Barbaro and The New York Times Don't Understand New Media
Published March 07, 2006
Michael Barbaro's New York Times piece attacking bloggers for directly lifting material out of a Wal-Mart press release has gone to press. Barbaro centres the argument around, and is highly critical of in particular, Brian Pickrell, publisher and editor of the midwest's Republican favourite Iowa Voice:
Brian Pickrell, a blogger, recently posted a note on his Web site attacking state legislation that would force Wal-Mart Stores to spend more on employee health insurance. "All across the country, newspaper editorial boards — no great friends of business — are ripping the bills," he wrote. It was the kind of pro-Wal-Mart comment the giant retailer might write itself. And, in fact, it did.Several sentences in Mr. Pickrell's Jan. 20 posting — and others from different days — are identical to those written by an employee at one of Wal-Mart's public relations firms and distributed by e-mail to bloggers.
... Mr. Pickrell, the 37-year-old who runs the Iowa Voice blog, said he began receiving updates from Wal-Mart in January. Like Mr. Beller, of Crazy Politico, Mr. Pickrell had criticized the Maryland legislature over its health care law before Wal-Mart contacted him...
Asked in a telephone interview about the resemblance of his postings to Mr. Manson's, Mr. Pickrell said: "I probably cut and paste a little bit and I should not have," adding that "I try to write my posting in my own words."
In an e-mail message sent after the interview, Mr. Pickrell said he received e-mail from many groups, including those opposed to Wal-Mart, which he uses as a starting point to "do my own research on a topic."
It is a shame Barbaro has missed the difference between what consitutes a direct quote - made in quote marks - and the essential body of a text, for his evident misunderstanding makes for misleading journalism of the highest order.
Perhaps Barbaro was unclear about how the platform of the online media works, but to the increasing band of readers who are familiar with such things, the story unfortunately looks like one penned out of the foolish naivity of a journalist who only understands traditional print infrastructure.
- Barbaro and The New York Times Don't Understand New Media
- Published: March 07, 2006
- Type: News
- Section: Culture
- Filed Under: Culture: Business and Economics, Sci/Tech: Blogging, Sci/Tech: Internet
- Writer: Daniel M. Harrison
- Daniel M. Harrison's BC Writer page
- Daniel M. Harrison's personal site
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Comments
I too was interviewed, and willingly contributed to his story. One of things he left out were comments by myself and others that newspapers often use PR releases as the basis for a story, either good or bad about a company. Jeff Jarvis made that point very well talking about this issue last night on CNBC's Closing Bell.
In any type of journalism a tip is a tip, whether it's from a junkie on the corner talking about police beat downs, or a corporate suit and tie sending out PR stuff about his company.
He missed the point on most of my Wal-Mart posts, which weren't as much praise for Wal-Mart as deriding the Anti-Wally World crowd for their basic lack of knowledge on retailing and economics in general.
Sorry I didn't realize you'd written a follow up piece and I wrote a few comments on the other site, which I'll copy over here now:
To wit:
Biggest story of the year?
Um, yeah.
That whole Valerie Plame thing is so not a story anymore.
Here's a good take on the issue.
Like it or not the Times reporter seesm to be pointing a valid complaint about bloggers doing what sloppy journalists also do - digesting and hten giving to the readers that which is spoon fed to them.
"Like it or not the Times reporter seesm to be pointing a valid complaint about bloggers doing what sloppy journalists also do - digesting and hten giving to the readers that which is spoon fed to them."
Given the context, not really. All of these blogs are Republican publications with a bias towards free-market agendas: if a company, or a political party, says "hey, we see you're interested in what we're doing as an individual/consumer, we'll send you some more stuff/updates", the blogger knows:
1. This is obviously biased information as it comes directly from the source seeking to promote themselves
2. This is most likely fitting with an agenda they hold anyway, so it just makes for enhanced storytelling/concepts.
I think what is most telling is that organisations - be they political or corporate - see blogs as a worthy enough medium now to pay attention to: this Michael barbaro could have written about. had he done so, he might have covered the ethical questions of organisation reaching out to the consumer, instead of just to journalists, and it would have been a fair piece, but as it is, he misunderstood completely what a "quote box" was.
It was sloppy journalism, and it was a shame, because this could have been a fascinating think-piece, as i said in the follow-up.
So you have no problem with Bill Pickroll quoting directly from a press release from Wal-Mart without acknowledging that to his readers?
You talk about the difference between old and new media - focusing on the quotebook - but leave out a much more important detail: A Similarity between old and new media - agenda-setting.
Just as politicians on the right and Chomsky on the left used to complain that the newspapers and tv setting were setting the days agenda by choosing what stories to cover so do blogs set agendas by choosing what they write about.
So is Wal-Mart attempting to set the agenda as far as bloggers are concerned? Sure sounds to me like the answer is yes whether it's receiving emails or quoting press releases or quoting it in a text box.
Is that bad? Well, it depends on how open they are about that with their readers.
If I was reading a blogger who was paying more attention to pro-walmart statements than anti-wal mart stances and thus biased due to laziness or other reasons I'd like to know that.
When I read a blogger I assume he or she has thought through an issue and is sharing a position, as opposed to just printing what they just got by email.
Tell me where I'm wrong please and we can start from there.
And yes, even the selection of quotes in a quotebox can be letting Wal-Mart successfully use a blogger's credibility to try to its point across.
The question I'd ask is whether the quotebox sometimes contains quotes from opponents of Wal-Mart.
Good piece on all of this over here at Buzzmachine.





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