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NPR suspends veteran editor who blew whistle on liberal bias at organization

You haven't watched newsnation have you? Are you confusing it with newsmax or OAN? Those are as right wing as they come.

Then you say get news from multiple sources, but not conservative ones... How the eff is that going to give you an objective world view?

Tell me you're in a left wing bubble without telling me you're in a left wing bubble.

God dam man, there is a world without bubbles.

Networks like CBS, NBC and ABC survive by advertising dollars. Competiton. Journalism is a critical component of their product and maintaining and sustaining integrity ensures reported news is correct and timely. To do so it must be fact checked and validated prior to being aired. This gatekeeping is a crucial aspect of legitimate journalism.

Fringe networks exist by subscription and are entertainment based. In the case view Fox News, the size of the viewership allowed them to lie until civil action caught up with them.

BTW, Newsmax is a far-right network, taking bleed-offs from dissatisfied Fox News viewers So, it's easy to see from where you're reading the spectrum.
 
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Like a mommy blogger, “he did his research.”
Stacks up well to your “zero research” dispute of what he presented.

You’d think one of the Republican editors at NPR would correct the record, but no.

Just you, without any evidence, asserting that he is incorrect.
 
One of his former co-workers pointing out that the "poor victim" is FOS:

"This article needed a better editor. I don’t know who, if anyone, edited Uri’s story, but they let him publish an article that discredited itself.

I discussed one example on stage in San Antonio. The article made headlines for Uri’s claim that he “looked at voter registration for our newsroom” in Washington, D.C., and found his “editorial” colleagues were unanimously registered Democrats—87 Democrats, 0 Republicans.

I am a prominent member of the newsroom in Washington. If Uri told the truth, then I could only be a registered Democrat. I held up a screenshot of my voter registration showing I am registered with “no party.” Some in the crowd gasped. Uri had misled them.

NPR says its content division has 662 people around the world, including far more than 87 in Washington. The article never disclosed this context. (NPR doesn’t ask employees about their voter registration; I don’t know how Uri learned the 87 registrations he says he found.)

When I asked Uri, he said he “couldn’t care less” that I am not a Democrat. He said the important thing was the “aggregate”—exactly what his 87-0 misrepresented by leaving out people like me. While it’s widely believed that most mainstream journalists are Democrats, I’ve had colleagues that I was pretty sure were conservative (I don’t ask), and I’ve learned just since Uri’s article that I am one of several NPR hosts of “no party” registration."



NPR hires smart people. We know that. The product shows that.

Do I detect jealousy here?

Look at the U.S. House..

Look at our pathetic Iowa state government.
 
Google Sheets breaks after the 33rd iteration. Just comes back with 0 after that.

Excel will go farther: 6.46235E-27

Or: 0.000000000000000000000000646235% chance of getting the same staff via random selection from the public at large.

That's a helluva parlay.

Han had much better odds of getting through the asteroid field.
Google sheets isnt “breaking,” cell is not formatted properly to display full number. The “0” you see is rounded. Easily correctable.
 
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An NPR editor resigned Wednesday morning, eight days after publishing a lengthy essay accusing the network of journalistic malpractice for conforming to a politically liberal worldview at the expense of fairness and accuracy.

Senior business editor Uri Berliner’s resignation came after a week of blowback to his comments, published online April 9 in the Free Press, that prompted criticism of NPR’s new chief executive and has left the newsroom in turmoil.

Berliner submitted his resignation letter one day after he disclosed that the network had temporarily suspended him for not getting approval for doing work for other publications. NPR policy requires receiving written permission from supervisors “for all outside freelance and journalistic work," according to the employee handbook.

An NPR spokeswoman said Wednesday that the network does not comment on personnel matters. Berliner declined The Washington Post’s request for further comment.


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In his resignation letter, Berliner called NPR “a great American institution where I have worked for 25 years,” and said that he doesn’t support calls to defund NPR. “I respect the integrity of my colleagues and wish for NPR to thrive and do important journalism,” he wrote in the letter posted on his X account. “But I cannot work in a newsroom where I am disparaged by a new CEO whose divisive views confirm the very problems I cite in my Free Press essay.”

