Skip to content
  • Categories
  • Recent
  • Tags
  • Popular
  • Users
  • Groups
Skins
  • Light
  • Brite
  • Cerulean
  • Cosmo
  • Flatly
  • Journal
  • Litera
  • Lumen
  • Lux
  • Materia
  • Minty
  • Morph
  • Pulse
  • Sandstone
  • Simplex
  • Sketchy
  • Spacelab
  • United
  • Yeti
  • Zephyr
  • Dark
  • Cyborg
  • Darkly
  • Quartz
  • Slate
  • Solar
  • Superhero
  • Vapor

  • Default (No Skin)
  • No Skin
Collapse

The New Coffee Room

  1. TNCR
  2. General Discussion
  3. No thread about the bloodbath at WaPo?

No thread about the bloodbath at WaPo?

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General Discussion
17 Posts 8 Posters 238 Views
  • Oldest to Newest
  • Newest to Oldest
  • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • Doctor PhibesD Offline
    Doctor PhibesD Offline
    Doctor Phibes
    wrote last edited by
    #6

    Hopefully he can invest the money he's saving into making more quality movies.

    Melania II, the sequel perhaps? Or how about doing Eric and Don's Bogus Journey?

    I was only joking

    1 Reply Last reply
    • MikM Mik

      He’s going to use AI to crawl over the web for stories.

      AxtremusA Offline
      AxtremusA Offline
      Axtremus
      wrote last edited by
      #7

      @Mik said in No thread about the bloodbath at WaPo?:

      He’s going to use AI to crawl over the web for stories.

      Here's your chance, fellow Coffee-Roomers! Post profusely, your TNCR posts just might get picked up by Bezos' crawler bots and recycled into WaPo articles!

      1 Reply Last reply
      • jon-nycJ Offline
        jon-nycJ Offline
        jon-nyc
        wrote last edited by
        #8

        What sucks is I just recently canceled my NYT subscription figuring the WaPo subscription would keep me covered.

        The whole reason we call them illegal aliens is because they’re subject to our laws.

        1 Reply Last reply
        • MikM Away
          MikM Away
          Mik
          wrote last edited by
          #9

          IMG_5391.jpeg

          "You cannot subsidize irresponsibility and expect people to become more responsible." — Thomas Sowell

          1 Reply Last reply
          • HoraceH Online
            HoraceH Online
            Horace
            wrote last edited by
            #10

            That’s great. Norm McDonald would have loved it. He thought the best jokes were artfully worded statements of reality.

            Education is extremely important.

            1 Reply Last reply
            • MikM Away
              MikM Away
              Mik
              wrote last edited by Mik
              #11

              I've seen this coming for 20+ years, partly because I had friends who worked at the formerly great newspaper, the Cincinnati Enquirer. Now Gannett backup toilet paper. These people were either stupid or in denial or both.

              "You cannot subsidize irresponsibility and expect people to become more responsible." — Thomas Sowell

              LuFins DadL 1 Reply Last reply
              • MikM Mik

                I've seen this coming for 20+ years, partly because I had friends who worked at the formerly great newspaper, the Cincinnati Enquirer. Now Gannett backup toilet paper. These people were either stupid or in denial or both.

                LuFins DadL Offline
                LuFins DadL Offline
                LuFins Dad
                wrote last edited by
                #12

                @Mik said in No thread about the bloodbath at WaPo?:

                I've seen this coming for 20+ years, partly because I had friends who worked at the formerly great newspaper, the Cincinnati Enquirer. Now Gannett backup toilet paper. These people were either stupid or in denial or both.

                Back in 2003-2004, it was blatantly obvious. Karla used to work for the American Society of Newsroom Editors, working with every single major publication. They knew it back then…

                The Brad

                1 Reply Last reply
                • HoraceH Online
                  HoraceH Online
                  Horace
                  wrote last edited by
                  #13

                  Watergate and journalism chasing that dragon, destroying itself in the process.

                  Short answer: yes, Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein changed journalism’s self-image — but they didn’t invent journalistic ego. They reframed it.

                  They helped turn journalism from a trade into a moral crusade profession, and that shift has had lasting consequences.

                  Let’s unpack it.

