Bottom-Line Pressures Now Hurting Coverage, Say
Journalists
by the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press
Overview
Section I: Views on Performance
Section II: Covering
the President and the Campaign
Section III: Today's
Changing Newsroom
Section IV: Values and
the Press
NOTE: This report is also available on
the Pew Research Center Web
site.
Overview
Journalists are unhappy with the way things are going in
their profession these days. Many give poor grades to the
coverage offered by the types of media that serve most Americans:
daily newspapers, local TV, network TV news and cable news
outlets. In fact, despite recent scandals at the New York
Times and USA Today, only national newspapers - and the websites
of national news organizations - receive good performance
grades from the journalistic ranks.
Roughly half of journalists at national media outlets (51%),
and about as many from local media (46%), believe that journalism
is going in the wrong direction, as significant majorities
of journalists have come to believe that increased bottom
line pressure is "seriously hurting" the quality
of news coverage. This is the view of 66% of national news
people and 57% of the local journalists questioned in this
survey.
Journalists at national news organizations generally take
a dimmer view of state of the profession than do local journalists.
But both groups express considerably more concern over the
deleterious impact of bottom-line pressures than they did
in polls taken by the Center in 1995 and 1999. Further, both
print and broadcast journalists voice high levels of concern
about this problem, as do majorities working at nearly all
levels of news organizations.

The notable dissent from this opinion comes from those at
the top of national news organizations. Most executives at
national news organizations (57%) feel increased business
pressures are "mostly just changing the way news organizations
do things" rather than seriously undermining quality.
The survey of journalists - conducted March 10-April 20
among 547 national and local reporters, editors and executives
by the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press in
collaboration with the Project for Excellence in Journalism
and the Committee of Concerned Journalists - also finds increased
worries about economic pressures in the responses to an open-ended
question about the biggest problem facing journalism today.
As was the case in the 1999 survey, problems with the quality
of coverage were cited most frequently. Underscoring these
worries, the polling finds a continuing rise in the percentage
of journalists believing that news reports are full of factual
errors. In the national media, this view increased from 30%
in 1995 to 40% in 1999 to 45% in the current survey.
When asked about what is going well in journalism these
days, print and broadcast journalists have strikingly different
things to say. TV and radio journalists most often mention
the speed of coverage - the ability to respond quickly to
breaking news stories - while print journalists emphasize
the quality of coverage and the watchdog role the press plays
as the profession's best features.
Journalists whose own newsrooms have undergone staff reductions
are among the most worried that bottom-line pressures are
undermining quality. Fully three-quarters of national and
local journalists who have experienced staff cuts at their
workplace say bottom-line pressures are seriously hurting
the quality of news coverage. Those not reporting staff reductions
are far more likely to say business pressures are just changing
newsgathering techniques.

Beyond the stress of shrinking workplaces, there are a number
of specific criticisms of the news media that are closely
associated with the view that bottom-line pressure is hurting
the quality of news coverage. First, there is almost universal
agreement among those who worry about growing financial pressure
that the media is paying too little attention to complex stories.
In addition, the belief that the 24-hour news cycle is weakening
journalism is much more prevalent among this group than among
news people who do not view financial pressure as a big problem,
and a majority says news reports are increasingly full of
factual errors and sloppy reporting. And most journalists
who worry about declining quality due to bottom-line pressures
say that the press is "too timid" these days.

In that regard, the poll finds that many journalists - especially
those in the national media - believe that the press has not
been critical enough of President Bush. Majorities of print
and broadcast journalists at national news organizations believe
the press has been insufficiently critical of the administration.
Many local print journalists concur. This is a minority opinion
only among local news executives and broadcast journalists.
While the press gives itself about the same overall grade
for its coverage of George W. Bush as it did nine years ago
for its coverage of Bill Clinton (B- among national journalists,
C+ from local journalists), the criticism in 1995 was that
the press was focusing too much on Clinton's problems, and
too little on his achievements.
There are significant ideological differences among news
people in attitudes toward coverage of Bush, with many more
self-described liberals than moderates or conservatives faulting
the press for being insufficiently critical. In terms of their
overall ideological outlook, majorities of national (54%)
and local journalists (61%) continue to describe themselves
as moderates. The percentage identifying themselves as liberal
has increased from 1995: 34% of national journalists describe
themselves as liberals, compared with 22% nine years ago.
The trend among local journalists has been similar - 23% say
they are liberals, up from 14% in 1995. More striking is the
relatively small minority of journalists who think of themselves
as politically conservative (7% national, 12% local). As was
the case a decade ago, the journalists as a group are much
less conservative than the general public (33% conservative).
The strong sentiment in favor of a more critical view of
White House coverage is just one way the climate of opinion
among journalists has changed since the 1990s. More generally,
there has been a steep decline in the percentage of national
and local news people who think the traditional criticism
of the press as too cynical still holds up. If anything, more
national news people today fault the press for being too timid,
not too cynical.
Not only do many national news people believe the press
has gone too soft in its coverage of President Bush, they
express considerably less confidence in the political judgment
of the American public than they did five years ago. Since
1999, the percentage saying they have a great deal of confidence
in the public's election choices has fallen from 52% to 31%
in the national sample of journalists.

Nonetheless, journalists have at least as much confidence
in the public's electoral judgments as does the public itself.
In addition, the growing distrust in the public's electoral
decisions is not being driven by negative feelings about President
Bush. Journalists who think the press is not critical enough
of Bush are no more likely than others to express skepticism
about the public's judgments.
By more than three-to-one, national and local journalists
believe it is a bad thing if some news organizations have
a "decidedly ideological point of view" in their
news coverage. And more than four-in-ten in both groups say
journalists too often let their ideological views show in
their reporting. This view is held more by self-described
conservative journalists than moderates or liberals.
At the same time, the single news outlet that strikes most
journalists as taking a particular ideological stance - either
liberal or conservative - is Fox News Channel. Among national
journalists, more than twice as many could identify a daily
news organization that they think is "especially conservative
in its coverage" than one they believe is "especially
liberal" (82% vs. 38%). And Fox has by far the highest
profile as a conservative news organization; it was cited
unprompted by 69% of national journalists. The New York Times
was most often mentioned as the national daily news organization
that takes a decidedly liberal point of view, but only by
20% of the national sample.
The survey shows that journalists continue to have a positive
opinion of the Internet's impact on journalism. Not only do
majorities of national (60%) and local journalists (51%) believe
the Internet has made journalism better, but they give relatively
high grades for the websites of national news organizations.
News people also acknowledge a downside to the Internet
- solid majorities of both national and local journalists
think the Internet allows too much posting of links to unfiltered
material. In addition, sizable numbers in the national (42%)
and local samples (35%) say the Internet has intensified the
deadline pressure they face. The changing media environment
is generally having an impact on journalists' workloads -
pluralities of national and local news people say they are
increasingly rewriting and repackaging stories for multiple
uses.
While journalists voice increasing concern over sloppy and
error-filled news reports, there is no evidence that recent
scandals like those at USA Today and the New York Times are
having a significant impact on the way journalists view the
profession. The number of journalists who cite "ethics
and standards" as the biggest problem facing journalism
has not grown since 1999. And most say that while plagiarism
may be getting more attention these days, it is actually no
more prevalent today than in the past.
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