The Pulitzer Prize Enters the 21st Century (Sort Of)

Prizes are being expanded to include online content — but conservative bloggers are still likely to be ignored.

December 12, 2008 - by Bookworm
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Today’s question is: “What’s a committee to do when it’s charged with awarding prizes for top quality newspaper journalism — if the newspapers aren’t around anymore?”

The Pulitzer Prize committee recently answered that question by announcing that newspapers no longer need a corporeal form but, instead, may exist solely in cyberspace. Joseph Pulitzer, after whom the prize was named, would no doubt be delighted by the committee’s willingness to embrace the future. I suspect, though, that he would also be dismayed by the committee’s periodic habit of elevating leftist ideology over sound journalism — a trend that will no doubt continue even in cyberspace.

Joseph Pulitzer, a half-Jewish, half-Catholic immigrant from the old Austro-Hungarian empire, was a military mad youth who, for a fee, came to America to fight in the Civil War. At war’s end, he combined native intelligence, hard work, and sound journalistic skills to become one of America’s leading newspaper publishers and a father to the investigative journalism that swept America at the beginning of the 20th century. It was Pulitzer who articulated the modern American journalistic credo, one founded firmly in the Constitution (and one that many modern journalists apparently forgot in the heady months of the Obama candidacy):

Our Republic and its press will rise or fall together. An able, disinterested, public-spirited press, with trained intelligence to know the right and courage to do it, can preserve that public virtue without which popular government is a sham and a mockery. A cynical, mercenary, demagogic press will produce in time a people as base as itself. The power to mould the future of the Republic will be in the hands of the journalists of future generations.

With this high-flown message in mind (and with a generous donation from Pulitzer’s estate in hand), both the Columbia School of Journalism and the Pulitzer Prize came into being. In the 90 or so years since then, the prize committee has successfully recognized many exemplary books, newspaper articles, plays, and photographs.

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Bookworm is a writer living in Marin, California. Her personal blog is Bookworm Room.

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10 Comments

1. BC:

Journalism requires critical thinking and research skills, maintaining an open and neutral predisposition, a logical yet skeptical mind, being able to put things in context, being able to sort out rumors from facts, and getting off your butt occasionally to actually investigate and look into matters further as needed.

Look at any conservative blog or media source, from the excitable numbnuts at Hot Air and the Free Republic to the supposedly more serious and restrained National Review and Weekly Standard, and compare them to the the most minor, obscure progressive blog — they all just suck as genuine news sources. There is nothing to indicate that they will ever amount to more than a random and motley collection people offering up opinion, complaints and charges based on a very, very fuzzy, and usually distorted information. Blogs and such are just a new flavor of Usenet with pretty graphics, videos, and fonts. No more, no less.

Dec 12, 2008 - 6:08 am 2. Pat J:

Right. Conservative bloggers are usually factually-challenged. Some rely on repeating the big lie until they convince enough people the lie is true. Hardly sound journalsim. Hardly credible.

Dec 12, 2008 - 2:21 pm 3. Rashputin:

While the assertions of BC aremostly just hot air, there’s a lot of truth in his comments about this just being Usenet. It follows the same path and generates groups almost as fast. The real problem conservative sites have isn’t anything to do with the quality of their work. Good journalists have already come along and I’m sure there will many more. The problem is, they’re going to act a lot like republicans.

What’s wrong with that, you ask? Well from decades of experience, as well as having a high school pal who has been in politics for those decades, republicans make problems for themselves as soon as you get more than six of them together. For some reason, you get just one too many republicans in a group and without a doubt there will be a clique formed within a matter of minutes. Oh, it won’t be over those tacky things like race, wealth, or even religion. It’ll be over things like, “he’s too enthusiastic”, “she’s got a degree from some cow college”, “his jokes are sort of tacky”. You get the picture, “not our kind, dear”.

Maybe, for example, repubs 1, 3, and 5, who band together and begin to work at keeping discussion focused on only “the right” topics. Maybe they decide that passing out tinfoil hat awards will make them look serious and shut up those energetic types who blab too much. They’ll work to ensure that their image isn’t tainted with all that nonsense. So, soon the clique will have unspoken rules, the blogs will limit input, and the readership will shrink fall off, and there won’t be so many around to see the fine reportage other than on rare occasions. One, Three, and Five, however, can form an even nicer group of blogs to roam among congratulating one another that their problems come from their efforts to do all the right things.

