List Books » Watchdogs of Democracy?: The Waning Washington Press Corps and How It Has Failed the Public
Authors: Helen Thomas
ISBN-13: 9780743267816, ISBN-10: 0743267818
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
Date Published: June 2006
Edition: (Non-applicable)
Helen Thomas is the dean of the White House press corps. The recipient of more than forty honorary degrees, she was honored in 1998 with the inaugural Helen Thomas Lifetime Achievement Award, established by the White House Correspondents' Association. The author of Thanks for the Memories, Mr. President; Front Row at the White House; and Dateline: White House, she lives in Washington, D.C., where she writes a syndicated column for Hearst.
In the course of more than sixty years spent covering Washington politics, Helen Thomas has witnessed firsthand a raft of fundamental changes in the way news is gathered and reported. Today, she sees a growing -- and alarming -- reluctance among reporters to question government spokesmen and probe for the truth. The result has been a wholesale failure by journalists to fulfill what is arguably their most vital role in contemporary American life -- to be the watchdogs of democracy.
Here, the legendary journalist and bestselling author delivers a hard-hitting manifesto on the precipitous decline in the quality and ethics of political reportage -- and issues a clarion call for change. Thomas confronts some of the most significant issues of the day and provides readers with rich historical perspective on the roots of American journalism, the circumstances attending the rise and fall of its golden age, and the nature and consequences of its current shortcomings. The book is a powerful, eye-opening discourse on the state of political reportage -- as well as a welcome and inspiring demand for meaningful and lasting reform.
Thomas, who has been covering Washington for more than 60 years, is displeased with the way in which the government tries to manipulate the news as never before; the press, diminished and monopolized by big business kowtowing to advertisers is "supine"; and dishonesty is everywhere. Thomas believes in a healthy adversarial challenge between government and press, but her explanation of her stance sometimes veers off track. She characterizes the nine presidents (beginning with Kennedy) she has covered, each of whom tried to spin the news his own way (Nixon, for a while, resorted to total blackout). Thomas dates the ever widening "credibility gap" back to the Vietnam War under Johnson. By this time, message management had reached the point of "outright propaganda." Readers will be entertained by her definition of the terms "background" and "off the record" and the difference between a "leak" and a "plant." But Thomas sees a bright side: she applauds trenchant political cartoonists and believes that the active public interest expressed in Internet blogs may help create transparency. (June) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
1 | Journalism - a most honorable profession | 1 |
2 | Eruptions of corruption | 13 |
3 | Presidents and reporters - never the twain shall meet | 26 |
4 | Press secretaries - in the bull's-eye | 36 |
5 | Spinning the news | 57 |
6 | Hail to the heroic leakers and whistle-blowers - and the journalists who protect them | 87 |
7 | Newspapers are a business, too | 112 |
8 | The FCC - fair and balanced? | 124 |
9 | Lapdogs of the press | 135 |
10 | Foreign correspondents in Iraq - deja vu all over again! | 153 |
11 | The greatest American journalists of our times | 169 |