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Monday, April 17, 2023

Karl du Fresne: The incredible disappearing journalists


Over the years I’ve worked with hundreds of journalists. To all intents and purposes, most have vanished from sight.

Some have gone quietly into retirement, but many are still active – just not in journalism. People whose bylines were once familiar to newspaper readers have effectively gone underground, along with the sub-editors who massaged their copy into shape. They have mostly been absorbed into the nebulous world of public relations, or comms as it’s now known in the trade.

The digital revolution inflicted huge damage on the print media, precipitating a hollowing out of newsrooms and an exodus of skill and experience into the comms business. According to the Sapere report commissioned by the Ministry of Culture and Heritage, the number of journalists fell by 52 per cent between 2000 and 2018.

Some of these refugees were snapped up by the private sector, where there has been a proliferation of PR and government relations (for which read lobbying) consultancies, the latter of which have recently come under justified critical scrutiny. But I would guess that an even greater number migrated to the public sector.

As the mainstream media shrank, so the government comms racket expanded almost exponentially. In the vernacular, it was known as going over to the dark side.

The trend has become even more pronounced under Labour. RNZ reported this morning that the number of comms staff in the core public service has risen 50 percent since Labour took office in 2017. Figures provided to RNZ show that 532 comms people were employed in the year to June 2022, up 7.5 percent on the previous year.

It’s odds-on that people employed in comms work across the public and private sectors now far outnumber those in journalism. Even 14 years ago the then Commissioner of Police remarked to me, with what I thought was a hint of smugness, that he employed more trained journalists than most newspapers did. I had no reason to doubt him.

I’m sure this wasn’t unique to the police. It has become de rigueur for every organisation with a public profile, whether it’s the local district council, a charitable organisation, a sports body or a government department, to have a comms manager and a team – often a large team – of comms advisers.

Health Minister Ayesha Verrall recently revealed in response to Opposition questioning that Te Whatu Ora, the national health agency, employs 173 comms people and a further 26 contractors working in the same field. This would be outrageous at the best of times but looks even worse when the health system is crumbling and desperately short of actual health professionals. It suggests seriously skewed priorities.

I’m reliably informed, meanwhile, that Wellington City Council employs 60 comms people across all its departments. If the effectiveness of an organisation’s comms staff can be gauged by its public image, you’d have to conclude that the comms people at both Te Whatu Ora and Wellington City Council are doing a spectacularly poor job.

Paradoxically, the expansion of comms departments hasn’t facilitated better communication with the public. Quite the reverse: many journalists will tell you that generally speaking, the ease of obtaining important information from government organisations tends to diminish as more comms people are employed.

When I started out in journalism in the late 60s, I could probably have counted on the fingers of my hands the number of fulltime PR people in Wellington. But what was previously a select and rather mysterious little club – mysterious because I could never quite figure out exactly what they did – now forms a powerful and steadily expanding tier in both the corporate and public sectors.

As an aside, not all my former colleagues made the transition into comms. A few re-invented themselves as academics and in the process, ended up a very long way from the world of plain English that journalism valued. I was amused recently to see that one former reporter of my acquaintance had become a university lecturer in marketing and acquired a PhD. According to his professional profile, his published research focuses on “market boundaries from a social practice perspective, approached from an abductive hermeneutic methodology and philosophical basis”. I would have loved to see him try to get that gibberish past a cranky, cardigan-wearing sub-editor.

But it’s comms, in all its varied permutations, that provided most of my old workmates with an escape route from a shrinking (some would say dying) industry. People who did useful and often admirable work as journalists now market themselves as content strategy advisers or communications and engagement leads, whatever that may mean.

I don’t entirely blame them. They have to make a buck, and they’re almost certainly earning a lot more than they did in their former career, though I bet they’re not having as much fun as they did when they worked in newsrooms.

I lament this enormous loss of skill and experience. You can see the results not only in the massive expansion of the comms sector, but more sadly in the greatly diminished quality of journalism.

The growth in the number of political press secretaries and media advisers, who wield more power than is healthy, is a striking manifestation of the trend.

Political press secretaries at the top level are more than mere functionaries. They are key influencers, practitioners of the dark arts: the equivalent of powerful courtiers in a royal palace. They often control the narrative when by rights it should be determined by the people who employ them.

I’ve seen it suggested recently that one reason Christopher Luxon isn’t getting more traction is that his media minders dictate the message when he would probably come across as more genuine and more spontaneous if he ignored their advice and trusted his own instincts.

Back at the media coalface, a shrinking but honourable minority of working journalists remain committed to telling important stories and upholding traditional values of fairness and impartiality. They should be regarded as heroes. Others still do their best to ensure a wide range of opinions are published in letters to the editor columns.

Unfortunately such people are now outnumbered by university-educated social justice activists posing as journalists who consider it their mission to correct the thinking of their ignorant, bigoted or misguided readers. This would be marginally more tolerable if they could write, but many of them can’t.