Lefties have cliques, too, but lefties tolerate all sorts of off color, poor taste humor. There are usually a lot of inane messages to scroll through before getting to something worthwhile, and just about any topic a weirdo wondering past wants’ to bring up gets some attention (if it’s not conservative, of course). Consequently, it’s not just lefties 1, 3, and 5, who feel like they belong and can get enthusiastic when the better writers (remember that leftie clique) say something needs attention and lots of vocal support. Lefties don’t right off the bat start trying to keep the unwashed masses quiet an in peanut gallery. They realize that they don’t have to actually hang out with these people other than in the e-world. They also realize how valuable it is for people to feel like they’re a part of something and that their enthusiasm is appreciated.

I hate to say it, but the conservative blogs will go the way of the other conservative stuff. A clique will emerge, they’ll have the right sort of credentials (whatever that is these days), and they’ll frown on newcomers, trying to tag them with things like, “Voodoo economics”, and “tinfoil proooofers”, especially if they seem to excite others a bit. They’ll really frown on enthusiasm except during the final weeks of a campaign. The rest of the time, those loud blabby folks can just stick to the peanut gallery and be seen, not heard. They can mumble a bit now and then, but please don’t let them get off onto all that stuff that doesn’t match the self-image the republican clique has of itself. There are a few sites that don’t fit that mold, but they’re not from traditional republicans, and they end up banned from google and such for being oh so incorrect and covered in tinfoil. The majority, though, are pretty much country club blogs. How’s that country club approach been working out for those who defend the party from the nutcake mases?

have a nice day

Dec 12, 2008 - 2:42 pm 4. clarice:

If Pulitzer remains consistent the prize will go to something like Democratic Underground.

Dec 12, 2008 - 3:05 pm 5. coniston:

Good conservative sites link to articles and facts, providing evidence to support their claims, Rashputin.

“Consequently, it’s not just lefties 1, 3, and 5, who feel like they belong and can get enthusiastic when the better writers (remember that leftie clique) say something needs attention and lots of vocal support. Lefties don’t right off the bat start trying to keep the unwashed masses quiet an in peanut gallery. They realize that they don’t have to actually hang out with these people other than in the e-world. They also realize how valuable it is for people to feel like they’re a part of something and that their enthusiasm is appreciated.”

The paragraph above seems true only in R’s mind.

Dec 12, 2008 - 6:51 pm 6. AnninCA:

Good journalism requires actually working a story, not just commenting on what someone else has already verified. Blogs are opinion-makers only.

Dec 13, 2008 - 9:35 am 7. James:

Dear Fellow Contributors: I actually want to PUKE when I read your ridiculous commentary. No where should “conservative” reporting be considered real “journalism” worthy of any award, no less the esteemed Pulitzer. Self-styled “conservative” news outlets are not news outlets at all. They are simply OPINION outlets, and bad ones at that. Any news organization that takes a particular stance is an “opinion” organization, and really should be banned by law. I’m not talking about legitimate news organizations, such as the New York Times and MSNBC. But sources of Nazi-like propaganda like Fox, Rush Limbaugh, and Victor Davis Hanson should be banned from print and the web. We need to protect free speech by washing away those who actually aim to propagate un-truths. Rashputin is correct; Lefties are tolerant, smart people who write really well and deserve the awards they give each other.

Dec 13, 2008 - 7:58 pm 8. Rashputin:

“Lefties are tolerant, smart people who write really well and deserve the awards they give each other.”

Not quite what I said, but thanks for displaying the way that lefties always stay on message and misquote or expand things to suit themselves. Tolerating nutcases in order to keep them involved isn’t the same thing as being tolerant; it’s more like taking advantage of, but whatever. Always being on the offense is their key advantage, the republican “in crowd” are already worried that some of their crowd might get off the bench rather than sitting calmly until the other team sets up for a play they think they can counter. That’s why the scoreboard looks so good right now, the republican folks waited all year to pick just the right play to counter.

At least they finally got a woman on the team who stayed on the field every play and didn’t just wait for the right opportunity to do something.

have a nice day

Dec 13, 2008 - 8:59 pm 9. Evil Pundit:

It looks like some of those newly-unemployed lefty journalists have come here to vent.

Dec 14, 2008 - 12:25 pm 10. Rand Simberg:

I’m struggling to figure out whether “James” is being serious, or sarcastic.

Dec 17, 2008 - 7:09 am

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