Try GOLD - Free

Public Editors Need Not Apply

ADWEEK

|

July 9, 2018

WHY PUBLICATIONS IN THE #FAKENEWS ERA ARE DITCHING OMBUDSMEN.

- Sara Jerde

Public Editors Need Not Apply

A handful of publications recently eliminated their public editor positions in favor of social media, appointing “reader representatives” and sharing more details about how stories were reported as ways to keep their newsrooms in check. But those avenues, media experts said, don’t replace having an internal, trained, professional journalist investigating issues that arise in newsrooms to hold editors accountable.

Publications including The Washington Post in 2013, The New York Times last year and, most recently ESPN in May, eliminated their public editor positions. The role had “outlived its usefulness,” ESPN explained, while The New York Times said no one person could handle all the responsibilities of the position. (Each publication referred back to its original statement in response to requests for comment.) In those original announcements, executives from each publication also cited the internet as an outlet for their newsrooms to be criticized.

“It’s not so much a matter of finding a conduit for readers to reach out to editors and reporters. If anything, there’s such a flood of stuff that journalists get these days from readers,” said Bill Grueskin, a Columbia Journalism School professor, adding that public editors use strong journalistic skills to explain to readers how and why newsroom decisions are made.

MORE STORIES FROM ADWEEK

ADWEEK

ADWEEK

News Anchor Of The Year Megyn Kelly

From Trump to ailes, the fox news personality fearlessly faces off with the powers that be—and ends up crushing the cable ratings race.

time to read

5 mins

November 28, 2016

ADWEEK

ADWEEK

The Big Bang

Global consultancies are rocking the agency world, creating a new universe of offerings that meld marketing and technology.

time to read

10 mins

March 13, 2017

ADWEEK

ADWEEK

DROGA5

Using the fingers on just one hand, David Droga argues, you can count the number of agencies that possess a “strong soul.”

time to read

6 mins

December 05, 2016

ADWEEK

ADWEEK

Ogily

When it comes to leadership changes, 2016 will be remembered as a time of disruption.

time to read

6 mins

December 05, 2016

ADWEEK

ADWEEK

The Myth of White Space

'Brands have to stand out in an obvious crowd—not stand alone in an unusual spot that no one cares about.'

time to read

4 mins

December 12, 2016

ADWEEK

ADWEEK

Brand Phelps

Can the greatest olympian in history be as dominant out of the pool as he was in it?

time to read

16 mins

December 12, 2016

ADWEEK

ADWEEK

Masters Of Their Domain

WHY DIGITAL BRANDS ARE KILLING IT IN ECOMMERCE. BY LAUREN JOHNSON

time to read

3 mins

April 16, 2018

ADWEEK

ADWEEK

Winners' Playbook

BRANDS OFTEN FIND THAT WHEN THEY AIM TO DO GOOD, THEY ALSO END UP DOING WELL. HERE ARE FOUR RULES TO KEEP IN MIND. BY DAN TYNAN

time to read

2 mins

April 16, 2018

ADWEEK

ADWEEK

Flipping The Disruption Script

THE FORTUNE 500 SHOULDN’T REST ON THEIR LAURELS OF HAVING A FIRST-TO- MARKET ADVANTAGE.

time to read

3 mins

December 4, 2017

ADWEEK

ADWEEK

MCCann

All things old were new again in 2017 as McCann dominated the U.S. agency landscape with a string of wins and created the most-discussed campaign of the year in Fearless Girl. 

time to read

7 mins

December 4, 2017

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size