An intriguing two-story package in this week's Independent Weekly reveals internal e-mail at the News & Observer in Raleigh-Durham, N.C. ...
http://indyweek.com/durham/2003-09-17/upfront.html... It's important for people to know what's going on at the institutions they depend on to know what's going on. That's why we're including this week a series of E-mails to and from The News & Observer (where I used to work) and members of its community panel.
... They're meant to point out that The News & Observer, like virtually every other daily newspaper and television news operation in America, failed to emphasize the real story behind the invasion of Iraq (as Project Censored found), and did not take criticism to heart when confronted with it. It's a tragedy for so many reasons--first and foremost because if articles leading up to the war had been placed in the proper perspective, Americans might have realized that Iraq had nothing to do with Sept. 11 and everything to do with a radical turn in foreign policy. And it's a shame for otherwise good newspapers with the journalistic pretensions of The N&O, because if they'd broken from the pack and applied the same critical eye they use on local and regional news, they'd look like heroes today.
http://indyweek.com/durham/2003-09-17/cover2.htmlEvery month, a group of 20 or so members of the community meet at 8 a.m. in the second-floor conference room of The News & Observer as part of a community panel, a rotating group of residents selected by the newspaper to hear their thoughts about the newspaper. But a brouhaha broke out recently among some panel members regarding the paper's coverage of the U.S. invasion of Iraq.
It started back in March when Stephen Dear, executive director of People of Faith Against the Death Penalty and a member of the panel, pulled out his laptop computer and read a statement to the group--and some of the newspaper's top editors, including Executive Editor Melanie Sill--condemning the newspaper's coverage of the runup to the invasion. It continued months later when members of the panel got wind of the newspaper's internal report on the meeting, written by reporter Lorenzo Perez. That report is designed to let the news staff know what the panel's members are saying.
Following is Dear's statement and the e-mail correspondence that followed.
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