Is PR killing real journalism?

I recently attended a debate between journalists and PR practitioners on the topic “Is PR killing real journalism?”. It was at the University of Lincoln and you can read the following reports on it:

Rob Wells’s at The Linc.

Carli Ann Smith’s at The Linc.

Andy Green, who took part in the debate on the side of the PRs, on his website.

Personally, I think the effect of PR on journalism is very situational.

PR is based around representing a vested interest and promoting your client’s company, department – or whatever it is they’re trying to ‘sell’ – in a positive light. And, of course, should the brown stuff hit the fan then it’s all about damage limitation.

So, inevitably, certain negative information will be withheld, whilst positive information will be promoted. Much like journalists you will get good and bad practitioners. Their ethics decide whether they’ll lie or not. A large pay-cheque probably helps too.

Journalism is going through a period of change, which some call a crisis, whereby revenues are falling and journos are being laid off. This leaves fewer journos having to generate the same amount of content. Consequently, there’s a heavy reliance on press releases because of a lack of time to find original news.

This is where PRs can manipulate a difficult situation.

By making a press release written much like a news article, the journalist under pressure to write a gazillion articles in a day may well just cut and paste the release. PRs can then get their message, unchallenged and unchanged, smack bang in the middle of a newspaper. This is where unethical PRs can spread lies, and where more ethical PRs can spread a positive message about their client unchallenged.

Furthermore, they can use this lack of time and resources to make it incredibly difficult for a journalist to cover a negative story on their client.

Anita Raghavan, who works for the Wall Street Journal, spoke for the journalists at the debate. She cited an example where she was pursuing a negative story about a large bank. The PRs told her she was barking up the wrong tree, that there was no story, and sent her hundreds of pages of emails ‘proving’ that she was wrong.

It took Raghavan six months to go through everything she was given, but none of it disproved her story. She then published and, as a result of her ‘non-story’, a new law was passed in the US. This is a great example of PRs protecting their client’s interests by manipulating a journo’s situation.

This probably happens quite often, as you’d expect. But the underlying issue here is that, while the PRs were disgraceful in their attempts at covering up a story, ultimately it was the lack of time the journalist has to investigate properly that is the real issue. And that’s down to the issue of commercialism of the media, with its relentless pursuit of profit at the expense of journalists’ jobs and resources. See Flat Earth News by Nick Davies for more.

In sum: there are good PRs and bad PRs, just like there are good journos and bad journos. PRs are doing their jobs by representing a client’s vested interests (although representing someone like BAE Systems is indefensible, but that’s another argument for another day…) and the journos should be allowed to do their jobs which is pulling apart press releases and challenging every claim made. But, due to time constraints because of a lack of resources, they can’t – and that’s the real problem.


3 Comments on “Is PR killing real journalism?”

  1. Katy Shinton says:

    Nice to see the article written in a very open, honest and balanced way.

    I totally agree with your points raised; which is refreshing after Rob Well’s article on The Linc, and even the debate itself. Mudslinging, namecalling and one-lane blame is not the cause for the fall of Journalism…. there is a much bigger picture, with both controllable and unavoidable factors.

    You are right in saying that you can get good and bad practitioners of both professions; it takes a kind of PERSON to behave unethically, NOT a profession. But in your response to the comment, ‘a large pay-cheque probably helps too’… I think this is a little unnecessary. There is many issues about pay; there are tirelessly hard, yet poorly paid jobs out there, but on the flip-side over-paid and ‘easy’ jobs (the celebrity arguement). It is your motivation for the profession, and your drive to achieve, that is the fuel behind how good a job you do (well should be). Not the pay-cheque. But then again, if times are hard enough, then some people DO sell themselves out for the cash. To re-iterate though… this is not just PRO bound, and it was wrong to suggest this. I am sure many journalists/papers that have been sued for ethical breaches were thinking about the revenues as their motivation…

    To reiterate Andy Green’s idea; With the ‘citizen journalism’ on the up (facebook… Twitter… The ‘poorer quality’, but in a lot of cases the quickest and most widespread) I feel it should no longer be about 2 separate enemy camps, but rather making sure both sides are adequatly armed to offer the best quality,
    most credible service to counter act the viral rumour system that is
    social networking!

    Point to raise in the last paragraph; I think it should be ‘PRO’s (Public Relations Officers) as opposed to ‘PR’s'? If you are listing the proffession?

    A great read nonetheless.

    Katy

    • Hi Katy,

      Cheers for the comment!

      It’s just a habit for me to refer to PRs, I use it as a catch-all term for those working in the PR industry (officers, execs, etc).

      I agree that it isn’t just PRs who sell-out for cash, but I was just making the point that defending a vested interest and getting your hands dirty in the process may be softened by a hella-load of cash monies at the end of it all!

  2. carli smith says:

    Fantastic article Shane :-)


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