Categories: OLD Media Moves

Access is one of the biz media’s problems

Brett Arends of Marketwatch.com writes about the problems in the media, and includes one that is particularly an issue in financial journalism.

Arends writes, “In early 2007, when the subprime crisis first blew up, some executives at big mortgage lending companies were going around telling everyone that their companies were okay. But I reported at the time that several of these executives were also quietly dumping stock in their own companies as fast as they could. Six months later one of the companies had plunged into crisis and was sold off cheaply. The CEO was interviewed on TV about the industry. Not once — not once — did the big-name interviewer ask him about the way he had dumped his own stock.

“There’s a reason the interviewer didn’t ask that question. It wasn’t her job. She wasn’t paid to break news. She was paid to get what the TV crowd calls ‘the big ‘get.’’ In other words, she was paid to get access. Her job depends on getting the honchos to come on her show. And to get them to come on her show, she had to promise them — implicitly — an easy ride.

“A few years ago a Wall Street tycoon was so incensed by a plan to eliminate one of his tax loopholes that he invoked the memory of the Holocaust by comparison. He is still welcome on TV channels. He is still invited to give speeches at lucrative media conferences. That’s because he still has money and power, and the media cannot give up their access to him.

“No one who asks tough questions will ever get ‘access.’ And an increasingly powerless media needs access. Work out what will happen.”

Read more here.

Chris Roush

Chris Roush was the dean of the School of Communications at Quinnipiac University in Hamden, Connecticut. He was previously Walter E. Hussman Sr. Distinguished Professor in business journalism at UNC-Chapel Hill. He is a former business journalist for Bloomberg News, Businessweek, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, The Tampa Tribune and the Sarasota Herald-Tribune. He is the author of the leading business reporting textbook "Show me the Money: Writing Business and Economics Stories for Mass Communication" and "Thinking Things Over," a biography of former Wall Street Journal editor Vermont Royster.

View Comments

    Recent Posts

    The evolution of the WSJ beyond finance

    Rahat Kapur of Campaign looks at the evolution The Wall Street Journal. Kapur writes, "The transformation…

    14 hours ago

    Silicon Valley Biz Journal seeks a reporter

    This position will be Hybrid in the office/market 3 days per week, and those days…

    14 hours ago

    Economist’s Bennet, WSJ’s Morrow receive awards

    The Fund for American Studies presented James Bennet of The Economist with the Kenneth Y. Tomlinson Award…

    22 hours ago

    WSJ is testing AI-generated article summaries

    The Wall Street Journal is experimenting with AI-generated article summaries that appear at the top…

    23 hours ago

    Cohen joining Bloomberg Tax

    Zach Cohen is joining Bloomberg Tax to cover the fiscal cliff and tax issues on…

    23 hours ago

    Avila named interim editor for Automotive Dive

    Larry Avila has been named interim editor for Automotive Dive, an Industry Dive publication. He…

    23 hours ago