In the comms war, meanwhile, the balance of power has long since shifted from those trying to get information to those controlling it. They are unseen influencers whose role is invisible to everyone other than the people they work with. This has serious implications for democracy and transparency.

It must be acknowledged that there’s a legitimate and even vital role for comms people. Cyclone Gabrielle was a useful reminder of the importance of making accurate, up-to-date information available to the public.

But there are comms and there are comms. There’s a crucial difference between straight, unembroidered information – factual information that’s openly disclosed and which people can use – and political or corporate spin that’s used to make organisations look good, to promote vested interests or to bury potentially embarrassing issues of public importance. The type of comms, in other words, that seeks to exert influence on public affairs without disclosing who’s pulling the strings and why.

To finish, a couple of crucial questions: is the quality of government better as a result of all these unseen “strategic” comms advisers in government departments and agencies? Most people would almost certainly say no. Do the public get more and better quality information? Again, probably not. The thing to remember is that the comms business is ultimately about control – and nowhere more so than in the political realm.

Karl du Fresne, a freelance journalist, is the former editor of The Dominion newspaper. He blogs at karldufresne.blogspot.co.nz.

9 comments:

robert Arthur said...

I am curious to learn which msm "ensure a wide range of opinions are published in Letters to the Editor". Do not include any of mine.

Anonymous said...

Yes, you can see the loss of quality journalists reflected in the appalling grammar and spelling currently published.

I guess though it is no longer important as English disappears from NZ.

Terry Morrissey said...

If ministers need press secretaries that is obvious proof that they are not capable of doing their job. If a prime minister needs a whole host of people to tell him/her/it what to say, him/her/it certainly should not have any qualification in communication.

propaganda
noun
1.
information, especially of a biased or misleading nature, used to promote a political cause or point of view.
There you go. That says it all.

Anonymous said...

Propaganda advisers would be more actuate, unless comms refers to communists.

TJS said...

"university-educated social justice activists posing as journalists who consider it their mission to correct the thinking of their ignorant, bigoted or misguided readers" lol...
Nice one. I see what you did there, because we're just pseudo intellectuals eh?

I wouldn't do this if I didn't care. And I mean by that, read what's going on order to see if there's any glimmer of hope.

Anonymous said...

TJS - same for me to see what's going on. We need to be ready for action though when support is needed. The nurses rally was interesting as it was supported by all the Unions, not just the nurses'. Union's rallying against a Labour government, now there's a thing.
MC

Anonymous said...

A better question to ask is "Who's been preparing the parrots?

PREPARING THE PARROTS 1

Marxist Journalism Teachers

Socialist Academic Profile. 17 Dr Martin Hirst -- by Trevor Loudon
My latest Socialist Academic Profile looks at Auckland University of Technology School of Communication Studies curriculum leader, Dr Martin Hirst.

According to the AUT website:

Dr Hirst joined the School of Communication Studies at AUT University in January 2007, after a 12 year teaching and research career in Australian journalism education. He has an extensive background in academic research in journalism and communication/media studies and is the co-author of three books: Look both ways: Fairfield, Cabramatta and the media (2001, with Antonio Castillo), Journalism Ethics: Arguments and Cases (2005, with Roger Patching) and Communications and New Media: Broadcast to narrowcast (2007, with John Harrison).

Sounds impressive. A very experienced man for a very influential position. Dr Hirst will be influencing the course content for hundreds of NZ’s student journalists. He will be in a position to influence the way they think and most importantly, how they write.

One experienced journalist, the Dominion Post’s Karl Du Fresne is not quite so impressed with the good doctor.


Writing in the Dominion Post du fresne discusses a recent journalism seminar he attended:

Cleverly titled Journalism Matters, the seminar in Parliament’s Grand Hall had the declared aim of promoting “quality journalism”. It mixed a recitation of age-old union gripes – such as claims of understaffing and low pay – with debate over broader philosophical questions about where journalism is heading.

While the roster of speakers reflected an unmistakably left-wing agenda, the seminar attracted a handful of executives from the two big newspaper groups, Fairfax Media and APN, and covered some issues that transcended industrial politics, such as the threat to traditional mainstream news media from competitive pressures unforeseen a few years ago…

The political theme continued throughout the seminar, perhaps reaching its low point when the curriculum leader in journalism at the Auckland University of Technology, self-proclaimed socialist Martin Hirst, declared that journalism was not about reporting the world, but about changing the world.

This highly politicised interpretation of journalism, which sees journalists not as reporters trying impartially to cover matters of public interest but as agents of political change, is now so entrenched in some journalism schools that it barely raised an eyebrow.

That criticism has led to a media spat between Du Fresne and Hirst and some rather incredible statements by the latter.

Anonymous said...

PREPARING THE PARROTS 1 CONT ...

I quote from today’s Christchurch Press:

First Hirst praises leftist journalist John Pilger

John Pilger’s crusading work over many years is another example of what I describe as the journalism of engagement.

