You don't learn basic honesty at journalism school.
For months now the Johann Hari affair has gripped the
political blogosphere. The Independent
columnist caused consternation when he was caught out embellishing some of his interviews with quotes taken
from other sources.
Now I don’t intend to make any contribution to the highly
personalised debate which has taken place for and against Hari. I didn’t particularly enjoy his columns, but
neither did they send me into apoplectic rage.
The most I can say about his writing is that it was highly ideological
and as such it had that precocious-but-angry adolescent feel to it.
His interviews, I must admit, I rarely bothered to
read. The Independent may take a great
deal of pride in its ‘journalistic integrity’, but it’s by some distance the
least read national quality newspaper and it is (let’s be honest) seriously
dull.
Its coverage of the UK regions is frankly shameful and the
best that can be said about the re-modelled paper is that it’s dropped those intensely irritating ‘issue’
front pages, which had a minimum of text and a big picture illustrating the ‘outrage’
of the day.
I did buy the Independent yesterday though and I read Hari’s ‘personal apology’. It was highly unconvincing.
The columnist is promising to take a four month course in
journalism, after which he intends to continue working at the Independent. He assures his readers that any future articles
will be published online with accompanying foot-notes and, where interviews
have taken place, video evidence of their content.
Now, I know that Hari must attract readers to the
Independent, but for goodness sake, give it up!
Who on earth wants to read a journalist who is so discredited that he
has to jump through hoops before anyone can believe a word that he’s
written? "Interesting interview, but I’d
better boot up the old computer and double-check that it actually took place"!
Imagine if a cowboy handy-man caused litres of brown sludge
to swamp your bathroom; would you employ him six months later if he
pledged to undertake a plumbing night-class?
The preposterous conceit here is that Hari didn't quite fully realise that he was doing something wrong, because he’d been
fast-tracked through the world of journalism and hadn’t received the necessary
basic training. As someone who isn’t a
trained journalist, but who has tried, for a spell, to make a living writing in
newspapers and magazines, I resent that analysis.
Hari is accused of plagiarism.
He went to Cambridge for goodness sake. Is anyone seriously suggesting that no-one ever walked him through a few basic lessons in not copying huge chunks of other people’s
work and claiming it as his own? That’s one of the first things
that any university drills into its students nowadays. It’s even a major theme in schools.
I’m not for a moment suggesting that anyone can walk into a
newspaper and do the job of a seasoned reporter. But honesty - basic intellectual honesty - in
writing, that’s not something that can be picked up at journalism school.
Since time immemorial writers have taken different paths into journalism. But if you’re currently
thinking of making money by penning articles professionally and you haven’t come
up through the traditional route, working for a local paper, whether your
background is academia, politics or even blogging, your prospects have just got that
bit bleaker.
And you have Johann Hari to thank.
Comments
Just like with journalists and honesty, you rather assume that there are certain values that are taken as read.
On a different note. In regards to our wager quite awhile ago, being able "I told you so" never really gets old.