Berliner’s 3,500-word essay, titled “I’ve Been at NPR for 25 Years. Here’s How We Lost America’s Trust,” seemed to confirm the worst suspicions held by NPR’s fiercest critics on the right: that the legendary media organization had an ideological, progressive agenda that dictates its journalism. And the Free Press is an online publication started by journalist Bari Weiss, whose own resignation from the New York Times in 2020 was used by conservative politicians as evidence that the Times stifled views to the right; Weiss accused the Times of catering to a rigid, politically left-leaning worldview and not defending her against online “bullies” when she expressed views to the contrary. Berliner’s essay was accompanied by several glossy portraits and a nearly hour-long podcast interview with Weiss.

Conservative activist Christopher Rufo — who rose to fame for targeting “critical race theory,” and whose scrutiny of Harvard president Claudine Gay preceded her resignation — set his sights this week on NPR’s new CEO, Katherine Maher, surfacing old social-media posts she wrote before she joined the news organization. In one 2020 tweet, she referred to Trump as a “deranged racist.” Others posts show her wearing a Biden hat, or wistfully daydreaming about hanging out with Kamala Harris. Rufo has called for Maher’s resignation.


Maher, who started her job as NPR CEO last month, previously was the head of the Wikimedia Foundation, the nonprofit that operates the online encyclopedia Wikipedia. An NPR spokesperson said in a statement Tuesday that Maher “was not working in journalism at the time” of the social media posts; she was “exercising her first amendment right to express herself like any other American citizen,” and “the CEO is not involved in editorial decisions.”
In a statement, an NPR spokesperson described the outcry over Maher’s old posts as “a bad faith attack that follows an established playbook, as online actors with explicit agendas work to discredit independent news organizations. ... Spending time on these accusations is intended to detract from NPR’s mission of informing the American public and providing local information in communities around the country is more important than ever.”

Last week, Maher indirectly referenced Berliner’s essay in a note to staff that NPR also published online. “Asking a question about whether we’re living up to our mission should always be fair game: after all, journalism is nothing if not hard questions,” she wrote. “Questioning whether our people are serving our mission with integrity, based on little more than the recognition of their identity, is profoundly disrespectful, hurtful, and demeaning.”


Many NPR staff members — including prominent on-air personalities — took issue with Berliner’s essay, calling it an unfair depiction that lacked context or journalistic rigor, and didn’t seek comment from NPR for his many claims.
“Morning Edition” host Steve Inskeep, writing on his Substack on Tuesday, fact-checked or contextualized several of the arguments Berliner made. For instance: Berliner wrote that he once asked “why we keep using that word that many Hispanics hate — Latinx.” Inskeep said he searched 90 days of NPR’s content and found “Latinx” was used nine times — “usually by a guest” — compared to the nearly 400 times “Latina” and “Latino” were used.

“This article needed a better editor,” Inskeep wrote. “I don’t know who, if anyone, edited Uri’s story, but they let him publish an article that discredited itself. ... A careful read of the article shows many sweeping statements for which the writer is unable to offer evidence.”


“Morning Edition” host Leila Fadel told The Post: “Many feel this was a bad faith effort to undermine and endanger our reporters around the country and the world, rather than make us a stronger and more powerful news organization. "He wrote what I think was a factually inaccurate take on our work that was filled with omissions to back his arguments.”
In the piece, Berliner accuses NPR of mishandling three major stories: the allegations of the 2016 Trump campaign’s collusion with Russia, the origins of the coronavirus, and the authenticity and relevance of Hunter Biden’s laptop. Berliner’s critics note that he didn’t oversee coverage of these stories. They also say that his essay indirectly maligns employee affinity groups — he name-checks groups for Muslim, Jewish, queer and Black employees, which he wrote “reflect broader movement in the culture of people clustering together based on ideology or a characteristic at birth.” He also writes, without proper context, about the size of NPR’s newsroom — that NPR’s D.C. headquarters is politically homogenous because it employs 87 registered Democrats and zero Republicans.

