W. Joseph Campbell

‘Getting It Wrong’ goes on Q-and-A

In Cronkite Moment, Debunking, Media myths, War of the Worlds, Watergate myth on August 4, 2010 at 8:47 am

My interview with Brian Lamb on C-SPAN’s Q&A program aired Sunday evening and early Monday–and the show looked better on the tube than I thought it would.

The interview was taped two weeks earlier and, afterward, I didn’t feel that it had gone all that well.

But I was mistaken.

Lamb, who is a real gentleman and is supported by a courteous and highly professional staff, led me through a brief discussion of each of the 10 prominent tales about American journalism which I address and debunk in my new book, Getting It Wrong.

We subsequently zeroed in on the myths of Watergate, Murrow-McCarthy, the Cronkite Moment, and the War of the Worlds radio dramatization.

Toward the end of the interview, which lasted nearly an hour, Lamb asked what might be next in my research. Maybe a sequel to Getting It Wrong, I replied, adding that universe of media-driven myths isn’t confined to the 10 addressed in the book.

Lamb

Lamb, who had read Getting It Wrong closely, surprised me a few times with his questions, including his query about this passage in the book’s closing chapter:

“American journalism loves giving prizes—to its own.”

That passage (which is true, of course) was a way of setting up the conclusion to the chapter discussing the highly exaggerated, over-the-top news coverage of Hurricane Katrina, which battered New Orleans and the Gulf Coast five years ago this month.

Among the many awards given for reporting about the hurricane was the Mongerson Prize for Investigative Reporting on the News. That award, I note in Getting It Wrong, “was initiated in 2001 to recognize journalists who set the record straight on inaccurate, incomplete, or misleading news stories. The Mongerson Prize was administered by Northwestern University and had a five-year run. It never attracted much attention, certainly nothing approaching the prominence of the Murrow Awards or the Pulitzer Prizes.”

The Mongerson Prize was given for the last time in 2006 and the winners that year were Brian Thevenot and Gordon Russell of the New Orleans Times-Picayune. They were honored for the report they prepared in late September 2005 that examined exaggerated accounts of mayhem in post-Katrina New Orleans.

“Four weeks after the storm,” Thevenot and Russell wrote, “few of the widely reported atrocities have been backed with evidence. The piles of murdered bodies never materialized, and soldiers, police officers and rescue personnel on the front lines assert that, while anarchy reigned at times and people suffered unimaginable indignities, most of the worst crimes reported at the time never happened.”

In announcing the winners, Northwestern said Thevenot and Russell had “exposed the dangers of pack journalism in a difficult reporting environment.”

A telling point.

I write in Getting It Wrong that Katrina’s aftermath “was no high, heroic moment in American journalism. The coverage was in important respects flawed and exaggerated. On crucial details, journalists erred badly, and got it wrong.

“In the days following Katrina’s landfall, news reports described apocalyptic horror that the hurricane supposedly had unleashed. They reported snipers firing at medical personnel. They reported that shots were fired at helicopters, halting evacuations from the Convention Center. They told of bodies being stacked there like cordwood. They reported roving gangs were preying on tourists and terrorizing the occupants of the Superdome, raping and killing. They said children were victims of sexual assault, that one seven-year-old was raped and her throat was slit. They reported that sharks were plying the flooded streets of New Orleans.

“None of those reports was verified or substantiated: No shots fired at rescue helicopters, no child rape victims, no bodies stacked like cordwood, no sharks.”

Thevenot’s candor about the Katrina coverage was refreshing, in measure because he acknowledged that he, too, had gotten it wrong in some of his reporting.

In an article for American Journalism Review titled “Mythmaking in New Orleans,” Thevenot wrote that “in the worst of the storm reporting, tales of violence, rapes, murders and other mayhem were simply stated as fact with no attribution at all.

“I am among those who committed this sin,” he conceded, referring to his description of the Convention Center in New Orleans, where many people dispossessed by the hurricane took refuge, as “a nightly scene of murders, rapes and regular stampedes.”

WJC

Related:

None of those reports was verified or substantiated: No shots fired at rescue helicopters,[i] no child rape victims, no bodies stacked like cordwood, no sharks


[i] See A Failure of Initiative, 169.

