conclusions

Page 4: Can the post maintain its legacy

Post’s Coverage of CrisesStrengths• Focus on Washington DC

bubble• Comprehensive policy

coverage• Editorials provide factual

understanding of events• Holding officials

accountable• Well organized website• Supplemental &

interactive materials online

• Effective in national and international news

• Learning lessons from past crises

• Innovative sources

Weaknesses• Focus on Washington DC

bubble• Subjective opinions in

“news” pieces• Dramatization• Lack of unique

information from the ground

Page 5: Can the post maintain its legacy
Page 6: Can the post maintain its legacy

Case Study #1

Coverage of Japan

Page 8: Can the post maintain its legacy

Hurricane Katrina v. Japan Earthquake/ Tsunami

Page 9: Can the post maintain its legacy

Legacy of KatrinaUniversally Observed Pitfalls• Lack of Media critique of public

officials (FEMA) and city protection• Focus on Destruction• Dramatization• Abundance of personal pieces, lack of

overall, comprehensive coverage• Early portrayal of relief / minimal

damage

Page 10: Can the post maintain its legacy

Successful Journalism in Japan

• Efficiently delivered the core facts

• Addressed official responses and the nation’s preparedness

• Captured severity of situation

• Coverage progressed from focus on incident, to overarching consequences

“No one should underestimate the potential effects of such a catastrophe - human, political, economic.”“Scientists said the event has reinforced a growing sense that the field of seismology needs to ditch some of its presumptions.”

Page 11: Can the post maintain its legacy

Missteps in Japan• Lack of in-depth analysis • Few examples of

excessively U.S. focused coverage

• Focus on numbers – magnitude, death toll “grim accounting”

• Articles directly from the post quickly declined

• Replaced with heavy use of AP articles, “Official says rescuers have pulled a 70-year-old woman from rubble 4 days after Japan tsunami”

Page 12: Can the post maintain its legacy

Japan Nuclear Crisis

Page 13: Can the post maintain its legacy

CHERNOBYL CRISISStrengths:Restricted information forced proactive journalismFind and maintain alternative sourcesAuthority questioned

Weaknesses: Cold War à Anti-Communist sentimentNumerous unnamed sources à Trustworthy?

Today:Less informative and more dramatic.

Page 14: Can the post maintain its legacy

JAPAN NUCLEAR CRISISStrengths:•Detailed explanation of what happened•Persistent coverage•Impact on us

Weaknesses:•Oversaturation, Drama•How could this have been prevented?

Page 16: Can the post maintain its legacy

America at War

Page 17: Can the post maintain its legacy

Bush’s War

Obama’s War

“A War of Choice or Necessity?”

“Second thoughts from Pentagon about year-end deadline to pull American soldiers from Iraq”

“Which Is 'The Real War'?”

“Will we ever find Osama bin Laden? Don't count on it.” “Forgotten, but not gone”

Coverage of Iraq and

Afghanistan

Page 18: Can the post maintain its legacy

Bob Woodward on the Iraq War

• Reactive and proactive• “If it’s not working,

what do you do? This is the untold history of how the Bush administration wrestled with that question. Compiled from classified documents and interviews with more than 150 participants”

• “No administration willingly puts its disagreements on display, but what happened in Washington during 2006 went beyond the usual give-and-take of government.”

Page 19: Can the post maintain its legacy

Obama and Bush: Rhetoric on Libya and Iraq

“President Obama has used his rhetorical and intellectual skills in the past to get himself out of a jam or boost his standing when he needed it most.”

“He will try to do that again with his scheduled speech Monday night on the Libyan conflict.”

The president and his most senior advisers have struggled to define the mission. They have relied on euphemisms — “time-limited, scope-limited military action” being the most widely quoted — to explain what the conflict is and isn’t, what the U.S. role is and isn’t. The results of their efforts have been mixed at best.”

“With skillful use of language and images, President Bush and his aides have kept the American public from turning against the war in Iraq despite the swelling number of U.S. casualties there.”

“Bush's opponents say he is building support for the Iraq war -- and himself -- by deceiving the public.”

“All these assertions are debatable and highly disputed. But the public appears to have accepted Bush's views.”

Holding authorities accountable

Page 20: Can the post maintain its legacy

Libya, Iraq, and Humanitarian WarsWhy humanitarian wars can go

so wrong• “In Libya, French President Nicolas

Sarkozy, British Prime Minister David Cameron and President Obama are already beginning to confront many of the classic dilemmas that bedeviled their predecessors facing massacres and genocide in Somalia, Bosnia and Rwanda.”

• “After the United States invaded Iraq, Condoleezza Rice reportedly warned George W. Bush about Darfur: ‘I don’t think you can invade another Muslim country during this administration, even for the best of reasons.’”

• “If Western strategists saw a more complex interest in furthering the democratic impulses of the Arab revolutions, Libya still may not have seemed of paramount importance compared with, say, Egypt or Tunisia. But what seemingly counted most in Libya was that civilians in Benghazi might, as Obama said last month, ‘suffer a massacre that would have reverberated across the region and stained the conscience of the world.’”

“Editorials provide factual understanding of events”

“Supplemental & interactive materials

online”

Page 21: Can the post maintain its legacy

Editorial Gone Too Far?

President Obama’s muddled Libya policy

Editorial Board Opinion, March 23, 2011

• “The only solution to Libya’s crisis, as Mr. Obama first recognized several weeks ago, is the removal of Mr. Gaddafi from power.”