Tony Cavin, NPR’s managing editor of standards and practices, told The Post that “I have no idea where he got that number,” that NPR’s newsroom has 660 employees, and that “I know a number of our hosts and staff are registered as independents.” That includes Inskeep, who, on his Substack, backed up Cavin’s assessment.


Berliner also wrote that, during the Trump administration, NPR “hitched our wagon” to top Trump antagonist Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) by interviewing him 25 times about Trump and Russia. Cavin told The Post NPR aired 900 interviews with lawmakers during the same period of time, “so that’s three percent. He’s a business reporter, he knows about statistics and it seems he’s selectively using statistics.”

“Weekend Edition” host Ayesha Rascoe told The Post that no individual or news organization is “above reproach,” but one should not “be able to tear down an entire organization’s work without any sort of response or context provided or pushback.” There are many legitimate critiques to make of NPR’s coverage, she added, “but the way this has been done — it’s to invalidate all the work NPR does.”

In an interview Tuesday with NPR’s David Folkenflik (whose work is also criticized in his essay), Berliner said he thinks Maher was not fit to run NPR. “We have great journalists here,” Berliner said to Folkenfilk. “If they shed their opinions and did the great journalism they’re capable of, this would be a much more interesting and fulfilling organization for our listeners.”

 
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Google sheets isnt “breaking,” cell is not formatted properly to display full number. The “0” you see is rounded. Easily correctable.
True, format as number and NPR could hire 14 more staff before Google sheets won't give them anymore decimal places.
 
Stacks up well to your “zero research” dispute of what he presented.

You’d think one of the Republican editors at NPR would correct the record, but no.

Just you, without any evidence, asserting that he is incorrect.
steve inskeep has spoken up and pointed out that he is not a registered democrat (among other issues with uri's article)

 
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steve inskeep has spoken up and pointed out that he is not a registered democrat (among other issues with uri's article)

His weaseling response makes its own point:

I discussed one example on stage in San Antonio. The article made headlines for Uri’s claim that he “looked at voter registration for our newsroom” in Washington, D.C., and found his “editorial” colleagues were unanimously registered Democrats—87 Democrats, 0 Republicans.

That quote is important, because he proceeds to compare that count of those with editorial power to:

I am a prominent member of the newsroom in Washington. If Uri told the truth, then I could only be a registered Democrat.

Is he an editor?

I held up a screenshot of my voter registration showing I am registered with “no party.” Some in the crowd gasped. Uri had misled them.

NPR says its content division has 662 people around the world, including far more than 87 in Washington. The article never disclosed this context. (NPR doesn’t ask employees about their voter registration; I don’t know how Uri learned the 87 registrations he says he found.)



More minions than those in positions of power? Is this a revelation?


When I asked Uri, he said he “couldn’t care less” that I am not a Democrat. He said the important thing was the “aggregate”—exactly what his 87-0 misrepresented by leaving out people like me. While it’s widely believed that most mainstream journalists are Democrats, I’ve had colleagues that I was pretty sure were conservative (I don’t ask), and I’ve learned just since Uri’s article that I am one of several NPR hosts of “no party” registration.


Oh. So not an editor that Uri referenced.
How misleading indeed.
 
His weaseling response makes its own point:

I discussed one example on stage in San Antonio. The article made headlines for Uri’s claim that he “looked at voter registration for our newsroom” in Washington, D.C., and found his “editorial” colleagues were unanimously registered Democrats—87 Democrats, 0 Republicans.

That quote is important, because he proceeds to compare that count of those with editorial power to:

I am a prominent member of the newsroom in Washington. If Uri told the truth, then I could only be a registered Democrat.

Is he an editor?

I held up a screenshot of my voter registration showing I am registered with “no party.” Some in the crowd gasped. Uri had misled them.

NPR says its content division has 662 people around the world, including far more than 87 in Washington. The article never disclosed this context. (NPR doesn’t ask employees about their voter registration; I don’t know how Uri learned the 87 registrations he says he found.)



More minions than those in positions of power? Is this a revelation?