  1. […] Getting It Wrong goes on Q-and-A <!–[if !mso]> the Journal, the Cisneros jailbreak and rescue was “epochal,” /* Style Definitions */ table.MsoNormalTable {mso-style-name:”Table Normal”; mso-tstyle-rowband-size:0; mso-tstyle-colband-size:0; mso-style-noshow:yes; mso-style-parent:”"; mso-padding-alt:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt; mso-para-margin:0in; mso-para-margin-bottom:.0001pt; mso-pagination:widow-orphan; font-size:10.0pt; font-family:”Times New Roman”; mso-ansi-language:#0400; mso-fareast-language:#0400; mso-bidi-language:#0400;} the Journal, the Cisneros jailbreak and rescue was “epochal,” the Journal, the Cisneros jailbreak and rescue was “epochal,”[i] a “supreme achievement of the journalism of action.” […]

  2. […] as I discuss in Getting It Wrong, the Pentagon was not the source for the botched report in the Post about Lynch’s supposed […]

  3. […] movie,” I write in Getting It Wrong, “suggested their reporting was more hazardous than it was, that by digging into Watergate, […]

  4. […] point out in Getting It Wrong that by early 1968, Cronkite’s assessment was neither novel nor […]

  5. […] I write in Getting It Wrong, “the coverage helped strip away the fiction circulated by the Kennedy administration that […]

  6. […] I point out in Getting It Wrong, the popular notion of demonstrative bra-burnings — that feminists in the late 1960s and […]

  7. […] I write in Getting It Wrong, “the notion that Kennedy asked or persuaded the Times to suppress, hold back, or dilute any […]

  8. […] roll up a scandal of such dimension, I write in Getting It Wrong, “required the collective if not always the coordinated forces of special prosecutors, […]

  9. […] the interim, as I point out in Getting It Wrong, the Times “did not abandon the Cuba-invasion story ….  Subsequent reporting in the […]

  10. […] write in Getting It Wrong that Hurricane Katrina – which struck New Orleans and the Gulf Coast at the end of August 2005 […]

  11. […] ‘Getting It Wrong’ goes on Q-and-A […]

  12. […] ‘Getting It Wrong’ goes on Q-and-A […]

  13. […] as I note in Getting It Wrong, the notion that Woodward and Bernstein inspired a generation of students to take up journalism […]

  14. […] I note in Getting It Wrong, the notion that the Post and its reporters exposed the Watergate scandal “is deeply […]

  15. […] heroic-journalist interpretation of Watergate, I write in Getting It Wrong, is to “misunderstand the scandal and to indulge in a particularly beguiling media-driven […]

  16. […] phrase “bra-burning,” as I note in Getting It Wrong, became a sneering, off-hand way “of ridiculing feminists and mocking their […]

  17. […] ‘Getting It Wrong’ goes on Q-and-A Share this:PrintStumbleUponDiggRedditEmailFacebookTwitterLike this:LikeBe the first to like this post. « Before NYTimes errs, claims Woodward, Bernstein ‘unraveled’ Watergate October 10, 2011 […]

  18. […] The C-Span program represented a rare occasion in which prominent U.S. news media have given attention to the book, The Jefferson-Hemings Controversy: Report of the Scholars Commission, which was released September 1 at the National Press Club in Washington. […]

  19. […] ‘Getting It Wrong’ goes on ‘Q-and-A’ Share this:PrintStumbleUponDiggRedditEmailFacebookTwitterLike this:LikeBe the first to like this post. « Before Ignore new Jefferson-paternity study, see accuracy suffer October 20, 2011 […]

  20. […] ‘Getting It Wrong’ goes on ‘Q-and-A’ Share this:PrintStumbleUponDiggRedditEmailFacebookTwitterLike this:LikeBe the first to like this post. « Before The ‘War of the Worlds’ radio show produced a ‘Paul Revere effect’ October 31, 2011 […]

  21. […] ‘Getting It Wrong’ goes on ‘Q-and-A’ Share this:PrintStumbleUponDiggRedditEmailFacebookTwitterLike this:LikeBe the first to like this post. « Before Accepting the Dicken-Garcia Award for Distinguished Scholarship in Journalism History November 12, 2011 […]

  22. […] ‘Getting It Wrong’ goes on ‘Q-and-A’ GA_googleAddAttr("AdOpt", "1"); GA_googleAddAttr("Origin", "other"); GA_googleAddAttr("theme_bg", "FFFFFF"); GA_googleAddAttr("theme_text", "000000"); GA_googleAddAttr("theme_link", "990000"); GA_googleAddAttr("theme_border", "CCCCCC"); GA_googleAddAttr("theme_url", "CC0000"); GA_googleAddAttr("LangId", "1"); GA_googleAddAttr("Autotag", "books"); GA_googleAddAttr("Autotag", "celebrities"); GA_googleAddAttr("Autotag", "entertainment"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "cronkite-moment"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "debunking"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "furnish-the-war"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "1968"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "debunking"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "dubious-quotes"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "fact-checking"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "getting-it-wrong"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "nixon"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "zhou-enlai"); GA_googleFillSlot("wpcom_sharethrough"); Share this:PrintStumbleUponDiggRedditEmailFacebookTwitterLike this:LikeBe the first to like this post. « Before ‘Immortal advice’ given only in a movie November 23, 2011 […]