• All this would require Mr. Obama to do something he has avoided from the beginning in Libya: Exercise U.S. leadership.

Page 22: Can the post maintain its legacy

Kosovo

Page 23: Can the post maintain its legacy

Conflict in Kosovo• First War: Early 1998

until 1999 between the army and police of Yugosalvia and the Kosovo Liberation Army [KLA]

• Second War: March 24, 1999 to June 11, 1999 between ethnic Albanian militants and Yugoslav forces – NATO supported

ethnic Albanian militants [KLA]

Page 24: Can the post maintain its legacy

Effective Kosovo Coverage

“The bombs falling for a third consecutive day over Yugoslavia yesterday are the tangible consequences of what President Clinton on national television Wednesday night called his ‘lessons in Bosnia’. It took nearly four years, and the loss of some 300,000 lives before Clinton led NATO to military intervention in Bosnia in 1995. In Kosovo, the White House has acted on a series of lessons…it must lay the political basis for military action with passes at diplomacy, however remote their chances of success”

Holding the Government Accountable:

Page 25: Can the post maintain its legacy

Ineffective Kosovo Coverage

“Rebels With a Crippled Cause” by Peter Finn (April 23, 1999)– “New recruits arrive so raw that

they can be used only for food detail.”

– “Nasty, limited and seemingly unwinnable, this is the Kosovo Liberation Army's war one month into NATO's air offensive against the Serb-controlled government of Yugoslavia.”

– “While the battle for the future of Kosovo is far from over, it is clear that the Kosovo Liberation Army will be central to its final outcome -- just as its leadership always insisted it would be.”

Ineffective and subjective language:

Page 26: Can the post maintain its legacy

Kosovo and Libya Lessons from the past:

“When intervening against Muammar Kaddafi, Western officials take comfort in recalling the 1999 NATO air war against the Serbian occupation of Kosovo, which is viewed as a “successful” humanitarian intervention. It is widely believed that intervention protected the Kosovar people from Serb aggression, and thus alleviated the humanitarian emergency…One hopes that the recent U.S. and European air strikes will have a similarly positive impact on Libya.” -- David N. Gibbs, “Beware the pitfalls of foreign intervention” (March 25, 2011)

Page 27: Can the post maintain its legacy

Kosovo and the DC bubble

“The Senate plans a daylong debate on the issue Monday. At a late afternoon meeting, its Republican leaders decided to seek a vote Tuesday on whether to block funds for the operation unless Congress authorizes it, according to an aide to Majority Leader Trent Lott (R-Miss.). But the vote will occur under rules requiring 60 votes for approval, which Republicans acknowledged would be difficult to get. They hold 55 of the Senate's 100 seats.”

-- “Serb Aggression” by Charles Babington (March 20, 1999)

Page 29: Can the post maintain its legacy

“Protests Spread against Mubarak” – by Sherine Bayoumi and Leila Fadel (January 26, 2011)

“US seeks swift transition in Egypt” – Karen De Young (January 31, 2011)

“Delusions of decline” – Michael Gerson (February 11, 2011)

Page 30: Can the post maintain its legacy

Case Study #3

National Coverage

Page 31: Can the post maintain its legacy

Focus on Policy

“Comprehensive Policy Coverage”

“Online Topic Sections”

“Interactive supplements

online”

Page 32: Can the post maintain its legacy

Catching the Budget Crisis Early

“But Boehner ruled out passing a temporary funding resolution to keep the government operating unless it contained at least some spending cuts, possibly setting up a showdown with Dem leaders in the Senate, who said Boehner had increased the risk of a government shutdown”

February 18th:

Page 33: Can the post maintain its legacy

D.C. was prepared for the worst April 8, 7:55 PM

Why the budget deal happened April 8, 11:02 PM

Boehner’s leadership is tested in the budget battle April 8, 11:08 PM

Budget Fight Shows Washington Still Broken. April 8, 11:11PM

Government Shutdown: What happened when Congress missed its deadline. April 9, 12:36 AM

Government Shutdown Averted: Congress agrees to budget deal, stopgap funding. April 9, 2:48 AM

Obama set to sign stopgap budget bill Saturday, April 9, 12:29 PM

StrengthsTimely updates that provides both sides of the argumentHistorical context, future implications, and current prospects

Page 34: Can the post maintain its legacy

Who Runs Government• Full information

about any government official

• Education, previous positions, notable achievements

• How they came to power, who they’re connected to

• Links to their websites, twitter, etc

• Organizational Charts that simplify entire departments

Page 35: Can the post maintain its legacy

Investigative Journalism

Maintains proactive traditionVariety of topics

Page 36: Can the post maintain its legacy

Conclusion

Page 37: Can the post maintain its legacy

Print vs Online Readership• Highest

online readership in DC

• Comprehensive political coverage caters to this audience

Fall 2009 data

Page 38: Can the post maintain its legacy

Conclusions• Learning and adapting

from their mistakes• Continuing to walk the

line within the DC bubble

• Maintaining a proactive stance, emphasized online, especially with political coverage

• The international coverage is adapting and improving upon mistakes, but the national policy coverage is the true unique trait of the Post and how the Post in-part lives up to the Watergate legacy

Page 39: Can the post maintain its legacy

“The Post on its worse days is better than most newspapers on their best days”