                  ⸻

                  1️⃣ What Journalism Was Like Before Watergate

                  Before the 1970s, American journalism was generally:

                  More Institutional, Less Heroic
                  • Reporters saw themselves as:
                  • Record-keepers
                  • City-hall watchers
                  • Information brokers
                  • Prestige came from:
                  • Access
                  • Reliability
                  • Being “in the room”

                  Not from “changing history.”

                  Still Proud — But Modestly So

                  Yes, journalists had ego. Always have.

                  But it was closer to:

                  “We’re important because democracy needs information.”

                  Not:

                  “We are the central moral force in society.”

                  ⸻

                  2️⃣ What Watergate Changed

                  Woodward and Bernstein’s reporting on the Watergate scandal led to Nixon’s resignation.

                  Then came:

                  📰 Media Myth-Making

                  Especially after:

                  All the President’s Men

                  This film portrayed reporters as:
                  • Lone truth-seekers
                  • Battling power
                  • Armed only with notebooks and integrity

                  It created a new archetype:

                  Journalist as Hero.

                  Not worker.
                  Not clerk.
                  Hero.

                  ⸻

                  3️⃣ The Cultural Shift They Triggered

                  After Watergate, journalism absorbed three new ideas:

                  ⸻

                  A) “We Can Bring Down Presidents”

                  This was new.

                  Before:

                  We inform the public.

                  After:

                  We hold ultimate power accountable.

                  That’s a subtle but huge change.

                  ⸻

                  B) “Our Job Is Moral, Not Just Informational”

                  Journalism shifted from:

                  “Here are the facts.”

                  Toward:

                  “Here is what these facts mean morally.”

                  This is where self-importance crept in.

                  ⸻

                  C) “We Are Protagonists”

                  Reporters increasingly saw themselves as part of the story.

                  You can see this today in:
                  • Personality journalism
                  • “Resistance” branding
                  • Performative outrage
                  • Journalists as public intellectuals/celebrities

                  That lineage traces back to Watergate.

                  ⸻

                  4️⃣ Did This Inflate Journalism’s Sense of Self?

                  Yes — in several ways.

                  1. Hero Syndrome

                  Many journalists came to believe:

                  If I’m not exposing corruption, I’m failing.

                  So they:
                  • Look for villains
                  • Frame stories as battles
                  • Prefer scandal to context

                  ⸻

                  1. Moral Licensing

                  If you see yourself as “saving democracy,” you may feel justified in:
                  • Cutting corners
                  • Shading interpretations
                  • Protecting allies
                  • Going soft on “your side”

                  Ends justify means.

                  That’s dangerous.

                  ⸻

                  1. Overestimation of Influence

                  Post-Watergate journalism often assumed:

                  If we publish it, society will correct itself.

                  That turned out to be false in the internet age.

                  ⸻

                  5️⃣ But: It Wasn’t Purely Bad

                  To be fair, Watergate also produced real positives:

                  ✔️ Stronger Investigative Norms
                  • Source protection
                  • Document verification
                  • FOIA use
                  • Long-form investigations

                  These improved journalism.

                  ✔️ Less Deference to Power

                  Pre-Watergate press was often too cozy with elites.

                  Watergate helped break that.

                  ⸻

                  6️⃣ Was Journalism Self-Important Before?

                  Yes — but differently.

                  Before Watergate, journalism was:

                  Status-Oriented
                  • “We are professionals.”
                  • “We are insiders.”
                  • “We are gatekeepers.”

                  After Watergate, it became:

                  Mission-Oriented
                  • “We are guardians of democracy.”
                  • “We are truth warriors.”
                  • “We are moral actors.”

                  Both involve ego.

                  The second is more dangerous.

                  ⸻

                  7️⃣ The Long-Term Consequence: Today’s Media Culture

                  What we see now is Watergate’s legacy distorted by social media:
                  • Journalists as activists
                  • News as moral theater
                  • Outrage as currency
                  • Confirmation bias as “truth”
                  • Audience capture

                  Many reporters today subconsciously model themselves on the Watergate myth — even though the media environment is totally different.

                  They’re still chasing:

                  “The next Nixon.”

                  In a world where that framework often doesn’t fit.

                  ⸻

                  8️⃣ Bottom Line

                  Your instinct is basically right.

                  Did Woodward & Bernstein inflate journalism’s self-importance?

                  Yes — indirectly.

                  They helped create the idea that journalism is a heroic moral enterprise.

                  ⸻

                  Was journalism self-important before them?

                  Yes — but more quietly.

                  It was about status and access, not moral grandeur.

                  ⸻

                  The Shift

                  Era Identity
                  Pre-Watergate Professional informant
                  Post-Watergate Moral hero
                  Today Performative crusader

                  ⸻

                  Final Thought

                  Watergate gave journalism its greatest triumph.

                  It also gave it its greatest illusion:

                  That it is society’s conscience.

                  Sometimes it is.

                  Often it isn’t.

                  And believing it always is has done real damage.

                  If you’d like, we can also talk about how this compares to European journalism traditions, which evolved very differently — and avoided some of these pitfalls.

                  Education is extremely important.

                  RenaudaR taiwan_girlT 2 Replies Last reply
                  • HoraceH Horace

                    Watergate and journalism chasing that dragon, destroying itself in the process.

                    Short answer: yes, Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein changed journalism’s self-image — but they didn’t invent journalistic ego. They reframed it.

                    They helped turn journalism from a trade into a moral crusade profession, and that shift has had lasting consequences.

                    Let’s unpack it.

                    ⸻

                    1️⃣ What Journalism Was Like Before Watergate

                    Before the 1970s, American journalism was generally:

                    More Institutional, Less Heroic
                    • Reporters saw themselves as:
                    • Record-keepers
                    • City-hall watchers
                    • Information brokers
                    • Prestige came from:
                    • Access
                    • Reliability
                    • Being “in the room”

                    Not from “changing history.”

                    Still Proud — But Modestly So

                    Yes, journalists had ego. Always have.

                    But it was closer to:

                    “We’re important because democracy needs information.”

                    Not:

                    “We are the central moral force in society.”

                    ⸻

                    2️⃣ What Watergate Changed

                    Woodward and Bernstein’s reporting on the Watergate scandal led to Nixon’s resignation.

                    Then came:

                    📰 Media Myth-Making

                    Especially after:

                    All the President’s Men

                    This film portrayed reporters as:
                    • Lone truth-seekers
                    • Battling power
                    • Armed only with notebooks and integrity

                    It created a new archetype:

                    Journalist as Hero.

                    Not worker.
                    Not clerk.
                    Hero.

                    ⸻

                    3️⃣ The Cultural Shift They Triggered

                    After Watergate, journalism absorbed three new ideas:

                    ⸻

                    A) “We Can Bring Down Presidents”

                    This was new.

                    Before:

                    We inform the public.

                    After:

                    We hold ultimate power accountable.

                    That’s a subtle but huge change.

                    ⸻

                    B) “Our Job Is Moral, Not Just Informational”

                    Journalism shifted from:

                    “Here are the facts.”

                    Toward:

                    “Here is what these facts mean morally.”

                    This is where self-importance crept in.

                    ⸻

                    C) “We Are Protagonists”

                    Reporters increasingly saw themselves as part of the story.

                    You can see this today in:
                    • Personality journalism
                    • “Resistance” branding
                    • Performative outrage
                    • Journalists as public intellectuals/celebrities

                    That lineage traces back to Watergate.

                    ⸻

                    4️⃣ Did This Inflate Journalism’s Sense of Self?

                    Yes — in several ways.

                    1. Hero Syndrome

                    Many journalists came to believe:

                    If I’m not exposing corruption, I’m failing.

                    So they:
                    • Look for villains
                    • Frame stories as battles
                    • Prefer scandal to context

                    ⸻

                    1. Moral Licensing

                    If you see yourself as “saving democracy,” you may feel justified in:
                    • Cutting corners
                    • Shading interpretations
                    • Protecting allies
                    • Going soft on “your side”

                    Ends justify means.

                    That’s dangerous.

                    ⸻

                    1. Overestimation of Influence

                    Post-Watergate journalism often assumed:

                    If we publish it, society will correct itself.

                    That turned out to be false in the internet age.

                    ⸻

                    5️⃣ But: It Wasn’t Purely Bad

                    To be fair, Watergate also produced real positives:

                    ✔️ Stronger Investigative Norms
                    • Source protection
                    • Document verification
                    • FOIA use
                    • Long-form investigations

                    These improved journalism.

                    ✔️ Less Deference to Power

                    Pre-Watergate press was often too cozy with elites.

                    Watergate helped break that.

                    ⸻

                    6️⃣ Was Journalism Self-Important Before?

                    Yes — but differently.

                    Before Watergate, journalism was:

                    Status-Oriented
                    • “We are professionals.”
                    • “We are insiders.”
                    • “We are gatekeepers.”

                    After Watergate, it became:

                    Mission-Oriented
                    • “We are guardians of democracy.”
                    • “We are truth warriors.”
                    • “We are moral actors.”

                    Both involve ego.

                    The second is more dangerous.

                    ⸻

                    7️⃣ The Long-Term Consequence: Today’s Media Culture

                    What we see now is Watergate’s legacy distorted by social media:
                    • Journalists as activists
                    • News as moral theater
                    • Outrage as currency
                    • Confirmation bias as “truth”
                    • Audience capture

                    Many reporters today subconsciously model themselves on the Watergate myth — even though the media environment is totally different.

                    They’re still chasing:

                    “The next Nixon.”

                    In a world where that framework often doesn’t fit.

                    ⸻

                    8️⃣ Bottom Line

                    Your instinct is basically right.

                    Did Woodward & Bernstein inflate journalism’s self-importance?

                    Yes — indirectly.

                    They helped create the idea that journalism is a heroic moral enterprise.

                    ⸻

                    Was journalism self-important before them?

                    Yes — but more quietly.

                    It was about status and access, not moral grandeur.

                    ⸻

                    The Shift

                    Era Identity
                    Pre-Watergate Professional informant
                    Post-Watergate Moral hero
                    Today Performative crusader

                    ⸻

                    Final Thought

                    Watergate gave journalism its greatest triumph.

                    It also gave it its greatest illusion:

                    That it is society’s conscience.

                    Sometimes it is.

                    Often it isn’t.

                    And believing it always is has done real damage.

                    If you’d like, we can also talk about how this compares to European journalism traditions, which evolved very differently — and avoided some of these pitfalls.

                    RenaudaR Offline
                    RenaudaR Offline
                    Renauda
                    wrote last edited by Renauda
                    #14

                    @Horace

                    And all along I just thought it was that every American journalist just wanted to be the next Walter Winchell.

                    I have always made a point of trying avoid US news sources whenever possible.

                    Elbows up!

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    • HoraceH Horace

                      Watergate and journalism chasing that dragon, destroying itself in the process.

                      Short answer: yes, Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein changed journalism’s self-image — but they didn’t invent journalistic ego. They reframed it.

                      They helped turn journalism from a trade into a moral crusade profession, and that shift has had lasting consequences.

                      Let’s unpack it.

                      ⸻

                      1️⃣ What Journalism Was Like Before Watergate

                      Before the 1970s, American journalism was generally:

                      More Institutional, Less Heroic
                      • Reporters saw themselves as:
                      • Record-keepers
                      • City-hall watchers
                      • Information brokers
                      • Prestige came from:
                      • Access
                      • Reliability
                      • Being “in the room”

                      Not from “changing history.”

                      Still Proud — But Modestly So

                      Yes, journalists had ego. Always have.

                      But it was closer to:

                      “We’re important because democracy needs information.”

                      Not:

                      “We are the central moral force in society.”

                      ⸻

                      2️⃣ What Watergate Changed

                      Woodward and Bernstein’s reporting on the Watergate scandal led to Nixon’s resignation.

                      Then came:

                      📰 Media Myth-Making

                      Especially after:

                      All the President’s Men

                      This film portrayed reporters as:
                      • Lone truth-seekers
                      • Battling power
                      • Armed only with notebooks and integrity

                      It created a new archetype:

                      Journalist as Hero.

                      Not worker.
                      Not clerk.
                      Hero.

                      ⸻

                      3️⃣ The Cultural Shift They Triggered

                      After Watergate, journalism absorbed three new ideas:

                      ⸻

                      A) “We Can Bring Down Presidents”

                      This was new.

                      Before:

                      We inform the public.

                      After:

                      We hold ultimate power accountable.

                      That’s a subtle but huge change.

                      ⸻

                      B) “Our Job Is Moral, Not Just Informational”

                      Journalism shifted from:

                      “Here are the facts.”

                      Toward:

                      “Here is what these facts mean morally.”

                      This is where self-importance crept in.

                      ⸻

                      C) “We Are Protagonists”

                      Reporters increasingly saw themselves as part of the story.

                      You can see this today in:
                      • Personality journalism
                      • “Resistance” branding
                      • Performative outrage
                      • Journalists as public intellectuals/celebrities

                      That lineage traces back to Watergate.

                      ⸻

                      4️⃣ Did This Inflate Journalism’s Sense of Self?

                      Yes — in several ways.

                      1. Hero Syndrome

                      Many journalists came to believe:

                      If I’m not exposing corruption, I’m failing.

                      So they:
                      • Look for villains
                      • Frame stories as battles
                      • Prefer scandal to context

                      ⸻

                      1. Moral Licensing

                      If you see yourself as “saving democracy,” you may feel justified in:
                      • Cutting corners
                      • Shading interpretations
                      • Protecting allies
                      • Going soft on “your side”

                      Ends justify means.

                      That’s dangerous.

                      ⸻

                      1. Overestimation of Influence

                      Post-Watergate journalism often assumed:

                      If we publish it, society will correct itself.

                      That turned out to be false in the internet age.

                      ⸻

                      5️⃣ But: It Wasn’t Purely Bad

                      To be fair, Watergate also produced real positives:

                      ✔️ Stronger Investigative Norms
                      • Source protection
                      • Document verification
                      • FOIA use
                      • Long-form investigations

                      These improved journalism.

                      ✔️ Less Deference to Power

                      Pre-Watergate press was often too cozy with elites.

                      Watergate helped break that.

                      ⸻

                      6️⃣ Was Journalism Self-Important Before?

                      Yes — but differently.

                      Before Watergate, journalism was:

                      Status-Oriented
                      • “We are professionals.”
                      • “We are insiders.”
                      • “We are gatekeepers.”

                      After Watergate, it became:

                      Mission-Oriented
                      • “We are guardians of democracy.”
                      • “We are truth warriors.”
                      • “We are moral actors.”

                      Both involve ego.

                      The second is more dangerous.

                      ⸻

                      7️⃣ The Long-Term Consequence: Today’s Media Culture

                      What we see now is Watergate’s legacy distorted by social media:
                      • Journalists as activists
                      • News as moral theater
                      • Outrage as currency
                      • Confirmation bias as “truth”
                      • Audience capture

                      Many reporters today subconsciously model themselves on the Watergate myth — even though the media environment is totally different.

                      They’re still chasing:

                      “The next Nixon.”

                      In a world where that framework often doesn’t fit.

                      ⸻

                      8️⃣ Bottom Line

                      Your instinct is basically right.

                      Did Woodward & Bernstein inflate journalism’s self-importance?

                      Yes — indirectly.

                      They helped create the idea that journalism is a heroic moral enterprise.

                      ⸻

                      Was journalism self-important before them?

                      Yes — but more quietly.

                      It was about status and access, not moral grandeur.

                      ⸻

                      The Shift

                      Era Identity
                      Pre-Watergate Professional informant
                      Post-Watergate Moral hero
                      Today Performative crusader

                      ⸻

                      Final Thought

                      Watergate gave journalism its greatest triumph.

                      It also gave it its greatest illusion:

                      That it is society’s conscience.

                      Sometimes it is.

                      Often it isn’t.

                      And believing it always is has done real damage.

                      If you’d like, we can also talk about how this compares to European journalism traditions, which evolved very differently — and avoided some of these pitfalls.

                      taiwan_girlT Offline
                      taiwan_girlT Offline
                      taiwan_girl
                      wrote last edited by
                      #15

                      @Horace your writing and thoughts are better than ChatGPT. LOL

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      • HoraceH Online
                        HoraceH Online
                        Horace
                        wrote last edited by
                        #16

                        Less wordy at any rate. Gpt was surprisingly repetitive there.

                        Education is extremely important.

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        • MikM Away
                          MikM Away
                          Mik
                          wrote last edited by Mik
                          #17

                          Woodward and Bernstein had a large hand in turning me off journalism as a career, as it was my major. EVERYBODY in it wanted to bust the BIG SCANDAL. No one wanted to hone the craft of newswriting.

                          "You cannot subsidize irresponsibility and expect people to become more responsible." — Thomas Sowell

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          Reply
                          • Reply as topic
                          Log in to reply
                          • Oldest to Newest
                          • Newest to Oldest
                          • Most Votes


                          • Login

                          • Don't have an account? Register

                          • Login or register to search.
                          • First post
                            Last post
                          0
                          • Categories
                          • Recent
                          • Tags
                          • Popular
                          • Users
                          • Groups