  23. […] ‘Getting It Wrong’ goes on Q-and-A GA_googleAddAttr("AdOpt", "1"); GA_googleAddAttr("Origin", "other"); GA_googleAddAttr("theme_bg", "FFFFFF"); GA_googleAddAttr("theme_text", "000000"); GA_googleAddAttr("theme_link", "990000"); GA_googleAddAttr("theme_border", "CCCCCC"); GA_googleAddAttr("theme_url", "CC0000"); GA_googleAddAttr("LangId", "1"); GA_googleAddAttr("Autotag", "religion"); GA_googleAddAttr("Autotag", "books"); GA_googleAddAttr("Autotag", "politics"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "debunking"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "media-myths"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "quotes"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "1968"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "debunking"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "fact-checking"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "furnish-the-war"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "getting-it-wrong"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "hearst"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "media-driven-myths"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "zhou-enlai"); GA_googleFillSlot("wpcom_sharethrough"); Share this:PrintStumbleUponDiggRedditEmailFacebookTwitterLike this:LikeBe the first to like this post. « Before Virginia (of ‘Yes, Virginia’) tells of her famous letter, 97 years ago December 23, 2011 […]

  24. […] ‘Getting It Wrong’ goes on Q-and-A Share this:PrintStumbleUponDiggRedditEmailFacebookTwitterLike this:LikeBe the first to like this post. « Before Taking stock: Top mythbusting posts of 2011 December 31, 2011 […]

  25. […] ‘Getting It Wrong’ goes on Q-and-A Advertisement GA_googleAddAttr("AdOpt", "1"); GA_googleAddAttr("Origin", "other"); GA_googleAddAttr("theme_bg", "FFFFFF"); GA_googleAddAttr("theme_text", "000000"); GA_googleAddAttr("theme_link", "990000"); GA_googleAddAttr("theme_border", "CCCCCC"); GA_googleAddAttr("theme_url", "CC0000"); GA_googleAddAttr("LangId", "1"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "debunking"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "jessica-lynch"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "washington-post"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "whiplash-journalism"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "debunking"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "distortion"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "fact-checking"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "getting-it-wrong"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "iran"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "jessica-lynch"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "news"); GA_googleAddAttr("Tag", "washington-post"); GA_googleFillSlot("wpcom_sharethrough"); Share this:PrintStumbleUponDiggRedditEmailFacebookTwitterLike this:LikeBe the first to like this post. « Before ‘Getting It Wrong’ goes on ‘One Hour of Hope’ January 10, 2012 […]

  26. […] ‘Getting It Wrong’ goes on Q-and-A Share this:PrintStumbleUponDiggRedditEmailFacebookTwitterLike this:LikeBe the first to like this post. « Before Fox News reiterates dubious Lynch-source claim, ignores WaPo role January 16, 2012 […]

  27. […] ‘Getting It Wrong’ goes on Q-and-A Share this:PrintStumbleUponDiggRedditEmailFacebookTwitterLike this:LikeBe the first to like this post. « Before ‘Accurately, it turned out’? Hardly, in the Jefferson-Hemings allegations February 13, 2012 […]

  28. […] ‘Getting It Wrong’ goes on Q-and-A Share this:PrintStumbleUponDiggRedditEmailFacebookTwitterLike this:LikeBe the first to like this post. « Before 40 years on: The ‘napalm girl’ photo and its associated errors June 3, 2012 […]

  29. […] ‘Getting It Wrong’ goes on ‘Q-and-A’ Share this:PrintStumbleUponDiggRedditEmailFacebookTwitterLike this:LikeBe the first to like this. « Before Cronkite ‘the most-trusted’? Where’s the evidence? June 9, 2012 […]

  30. […] ‘Getting It Wrong’ goes on Q-and-A Share this:PrintStumbleUponDiggRedditEmailFacebookTwitterLike this:LikeBe the first to like this. « Before The media myths of Watergate: Part Three June 19, 2012 […]

  31. […] the anecdote rests on irreconcilable illogic. As I write in Getting It Wrong, it “would have been absurd for Hearst to vow to ‘furnish the war’ because war— […]

  32. […] ‘Getting It Wrong’ goes on Q-and-A Share this:PrintStumbleUponDiggRedditEmailFacebookTwitterLike this:LikeBe the first to like this. « Before USA Today invokes Kennedy-Nixon debate myth September 21, 2012 […]

  33. […] Getting It Wrong goes on Q-and-A Share this:PrintStumbleUponDiggRedditEmailFacebookTwitterLike this:LikeBe the first to like this. « Before 1960 myth ricochets around the media in advance of Obama-Romney debate October 3, 2012 […]

  34. […] ‘Getting It Wrong’ goes on Q-and-A […]

  35. […] ‘Getting It Wrong’ goes on Q-and-A […]

  36. […] ‘Getting It Wrong’ goes on ‘Q-and-A’ […]

Comments are closed.