More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Eric Alterman

GET UPDATES FROM Eric Alterman

Think Again: NPR: Still Bending Over Backward

Posted: 08/12/11 12:38 PM ET

National Public Radio's Morning Edition did a report last week on therapy to turn gay people straight, inspired by the work of Rep. Michele Bachmann's (R-MN) husband. The story rested on interviews with two gay men who had been through the therapy; one who felt it caused "emotional and psychological damage" and the other -- a conservative Christian -- who was able to convert to heterosexuality (though NPR did not report the latter fellow also founded an organization that attempts to help others change their sexual orientation from homosexuality to heterosexuality as well).

The story was a perfect mixture of journalistic "balance," where unfortunately none existed in real life. As was reported in a June 2011 New York Times magazine article, in 2009, an American Psychological Association taskforce warned against attempting to change a person's sexual orientation because of the harm it causes, the ineffectiveness of its results, and the fact that sexual orientation is not something that requires a "cure" in the first place.

NPR reporter Alix Spiegel and her editor Anne Gudenkauf explained themselves to NPR Ombudsman Edward Schumacher-Matos by insisting that "As journalists, it is our job to feature the experiences of people all across the spectrum -- political, religious, and, yes, sexual -- and to allow their experiences and views to be fully enough shared so that they can be understood."

They neglected, they said, to distinguish between the majority and minority experiences in this case because they believed NPR listeners "are well informed about (lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender) issues and thus would not need to have this spelled out at the start of the story." They admitted this was a mistake. They also tried to walk back their imputation of a "raging" debate among psychologists, explaining, "We did not mean by this to suggest that the two sides are even in numbers. We did mean to suggest that the proponents on both sides feel strongly about the disagreement."

Margaret Low Smith, NPR's acting senior vice president for news, did not think their explanation went far enough and added, "We should have put the whole idea of conversion therapy into perspective. Not doing so meant the listener had no data to understand how common this practice is and how many people seek it out. The absence of context undercut the value of our reporting."

What is really going on here? Why would NPR, home to so many liberals and, one presumes, quite a few gay people, bend over so far backward to offer credibility to something associated with conservative efforts to discriminate against and persecute gay people? Alas, it's a familiar syndrome. Journalists have been so cowed by conservative attempts to "work the refs" that they end up writing reports that raise the question of whether President Obama might be a Muslim or whether global warming is a conspiracy of a power-hungry mad scientist.

A particularly egregious example of this tendency occurred last year on NPR when it saw fit to quote the discredited right-wing zealot David Horowitz in an obituary for leftist historian Howard Zinn. "There is absolutely nothing in Howard Zinn's intellectual output that is worthy of any kind of respect," he explained.

How odd, therefore, that this temple of ideological diversity--one that takes its commitment to giving conservatives a voice so seriously that it occasionally allows it to undermine its journalistic judgment--should be the subject of hundreds of pages of complaint from its former employee Juan Williams in a book called Muzzled: The Assault on Honest Debate.

Williams was fired by NPR news boss Ellen Weiss because, in giving voice to his fears of Muslims on Fox News, she said he had violated an NPR prohibition against staffers offering personal opinions. This was unfair to Williams, undoubtedly since lots of NPR staffers did this, as James Rainey of the Los Angeles Times pointed out. Interestingly, however, it mirrors The Washington Post's firing of Dave Weigel, when its reporters do much the same thing. Weiss was herself forced to resign largely for her actions, even though the dumping of Williams over his comments on Fox was clearly just the last of many straws.

According to Williams, who had been repeatedly warned, he was fired because NPR "is very elitist and in this case white institution" and "it struggles with the idea that there are capable thinkers and journalist and people who don't fit into some box." He had to go because, he said he was told, he "did not fit their view of how a black person thinks." What's more, he writes of Ellen Weiss, "She was able to use that distortion, along with a general view of Fox News as bad guys, to engage in a vigilante-style attack on me. NPR's standards for its journalistic ethics, which I supposedly broke, seemed to apply only to me."

A question Williams never asks is what he was doing at NPR in the first place.

