How to Talk to the News Media
By Anonymous
Created Jun 26 2007 - 8:51am
CCJ Staff, June 26, 2007
http://www.concernedjournalists.org/how-talk-news-media
The elements of journalism work both ways, and we citizens have
to do our part in the relationship. We have a responsibility
to show up, to be engaged,
to send e-mails, and letters to the editor, to be part of the
public forum and in some cases to initiate it.
How to Interact with a News Organization
Make yourself intimately familiar with the rights listed here.
This can make your conversation with news organizations far more
effective.
They
allow you to say to an editor, "I understand you are a business, but
you also have a responsibility to the community." Journalists
widely embrace the principles listed here and should not argue.
Do not approach news people merely as a customer whose main recourse
is threatening to withhold business. Approach journalists instead
as a member
of your community. This empowers you and makes the conversation
one between peers.
Know what you want to communicate. Are you complaining or suggesting
something? Do you want something corrected, or added to future
coverage?
Contact the right person. Do not call the newsroom to discuss
a problem with home delivery. Do not call the sales department
to complain about
a news story.
Presentation is important. If you are writing
or emailing a newsroom, proofread what you write, use a spell checker
program. A letter
with correct spelling
and grammar is more likely to be taken seriously than one without.
How to Complain
Above all, contact works best if it comes constructively, as advice
and information rather than condemnation. In that spirit:
Give the news organization the benefit of the doubt. If an account
seems biased, assume the correspondents, editors and producers
were trying to
be fair and that their failure was in their execution not in their
intent.
Don't go to the boss first. Contact the responsible reporter
or editor. Or the reader representative if the organization has
one. Journalists
want to get things right and there are consequences if they
don't. They should listen.
Be armed with facts and figures, people to contact, documentation,
evidence, not just hearsay.
If you are ignored, try again, and through more than one method,
such as a letter or email to the responsible correspondent and
his or her supervisor.
The third time, contact the publisher or general manager in writing.
Most news organizations want to hear from you and want their
employees to listen.
Since you are a citizen, not a customer, you are not always right.
Be aware that if your complaint is unpersuasive, or a matter of
interpretation
rather than fact, you may not prevail.
Be extremely careful with email. It can be sent in a nanosecond,
but it can't be retrieved. With an old fashioned letter, we had
to address the
envelope, find a stamp etc. and a few seconds or minutes passed
for reconsideration. Very hurtful emails are sent every day - and
regretted later.
If You Have a Story Idea or Suggestion for Coverage
The advice here is similar to that for complaints: