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Michele Bachmann: why bloggers can be better than professional journalists (if they want)

by: Bill Prendergast

Sat Feb 18, 2012 at 14:00:00 PM CST


Veteran Minnesota political reporter Brian Lambert has dismissed leading Minnesota media's coverage of Michele Bachmann as a "fail."

It's not all bad news. Lambert did identify a small number of far less influential news sources that did do regular, valuable coverage of Bachmann. (Two that were recognized by Lambert turned out to be newspapers: The City Pages and the Minnesota Independent. I wrote about them yesterday.)

Lambert stated that the best political profile of Bachmann was done by an out of state journalist (Ryan Lizza of the New Yorker.) That's eternally shameful to Minnesota news professionals who covered politics in Minnesota during the last ten years. But I'm not sure the news professionals in Minnesota feel any shame.

The oddest thing in Lambert's assessment: his conclusion that many of the people who did the best "day-to-day reporting" on Bachmann were not full-time news professionals at all. In the opinion a veteran of Minnesota newsrooms, unpaid volunteer Minnesota bloggers did a better job of day-to-day news coverage on the biggest political career in Minnesota--a better job the state's three leading professional news
media.

That's a really newsworthy conclusion. I can't understand why the state's three leading professional media aren't playing that story up, this week: "LAMBERT: VOLUNTEER BLOGGERS BETTER THAN US ON BACHMANN STORY"

Why did the bloggers do better than the PiPress, Star Tribune, and MPR on the Bachmann story--year after year after year?

These volunteer bloggers have no budget (except for ad revenues from their blogs, and those are pathetic.)

And in most cases, bloggers have no experience when it comes to political reporting. (No J-School, for most bloggers.) And most volunteer bloggers are partisan; they write to publish their own political views as well as breaking stories.

And most bloggers don't do original reporting. Am I right? For most bloggers, the "news commentary" format is the norm--not original reporting by the blogger. I mean: what you normally see from a political blogger is...
(CONTINUED)
 

Bill Prendergast :: Michele Bachmann: why bloggers can be better than professional journalists (if they want)
...a link to a relevant news story by a reporter or publication, along with the blogger's original commentary on that reporting.

How could a bunch of people who do that,--
--be said to do better
--on the story of the most important political career in the state,
--better than the state's professional media?

It's craaazy, isn't it? But Lambert's right. Some of us bloggers--a very small number with very small resources--were better than Minnesota's biggest media on the story.

Here's how we did it. First, some of us do do original reporting (even though that's the exception.) Once in a blue moon, some bloggers do publish a sourced original news story.

But even when that happens, that blogger's original story has very little political impact unless major media/the legit media decides to pick up that blogger's story angle and run in their publications or broadcasts. (Example: Over the years volunteer Minnesota bloggers collected all this kook/extremist stuff from Bachmann from recordings of her speaking. I, for one, started collecting Bachmann's comments that back in 2003 or so...)

(...But there was no real interest in Minnesota corporate media in publishing any of that sourced, bullet-proof original reporting--even though I handed that stuff to them, free...)

(...so it didn't have much impact until sources inside and outside the state did pick it up, many years later.)

Moral of the story: if none of the big media (internet or print or broadcast) pick up your blogger original reporting--your blogger original reporting probably won't have much impact on the political debate.

That's one reason that a lot of us bloggers rely regularly on other people's reporting. You may not care what we report, but lot of people care what the LA Times reports, what the NYT reports, what CNN or Fox reports.

In Minnesota from 2006 to the present day, the most telling stories documenting Bachmann kookiness and hate came from professional reporting outside the state. Most political bloggers I know use professional reporting as the basis for their own work.

(Then why don't people just go straight to the LA Times or the Fox website, instead of to the local blogger?)

Because the most telling weapon in the volunteer blogger's arsenal is not original reporting: it's focus on newsgathering. The regular collection of relevant links to reliable reporting--all at one website. That enables an interested volunteer blogger to provide something that most professional news sources don't provide--deep focus, on one topic at a time, regularly, at one site. Plus: commentary and context provided by the blogger, and hopefully valuable input from the readers of the blog.

That's the model that the big professional Minnesota news outlets used to sneer at--and have been to imitate ever since, with vary commitment and success.

There is practically nothing to prevent a political blogger from staying on the internet as long as necessary--to gather the day's news on a particular topic, and write on it regularly. Nothing can stop a blogger from doing that, except perhaps the blogger's spouse.

The professional media we're talking about cater to short attention span. The editors move like spinning from spinning tops from riots in Syria to Whitney Houston's funeral.

The blogger can do deep, regular newsgathering with a sustained focus (if they want to.) If the blogger chooses to do this: readers who return to the blog day to day know that they'll find not only links to serious reporting on a topic they care about--but worthwhile news analysis with serious context and focus. (If they don't think the blogger's news analysis is worthwhile--they don't keeping coming back to read.)

But if the blogger's opinion on the news item is worthwhile: the readers get 1) a free editorial publication about the important topic of their choice, and 2) focus, context, valuable and informed opinion...not the "shoot from the hip, I gotta move on to the next topic now" stuff that most professional reporters have to submit.

So that's one reason that the wretched news-gathering, bitching and moaning Bachmann bloggers beat most of Minnesota professional reporters telling the Bachmann story...year, after year, after year...

...More about why the professional press failed, tomorrow.

LINK:
Lambert's story.
http://thesamerowdycrowd.wordp...

It's important to understand why there was a chronic "fail" by Minnesota's leading media.

Because for now, we are all "stuck with" the Minneapolis Star Tribune, the Pioneer Press, and MPR as the state's most influential news providers. If they regularly fail--year after year--to report evidence of extremism in the most important Minnesota political career of the last decade...

...we get lies and extremist views as one basis of our public policy. When the most influential media and reporters failed on the Bachmann story--wingers circulating paranoid political theory and talk radio propaganda gained a media legitimacy they never had before in this state. Bachmann's high profile rise in the state and federal government taught them something: that the PiPress, Strib, and MPR couldn't be counted on to report lies and crazy charges made by political figures, as these occurred.

The result today is a Minnesota Republican party where cynics, lying crackpots, and demagogues can maintain power by spreading perverse lies and disinformation. When the most influential media fails (or even spikes) the story of extremism in goverment--they poison our political process.

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Bachmann Coverage (0.00 / 0)
Bill, nice article. I still feel you know more about Bachmann than anyone else I have met. We never agree on politics but I have always respected your knowledge and thoroughness. I always found the Dump Bachmann site to have more info than anyone. They should be mentioned in this story.

I wish the local media would have treated the coverage of the 6th District race with more scrutiny.

The 2010 election was the most expensive congressional race in history. The fact that both the Democratic candidate Clark and Bachmann together spent over 18 million on a two year congressional seat was a disgrace. I tried to get the media to make more of a story about that.  

I will also add that the Democratic party is no better than the Republican party. I have the experience of being a two time losing candidate in the election process. I was able to pull back that veil and see how the process works.

I honestly had more issues with the Democratic party in 2010.

Keep up the good work Bill.


Bob--given the fact that you ran for Congress (0.00 / 0)
twice against Bachmann, and given the fact that I passionately opposed your decision to run in the 6th district both times...

...that's one of the most gracious endorsements  I've ever received from anyone. Thank you.

I have mentioned Dump Bachmann on this blog many times in the past, though not in this story. Their work was cited in the comment thread to Lambert's post, and I think I referenced that thread here just yesterday.

By the time I'd left the DB blog, I'd spent significant time defending Ken, Karl and Eva from personal and sometimes obscene attacks on the internet in the comment threads at DB. Last summer national and international reporters came to Minnesota and began to use me as a source on Bachmann. I also referred them to Karl Bremer and Ken Avidor --because we are all on the same side.

There was acrimony when I parted ways with Dump Bachmann.  I have criticized coverage decisions and media strategy decisions at Dump Bachmann in the past; that's because criticizing how Bachmann is covered is part of what I do--and did, even when I was working at DB.

We continue to have strong differing opinions on all sorts of different matters. Nonetheless, even after I fell out with Eva and Karl and departed from DB I continued to recommend DB to readers here at MPP whenever I felt Ken or Karl or Eva published important new work directly relevant to the Michele Bachmann story. I ran a front page plug for their book here, on this blog. Believe me, Bob--Bill Prendergast understands the nature of the DB blog's contribution.


[ Parent ]
Bachmann Coverage (0.00 / 0)
Thanks Bill, I know you understand the nature of the DB site. I think you and a lot of the other successful bloggers do a great job because you do it out of passion rather than for money. I always say never underestimate the power of passion. I think it is great that the national media came to you and not the lame stream media.

You and Ken were fair to me when I ran. I appreciate passionate and hard working individuals no matter what their political views are. I was happy that you introduced yourself to me at the Stillwater debate.

I have been ripped by all sides of the spectrum but you have to expect that if you enter politics.

Thanks for the kind words.


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