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Ted Koppel:
By J.D. Lasica May 8, 1997
Immediacy has never been a strong suit of Net news among the mainstream
media. But in the coming months, dozens of content providers from
giants like the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal to small-town
weeklies and dailies will team up with Netscape, Microsoft, PointCast and other push-news services to broadcast their own "channels"
of breaking news right to a user's desktop.
That promises to fundamentally reshape the online news landscape. What risks
do these traditional print organizations face in moving toward a broadcast
model of Net news? I posed the question to Ted Koppel, whose 1996 book "Nightline"
dissects how television has reshaped news values in our lifetime. Koppel,
who surfs the Web only infrequently, has some words of warning for online
reporters eager to reinvent the wheel of journalism. This is his first interview
on the subject of the Internet.
First of all, it's not totally analogous to what I do or what my colleagues
Peter Jennings or Dan Rather do. We have a deadline in the same way that
my newspaper colleagues have a daily deadline. Going on live is not something
we do most of the time. Now, let me ask you, is there such a thing
as an online deadline?
Sure, it's continual, around the clock.
The deadline is when you're satisfied as a professional journalist that
you've got the story, the facts have been verified, and then you go with
it.
What I thought you were going to ask about was the issue of all the dubious
news reports floating around on the Internet. One of the problems that I
see and not much has been made of it is that the credibility
of any news report depends on the reputation of the source. To the degree
you don't know the source of the material, that needs to be taken with a
healthy dose of skepticism. There is all manner of dubious information on
the Web, and whether it ends up in the hands of Pierre Salinger, who gives
it more credibility than it deserves, or whether it leaches into the public
consciousness in some other manner, a journalist, as an editor, has a responsibility
to ultimately separate truth from rumor.
The Internet's immediacy seems to be one of its
most attractive features. It gives people a greater sense of participation
and immediacy
Or a greater sense of paranoia about their government and the press and
coverups and so on.
Some of the proponents of push media say that reporters
shouldn't report stories just once a day, they should break stories all
day long by printing what they know when they know it and then updating
it as additional information becomes available. Are there perils in reporting
information the minute you get it?
Take an example from a few years ago, a plane hijacking in the Middle East.
Peter Jennings happens to have had a long history of reporting on events
from the Middle East, and he is able to tap into that well of knowledge
to provide viewers with context and perspective. Now, if we are now moving
into an era in which reporters are pressured to get it online before we
have a chance to check and edit the material if speed is the main
criteria of putting something online then I think that's dangerous.
Whether you have one or 78 deadlines a day in your online organization,
I've got no problem with updating the news continually. But where we need
to be cautious is that we don't get pushed beyond that point into what I call 'McThought,' or the journalistic equivalent of fast food. There has
been a tendency in network television for certain news executives to be
watching a bank of television screens and seeing a news report on a competing
news program and saying, `Let's go with that,' even though we haven't had
a chance to verify the information. Now, that's probably not applicable
to the online world.
Perhaps it's too early to tell. I wanted to ask
about the suggestion I've heard from some broadcast journalists that the
news is alive, that no story is ever finally written
That's a colossal copout.
Why do you say that?
Well, it suggests that all we have to do is put any information we collect
on the air because we can never hope to have it all anyway. No, there are
several thresholds you have to cross before you put it on the line and
go with it.
Such as?
Like getting your facts straight. Let's take an example. A bulletin breaks
on the wire. All you know is that a plane has gone down over Pittsburgh.
Do you go on the air with that?
I've seen those kinds of news bulletins.
I don't think you have enough information to go on the air with it yet.
I have no right to terrify every person who has a family or a friend flying
in the Eastern corridor. You need to at least narrow it down. What is the
airline? What is the embarkation point? What is the destination? And even
then, I'd like to know, are there any survivors?
ABCnews.com just recently launched on the Net.
As more and more news organizations join the fray, isn't it inevitable that
Net news will become ratings-driven, with a kind of tabloid mindset where
the premium is on getting the story first rather than getting it right?
That depends on what you're buying. I don't think that `Inside Edition,'
or any of the lighter, frothier so-called news and entertainment shows on
the air has much to do with `Nightline.' It's a different audience. We're
looking for different things. But there's always going to be room for the
outlet that says, `We're not worried about getting it first, we're about
getting it right.'
As a news consumer, I'm more interested in the quality of the information
I'm receiving. Whether you're the New York Times, or Wall Street Journal,
or Washington Post, or Los Angeles Times or whatever your particular
news organization you have to maintain your quality while you're
being faster and better than the other guy on the block. But if your competition
reaches the point where you're willing to sacrifice quality and context
and completeness, I think that's going to rear up and bite us in the ass. |