When I asked Uri, he said he “couldn’t care less” that I am not a Democrat. He said the important thing was the “aggregate”—exactly what his 87-0 misrepresented by leaving out people like me. While it’s widely believed that most mainstream journalists are Democrats, I’ve had colleagues that I was pretty sure were conservative (I don’t ask), and I’ve learned just since Uri’s article that I am one of several NPR hosts of “no party” registration.


Oh. So not an editor that Uri referenced.
How misleading indeed.
i know better than to think you'd acknowledge or agree with a single thing said in that article

i was just pointing out that there was push back from people associated with NPR (steve's article mentions another) - which seemed to the crux of your "you'd think one of the republican editors at NPR..." comment
 
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i was just pointing out that there was push back from people associated with NPR (steve's article mentions another) - which seemed to the crux of your "you'd think one of the republican editors at NPR..." comment
Let me know when you find that Republican editor.
 
Let me know when you find that Republican editor.
personally i dont' really give a shit

the republican party has made rejection of all non-explicitly partisan news outlets part of their dogma

it isn't shocking that there aren't many/any republicans left

----

let's not pretend having republicans (or former republicans) around buys a news outlet any credibility with current republicans. MSNBC and CNN have several former republicans prominently featured...a few with their own shows. does that seem to earn them any credit?
 
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God dam man, there is a world without bubbles.

Networks like CBS, NBC and ABC survive by advertising dollars. Competiton. Journalism is a critical component of their product and maintaining and sustaining integrity ensures reported news is correct and timely. To do so it must be fact checked and validated prior to being aired. This gatekeeping is a crucial aspect of legitimate journalism.

Fringe networks exist by subscription and are entertainment based. In the case view Fox News, the size of the viewership allowed them to lie until civil action caught up with them.

BTW, Newsmax is a far-right network, taking bleed-offs from dissatisfied Fox News viewers So, it's easy to see from where you're reading the spectrum.
NewsNation is center. ABC, NBC and CBS are left leaning, just not as far left as MSNBC and CNN. I agree Newsmax is far right, that's why I wondered if you were thinking of them when you said NewsNation was as far right as you can get. Newsmax or foxnews aren't giving Cuomo his own show...NN does.

If someone says ABC, NBC, CBS are center, I know they lean left. If they say FoxNews is fair and balanced, I know they lean pretty far right. I know if someone says CNN/MSNBC are balanced, I know they're pretty far left. Easy formula.
 
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How far removed the staff of NPR is from the public at large in viewpoint diversity.
Keep up.


What I've tumbled upon is the fact that you'll desperately deflect from showing us just how far removed 87-0 is from the public at large.
lol…still can’t grab that dollar can you?? Keep reaching.

I’ll try to dumb this down so even you can understand it. Uri - and you? - claim there was a time when NPR was far more balanced in their presentation of the news. You keep trying to claim that this 87-0 number shows how far they’ve strayed from that but…

READ THIS CAREFULLY

…neither you nor Uri have told us what the newsroom numbers were THEN. You can’t demonstrate shit with that 87-0 claim without showing how different it was THEN when NPR was “better”. Absent that context, the number is just BS. I’m not sure what about that incredibly simple premise escapes you. I suspect you still don’t get it.

You not getting it is hardly surprising. A guy who won a Peabody -supposedly all on his own - would undoubtedly understand it…which is another example that URI’s a guy grinding an axe rather than trying to make a salient point.

And, of course, now we know he lied about that number.
 
Note that when he presented his findings they weren't disputed.
You're the only person I've seen dispute them. Certainly no one from NPR disputes it.
And yet you've done so having done nothing to know otherwise.


In recent years I’ve struggled to answer that question. Concerned by the lack of viewpoint diversity, I looked at voter registration for our newsroom. In D.C., where NPR is headquartered and many of us live, I found 87 registered Democrats working in editorial positions and zero Republicans. None.

So on May 3, 2021, I presented the findings at an all-hands editorial staff meeting. When I suggested we had a diversity problem with a score of 87 Democrats and zero Republicans, the response wasn’t hostile. It was worse. It was met with profound indifference. I got a few messages from surprised, curious colleagues. But the messages were of the “oh wow, that’s weird” variety, as if the lopsided tally was a random anomaly rather than a critical failure of our diversity North Star.

