Eric Starkman, who runs a public relations agency called Starkman & Associates, has an interested perspective on what’s wrong with the media world — it’s the leaders — but he also provides an interesting perspective on how the business media performed during the financial crisis.
“Most business journalists tend to mime conventional wisdom of the day, which explains why the leaders of Enron, Worldcom, and Tyco were heralded in newspaper and magazine cover stories before those companies blew up. Journalists would serve their audiences best if they reported as many informed perspectives as possible, rather than spew out their too often misinformed and biased opinions about the companies and subjects they supposedly objectively cover.
“As for the prescience of mainstream journalism about Goldman Sachs and Paulson, check out this fawning profile that Fortune published in 2004.”
Read more here.
Fox Business host Larry Kudlow has no plans to leave his role amid reports detailing…
Morgan Meaker, a senior writer for Wired covering Europe, is leaving the publication after three…
Nick Dunn, who is currently head of CNBC Events as senior vice president and managing…
Wall Street Journal editor in chief Emma Tucker sent out the following on Friday: Dear…
New York Times metro editor Nestor Ramos sent out the following on Friday: We are delighted to…
Rahat Kapur of Campaign looks at the evolution The Wall Street Journal. Kapur writes, "The transformation…
View Comments
This guy is uninformed. Fortune also wrote extensive articles about the looming problem in the subprime market back circa 2005-2007; I had a reporter ask Bernie Ebbers in 2000 why his financial numbers didn't make sense, and Ebbers dismissed us as 'not understanding the WorldCom business model'-- and as soon as the earnings call ended, my reporter turned to me and said 'well, those guys are cooking up something.'
Plenty of business reporters predicted the broad contours and basic truth of the financial crisis for years. But in a world awash in news, many people failed to notice. Starkman is one of them.
This would carry a lot more weight if Starkman weren't paid to help companies massage the truth and spin their images. Perhaps the problem isn't business journalists but the PR people paid to lie to them.