To continue reading, please go here.

 

Follow Eric Alterman on Twitter: www.twitter.com/Eric_Alterman

 
 
  • Comments
  • 23
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
10:27 AM on 08/16/2011
Why are we still fighting the ridiculous, 40 year old "Culture Wars," in even more ridiculous ways? After many decades of sexual research and endless studies--haven't people gotten the idea that humans are sexual creatures, with a very wide range of sexual desires and fantasies?

People can pretend--even to themselves--that they have somehow changed their orientation, but there is that "critical moment" when only they, and presumably the god they are also trying to fool, know what is the exact image going through their minds.
10:12 AM on 08/15/2011
it's called "funding"...and the threat of "de-funding" by the Congress...NPR is on a leash...who can blame them for "pulling a CNN"...
01:52 PM on 08/14/2011
"Balance" is only relevant if facts are being balanced with facts. In the case of Fox News and more recently NPR, facts are balanced with speculation and outright lies. A fact is a fact, period. Everything reported now has to be subject to interpretation or nuance by the organization doing the reporting. The audience's cognitive dissonance and need to conform to the loudest and most boisterous pundits allows this to be acceptable. I have also noticed that when I listen to NPR, or any media outlets, the reporting seems designed to provoke listeners rather than educate them or provide any means of resolving a political or philosophical issue. I frequently turn my radio off when I am presented a report that compares apples and oranges or seriously discusses an irrelevant angle on an issue.
12:50 PM on 08/14/2011
Do you guys not get what NPR was doing? Their purpose behind this report was not to lend creedence to this discredited "gay therapy," it was to discredit Michelle Bachman and make her look like an extremist wacko. I would think you would be happy with NPR's obvious advocacy here.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Douglas Campbell
02:02 PM on 08/14/2011
probably
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Douglas Campbell
09:13 PM on 08/13/2011
NPR has in the past given unfair and unchallenged soapboxes to other anti gay pundits, such as Matthew Franck in December of 2010. This is not a surprise...
07:26 PM on 08/13/2011
This is the obsession with ''balance'' which means that there are two sides to every story. A couple of weeks ago I commented that sometimes balance is not required. I got a couple of democrats attacking me as if I worked for Fox! I'm a far left populist kind of guy.

We do not need balance. We need honesty, integrity and critical analysis. If there is a need for 'balance' felt by some folk up the management tree, let them make another program which ''strikes the balance.''

Imagine a program about praying the gay away. Manipulative torturers explain their god-given tasks. Very creepy.
12:53 PM on 08/14/2011
Imagine a program stating that George Bush lied about the CIA's knowledge of Saddam Hussain's weapons stockpile, and if so you will have most of the mainstream news media. Imagine a program that pushes a discredited theory that Jews run the U.S. foreign policy establishment, you would have CNN and Christianne Amonpour. Imagine a news program that stated George Bush Senior went to Iran during the 1980 election to ask the Iranians to keep the Americans hostage until the election was over, you would have Ted Koppel on ABC's "Nightline." Just a few of the "critical analysis" versions you are suggesting.
01:13 PM on 08/14/2011
Jerry you have a problem. Address it. You see, it was you who suggested the things you wrote, not me. Look at my comment. These suggestions are not there. Look at your comment. There they are! Get help.
07:58 PM on 08/14/2011
absolutely .. the so called 'fairness doctrine" doesnot mean interviewing a person talking about the terrors of lynching while the 'other side' discusses the benefits to the rope industry in a folksy interview. /that neither balance nor journalism. how many times did npr repeat 'shock & awe" as Bagdad, a civilivan city filled with non combatants, was, set to fire just like the world trade center.
07:03 PM on 08/15/2011
Well said. The media has fallen into the toilet in the last few decades.
10:22 AM on 08/13/2011
Now what I am going to do? NPR is now producing programming that suggests some widespread disagreement among health professionals about whether "conversion therapy" to become heterosexual is possible or desirable? It's been 40 years since the American Psychiatric Association dropped homosexuality from a list of mental disorders. It's the job of Fox News to engage in whacko "journalism". Perhaps NPR is afraid Congress will cut off their funding if they don't sound more Republican. Shame on them. If the only way to stay on the air is to lie, NPR staff should simply turn off the lights, close the door behind them and go after private foundations to replace whatever federal money it loses. If they can do that, they can thumb their noses at right wing extremists and do the kind of work that lowers my blood pressure. Debates over human sexuality have become nauseatingly boring and predictable. If we start with a simple premise - that human sexuality is complex and woven into our DNA just like the color of our hair - how can we deny basic civil rights to those in the minority? There is only one answer: it is part of the recipe for winning elections. Until that changes, this struggle will go on for the rest of my life. I'll be a part of it.
07:07 PM on 08/15/2011
Unfortunately, it is very common for movements and organizations to start off with an idea that, once they have become institutions, gets left behind as the focus shifts to growing as an end in itself, and doling out good salaries and perks. What's important becomes momentum, not direction.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Elmo Nellie
07:41 PM on 08/22/2011
What a novel idea! Produce a program that people want to hear and have more commercials (they have plenty now...just can't bring themselves to admitting it) and GET OFF THE FED DOLE.

