Blatant obviously is wrong on many levels. And the subtler types of 鈥渂orrowing鈥 that tend to happen regularly in local media also poison the journalistic air.
Often, when a journalist rehashes someone else鈥檚 work without giving proper credit, it isn鈥檛 some sort of creative effort to remix or add value to that work. It鈥檚 an unfair attempt to colonize the story and take ownership of it.
As an aspect of pack or herd journalism, it often represents some of the , as outlined in the Global Media Journal by University of Central Florida researchers Jonathan Matusitz and Gerald-Mark Breen.
This practice conflicts with the Society of Professional Journalists鈥 , undermines the larger journalism community and reflects poorly on the individuals involved.
This isn鈥檛 just a Hawaii issue, of course, nor is it new. The SPJ code specifically points a finger at 鈥渢he traditional broadcast news outlet,鈥 always looking for content, and to TV news鈥 propensity to take something 鈥 the original source.鈥 The code declares that kind of behavior a form of misuse.
Claiming Cook Lauer’s Scoop
We can look back in time, like a media archaeologist, and find rich examples. Take the Billy Kenoi scandal, which has the Hawaii County mayor trouble now. of broke this story 鈥 exposing Kenoi鈥檚 personal purchases on his county credit card 鈥 in a report published on . , this story simply wouldn鈥檛 exist.
The next day, , with reporter using the verbal link of 鈥渉ere鈥檚 what we know so far,鈥 鈥淚 found out鈥 and 鈥淚 also found out that,鈥 while three times inserting 鈥淜HON2鈥 into the text of the accompanying web story.
Uyeno noted both in print and on the air (a bit breathlessly, by the way) one of her primary contributions to this story: Club Evergreen鈥檚 hours of operation. She also noted that KHON2 鈥渇ound out鈥 that disciplinary action can be taken if a county credit card is used for personal reasons or to buy alcoholic beverages. That journalistic digging involved simply of Cook Lauer鈥檚 original piece.
That journalistic digging involved simply reading the first line of Cook Lauer鈥檚 original piece.
Two days later, on April 1, Hawaii News Now鈥檚 reporter Rick Daysog , too, with such verbal phrases as 鈥渢here are new revelations鈥 and 鈥渙nce the scandal surfaced,鈥 adding in the written account that, 鈥渆arlier this week, Big Island Mayor Billy Kenoi said he used his government credit card,鈥 as if that statement were something that just emerged from the ether, or as part of idle conversation in the town hall.
In the written account, Daysog did toss a morsel of credit to West Hawaii Today, by writing that the Big Island paper found two questionable charges (for a surfboard and bicycle equipment). But the way that attribution was written, it appeared that HNN was leading this investigation and West Hawaii Today only had contributed a small part to the overall story, not initiated it.
Neither of the television news stations credited Cook Lauer by name. (KITV also reported on this story on April 1, but its coverage or through alternative searches).
Giving Credit Where It’s Due
Civil Beat鈥檚 Chad Blair, on the day the Kenoi story broke, , from the first words of the piece and with a hyperlink to it. The Star-Advertiser, a few days later, to West Hawaii Today. Those are examples of how distinguishing appropriate credit and then recirculating and remixing a story with new contributions actually contributes power (and even adds value). When that credit is missing, the new iteration of the story diminishes or dismisses the original reporting.
Small-circulation publications on neighboring islands and digital-only publications, such as Civil Beat, are susceptible to such cherry-picking by other media organizations, especially those that broadcast freely over public airwaves or physically dominate space in downtown Honolulu with their newsstands.
Last month, for example, another story looked suspiciously like an unattributed rewrite job. This time, the .聽Nick Grube had dug into the financial holdings of Colbert Matsumoto, a recently member of the board, and found that he had several undisclosed pieces of property along that rail line 鈥 very valuable pieces of property 鈥 that inevitably would be affected by his decisions on the board.
The follow-up coverage by Hawaii News Now seems more than a coincidence, since Matsumoto was appointed on April 20; Grube鈥檚 story was published on , and 鈥 reiterating much of the same material that Grube revealed 鈥 appeared the next day.
Daysog used the latching-on trick of finding a representative 鈥渞ail critic鈥 to mouth the core concern raised by Grube鈥檚 piece, without mentioning that Grube raised it; then he rewrote the issues also raised by Grube, again, without mentioning Grube or Civil Beat. So whose story is that? How fair, or ethical, is that?
This gray area emerges when journalists add bits and pieces to a story already in circulation. Sometimes, those are valuable contributions that make the story even better. Many times, though, those added parts are just a method for extracting and taking credit.
Press Release Journalism
While that sort of incrementalism 鈥 arguably, of value 鈥 takes place, another sketchy sub-current of local news is press release journalism. That鈥檚 when a press release goes out and 鈥渂usy鈥 journalists just plug that press release directly into their channel as is.
Most journalists at least will ask a question or two to sort of stake a claim on the story, as they do when trying to take over a piece from another media source. Yet sometimes, they don鈥檛 even do that much, as illustrated by this recent web piece for KITV, literally titled (and these errors are his, not mine): 鈥淣ew airport signs direct give visitors beach safety advice.鈥
That incoherent headline is followed by this jumble of an introduction:
鈥淭he Hawaii State Department of Health in partnership with the City & County of Honolulu; the Counties of Hawaii, Kauai, and Maui; Hawaiian Lifeguard Association, Department of Transportation; and Hawaii Tourism Authority is kicking off a new initiative to share life-saving advice on ocean safety and drowning prevention with travelers statewide.鈥
And on the story went, circulated by Wakida鈥檚 ghost writer, Janice Okubo, a communication officer in the Department of Health.
Expecting Better
Instead of finding an unpaid intern, or some other sort of rookie involved, I instead learned, through the KITV web site, that has been working for the station for more than 15 years, including serving as its digital media manager for the past five.
No public-relations people are going to complain when their press releases get published, of course, regardless of who claims credit for it. The journalism community also tends to tolerate the re-circulators, because what are they going to do about it? But audience members who recognize these behaviors are in a position to demand better, by voting to give their attention to media sources who do the best original reporting.
Journalists, meanwhile, should give their colleagues at other media organizations credit for the work that they do.
Wouldn鈥檛 each of them like that respect in return?
So it starts somewhere, and that place is giving credit, or, as the SPJ code succinctly advises:聽
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About the Author
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Brett Oppegaard has a doctorate degree in technical communication and rhetoric. He studies journalism and media forms as an associate professor at the University of Hawaii Manoa, in the School of Communications. He also has worked for many years in the journalism industry. Comment below or email Brett at brett.oppegaard@gmail.com.
Reader Rep is a media criticism and commentary column that is independent from Civil Beat鈥檚 editorial staff and does not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of Civil Beat.