In a follow-up email exchange, a top NPR news executive told me that she had been “skewered” for bringing up diversity of thought when she arrived at NPR. So, she said, “I want to be careful how we discuss this publicly.”
So, he didn't do any actual "independent analysis", he just looked around and made shit up.

That's what we've already told you.
 
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Note that when he presented his findings they weren't disputed.
You're the only person I've seen dispute them. Certainly no one from NPR disputes it.
And yet you've done so having done nothing to know otherwise.


In recent years I’ve struggled to answer that question. Concerned by the lack of viewpoint diversity, I looked at voter registration for our newsroom. In D.C., where NPR is headquartered and many of us live, I found 87 registered Democrats working in editorial positions and zero Republicans. None.

So on May 3, 2021, I presented the findings at an all-hands editorial staff meeting. When I suggested we had a diversity problem with a score of 87 Democrats and zero Republicans, the response wasn’t hostile. It was worse. It was met with profound indifference. I got a few messages from surprised, curious colleagues. But the messages were of the “oh wow, that’s weird” variety, as if the lopsided tally was a random anomaly rather than a critical failure of our diversity North Star.

In a follow-up email exchange, a top NPR news executive told me that she had been “skewered” for bringing up diversity of thought when she arrived at NPR. So, she said, “I want to be careful how we discuss this publicly.”
No credible employer would ask their employees political affiliation. You're being ridiculous.
 
Trump broke a lot of things.

Unfortunately one of them was NPR.

Jimmy Fallon Reaction GIF by The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon
 
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No credible employer would ask their employees political affiliation. You're being ridiculous.
Voter registrations aren't secret information.
With a name and birthday you can pull Leon county voter registration info on anyone.

You're asserting, without evidence, that he made up this number. You're being ridiculous.
 
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You keep trying to claim that this 87-0 number shows how far they’ve strayed from
the public at large.
That’s the point I’m making.

Say it with me: 6 Octillionths of a chance to get a distribution like that randomly.
Octillionth.
 
the public at large.
That’s the point I’m making.

Say it with me: 6 Octillionths of a chance to get a distribution like that randomly.
Octillionth.
but to expect "normal distribution" is disingenuous

the republican party has been self selecting to (at minimum) discourage association with NPR and any other non-conservative/partisan republican media for the last few decades...and that went into overdrive after 2015
 
but to expect "normal distribution" is disingenuous
It’s not even in the same galaxy as normal.

Octillionths.

What’s disingenuous is to deflect from what that distribution readily indicates.

It’s a leftist hivemind, and when leftists on this board are like, ‘I can’t see the problem’ it further validates the scope of the blind spot.
 
So is NPR. They sit very close to one another on the bias/credibility map.

Type them in and look for yourself:
The fact you believe that is peak Joes Place.


If you move the entire spectrum "left" suddenly "left" is center.
 
Voter registrations aren't secret information.
With a name and birthday you can pull Leon county voter registration info on anyone.

You're asserting, without evidence, that he made up this number. You're being ridiculous.
It would be unethical for NPR to pull voting records of all it's workers. You're literally demanding they operate in a shady fashion, the very complaint you have against them in this thread. Think before you post.
 
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It’s not even in the same galaxy as normal.

Octillionths.

What’s disingenuous is to deflect from what that distribution readily indicates.

It’s a leftist hivemind, and when leftists on this board are like, ‘I can’t see the problem’ it further validates the scope of the blind spot.
but it ignores the republicans' collective role in purposely separating themselves from these kinds of organizations and institutions...only to turn around and complain that they're being excluded

and like i said earlier in the thread...let's not act like having republicans around earns a newsroom or organization any credit in this discussion. MSNBC has multiple shows hosted by former republicans...
 
Nobody said they did.



Quote of my demand?
Uri didn't even give NPR advanced notice of this piece. Good journalism gives the subject of the piece the opportunity to defend themselves before running it. Uri denied NPR this opportunity. He's not credible. Stop pretending he is.
 
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