Then they can produce that super wonderful news you like so much and make it COMPLETELY left leaning. See how that works?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MarcEdward
likes all cats more than most people
06:31 PM on 08/12/2011
When NPR decided to label "TORTURE" as ":enhanced interrogation" I switched them off for good.
As far as I'm concerned, NPR is FoxNews with calm soft spoken voices.
12:54 PM on 08/14/2011
"Fox is NPR"

You, sir have a basic inability to distinguish between fact and fiction.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MarcEdward
likes all cats more than most people
02:37 PM on 08/14/2011
Personal attacks are all you have it seems.
08:04 PM on 08/14/2011
Absolutely ... i have been wondering how npr could skate along reading press releases in depth.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
raker
02:56 PM on 08/12/2011
The problem with NPR isn't elitism or whiteness, it's their right wing orientation. "Balance" in news is the artificial virtue that helps only the right, validating every one of their atrocities, and NPR is the right's hero in that regard.

Like Obama, NPR seems to think that going off the deep right end, politically, is a way to neutralize the assault from the right. We've seen that both are sadly mistaken. Even an ember of integrity is enough to get you branded a "radical left wing extremist," and one weak little ember of integrity is all that NPR has left. And Alix Spiegel ought to get herself a job in a shoe store, because journalism is not for her.
12:55 PM on 08/14/2011
"NPR is right wing"

And what does that make you, a centrist?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
02:22 PM on 08/12/2011
Good post Eric. The Right figured out quite a while ago how to turn the table on facts by taking advantage of the principle of false equivalence that is the unchallenged operational assumption of the MSM. For all practical purposes we can think of MSM organizations - including NPR - as black boxes that treat all incoming signals as equivalent. If there is a discoverable truth that corresponds to facts, and in many cases it can safely be assumed that there is, expressing it would be a form of taking sides. Therefore the cowed and careerist members of the media must avoid taking sides with the facts at all costs if the facts themselves are being contested. It is a good career and business move. Present the two sides as equivalent even if one side conforms to truth and the other does not. If the viewer doesn’t have to work (or look for work) all day and attend to family matters, and has infinite time to independently research this and all other pressing societal issues, what’s the harm? If you had a couple of billion dollars and could easily manipulate the media to present your side that bailing out the banks and other too-big-to-fail institutions is necessary for maintaining the luster of our shining city upon a hill, but that doing the same for homeowners with underwater mortgages leads to moral hazard, wouldn’t you do it?
08:17 PM on 08/14/2011
What a relief to hear some thinking .... the 'housing bubble' in leiu of fraud; 'the banks paid back the tarp'; in leiu of charging people with perfect credit 30% on money thebanks were given for 3%, it goes on continually. the film star interviews that are bald promos ... npr is journaistic muzak grown in the political environment of a university. What this whole stroy is about is npr running from talking a journalistic stand on anything. but their own tenure.