Then he attacks the virtue of journalistic objectivity;

Objectivity as a principle of journalism is no longer the holy grail. The fact that some journalism editors are prepared to say so and put such ideas in front of their students is just a recognition of this idea. In the respected Columbia Journalism Review, Brent Cunningham has written a thoughtful piece called “Rethinking Objectivity”. He makes the point that often it is an excuse for lazy journalism and that it forces reporters to rely on official sources. He also argues that it allows the news agenda to be captured by the “spin doctors”…

Then he discusses his socialist views;

My politics are in the tradition of international socialism…I don’t believe for a minute that the charade of democracy practised in the free market West is the be all and end all of human political development.

Well just how “socialist is Dr Hirst.

I can report that Dr Hirst joined a small Trotskyist sect while at university in Sydney in 1975.

I can also report that he remains a Trotskyist to this day.

Dr Hirst is listed as a contributor to the Australian Trotskyist website Marxist Interventions, where he is described thus:

Martin Hirst has been active in socialist politics since 1975 and claims to have been the only Trotskyist to ever work in the federal press gallery as a journalist

I quote from the comments section of Australian blog Intercontinental Cry:

just a quick line to let you know there was a very militant occupation of the Australian Consulate in Auckland this evening against the invasion of Aboriginal lands and in solidarity with our black brothers and sisters facing John Howard’s racist attacks…

Kia kaha
Joe Carolan
Socialist Worker, Aotearoa

very good speeches from all the groups in support-

Julia and Joe from Socialist Worker, Martin Hirst, Lecturer in Media studies at AUT, Jared from Workers Party, Jim Gladwin from Citizens against Privatisation, and statement read out from Kulin Nations and Aboriginal declaration of sovereignty’ by UNITY editor Daph Lawless in Consulate occupation that broke through police lines.

So there you have it.

Your taxes are paying a lifelong Trotskyist, who does not believe in objective journalism, to design curricula, to teach future Kiwi journalists how to work for “social change”.

Am I being fair to Dr Hirst here? Or am I being too “objective”?

You judge, dear reader. It’s your world this man wants to change.
ENDS

Cyndy Bowater-Pratt said...

The digital era has been an easy and convenient scapegoat to blame for wrecking our mainstream media. I believe the real culprits are much closer to home. The major media corporations themselves, and their various reincarnations over the years, need a good hard look in their own rearview mirrors. When it comes to why most of the nation's experienced journalists, and their newsrooms, have disappeared, the buck stops with their poor (to put it politely) past management. With a few rare and precious exceptions, these seasoned journos have lost their careers in the mainstream media as “thanks” from their employers after decades of hard work and service to their respective communities. This came as a major slap in the face to them all. One-by-one they’ve had to make way for cheaper 101 reporting and infotainment or, worse still, been forced to ride the juggernaut. This has been aimed at the lowest common denominator – trying to chase the mass market and elusive shareholder profits. The real irony is that many privately-owned provincial media organisations use a completely different media model to these flailing corporate giant. It’s more successful and sustainable.
Decades on and the big national multinational entities still don’t understand the real essence and nature of the industry they’ve bought into and why overseas models don’t, succeed here. Time and again we see examples of that – including advertising and marketing driving the industry. I am sure I was not the only person horrified when what journos do (which is a time honoured trade and craft) was re-branded and marketed as merely 'Stuff’ to be lumped in with everything else. That really sucked.
I once asked an Australasian media mogul and his colleague (visiting after their corporate takeover) what internal management training system their big news corporation had. The answer was a prolonged silence. There was none. That spoke volumes to me and so it is no surprise what has happened since then. I also discovered these organisations also have little, if any, idea what skills and experience the staff they employed had. Are they not also invaluable business assets? It’s no wonder many of us former scribes are languishing in the land of disillusionment – we’ve being undermined and abandoned by the very industry that trained us in the first place.
Meanwhile, all those PR and communications people certainly don’t profess to be journalists. They and their spin doctor (lobbyist) friends don’t need to apply any ethics – media or otherwise - to what they do. Their only real loyalty is to whoever pays them and that can be as changeable as the wind.
I also believe the lack of official ‘communications’ we received from any and all government sources, given the large number of comms people they employ, in the aftermath of Cyclone Gabrielle has been woeful. And the poor quality of what little information we did receive was truly appalling. Ask anyone here in Napier about that. For days on end it was only thanks to Radio New Zealand that we had any idea of what was going on. This illustrates the now gaping information chasm the public of NZ has ended up with. We are bombarded with lots of an endless stream of noisy information but very little of it is relevant or of use to any of us.
So, what happens to our society when the last provincial newsroom light is turned off and there is no one independent left to seriously question the powers that be on what they are up to? Surely that leaves us with big business and also local, regional and central government given carte blanche with their powers going totally unchecked. Who benefits from that? Certainly not ordinary, unsuspecting Kiwis who will, invariably, have to pay for it all. They need to be shaken awake.
Like many former journos, I sincerely hope we come full circle. The grass roots people of Aotearoa deserve to get their proud and fiercely local newsrooms back.

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