The news at any cost: how journalists compromise their ethics to shape the news.

AuthorLemann, Nicholas
PositionYoung Adult Review

The News at Any Cost: How Journalists Compromise Their Ethics to shape the news.

The News at Any Cost: How Journalists Compromise Their Ethics to Shape the News. Tom Goldstein. Simon & Schuster, $18.95. This book has been advertised as a sensational, insider's expose of media sleaze, but when you tear off the wrapping paper what you find is a journalism school ethics textbook. Buried deep within that, in turn, are memoirs of Goldstein's service as a reporter at The New York Times and as press secretary to Mayor Edward Koch of New York, which contain a couple of good morsels. Goldstein says Koch is so cozy with Rupert Murdoch ("Rupert is more important to me than anyone else,' he quotes Koch as saying) that he often calls the editorial page editor of Murdoch's New York Post and dictates the editorials about himself, which run verbatim. The Times's soft spot is for Irving Kaufman, a federal judge who always rules for the press and is rewarded with adoring coverage which never mentions that he presided at the Rosenberg trial.

The discourse on journalistic ethics isn't nearly as interesting. Goldstein has done some sporadic first-hand research--visited a few newsrooms, distributed a questionnaire to editors, and run with a Super Bowl press corps--but for the most part he worked from clips. In fact, it's as if he punched the words "media ethics' into a Nexis machine and summarized the entire product. Not much is missing here, although if you're a journalist and not a journalism student, you may not want to read summaries of the cases of Janet Cooke, Laura Foreman, "Hymietown,' the Chicago Sun Times's Mirage Bar, The New Yorker fact-checking flap, "Ear''s Jimmy Carter bugging error, the CBS Vietnam documentary, ambush interviews, etc. Goldstein summarizes these familiar stories with impeccable clarity and evenhandedness, and then sometimes delivers a prim verdict, such as "he . . . abused journalistic license,' or "many of the practices and strategies taken for granted by journalists raise troubling questions.'

For lawyers and doctors, the massive edifice of required professional school, limited entry into the field, and high pay and prestige was built on a foundation of concern about quackery. As journalism becomes more influential and more like a public utility because of government regulation of broadcasters and the decline of competition among newspapers, the temptation to turn it into a profession can only grow. Goldstein knows not to go...

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