Opinion
Of Journalism, Truth And Objectivity
Apparently, everyone agrees that journalists must tell the truth. However, it is an uphill task if not absolutely impossible to pin down on a universal definition of truth. Indeed, the desire that (journalistic) information be truthful is basic. This is based on the fact that the way people generally learn, think and act upon the world and beyond depend to a large extent on the truthfulness, accuracy and objectivity of the information they get from the media, be it electronic or the print media.
Although truth is truth, it has scarcely been unilaterally defined by scholars. Some scholars like Bill Kovach and Tom Rosenstiel would rather opine that it does not exist, since we are all subjective individuals. However, journalistic truth or truth in the journalistic sense of the word, means just more than squaring up with reality. It implies among others “setting the facts right”.
Consequently, the nation of journalistic objectivity turns up for attention. This is hinged on the fact that in relating events just the way they occurred, the journalist applies a few principles of accuracy, balance, fairness and coherence. Journalistic truth and objectivity is more than mere accuracy. It is procedural in nature. Thus, it involves a process of sorting out and arriving at what is required as “functional truth”. That is publishing stories which are both factually correct and substantially verifiable and reliable.
Similarly, truth and objectivity as perceived and understood in journalism is a continuous journey toward understanding.
According to B. Kovach, it is a process that develops between the initial story and the interaction among the public, newsmaker and journalists over time. Hence the first principle of journalism comes to the fore. Truth has been a complicated term but in journalism, distances itself from its strictest philosophical interpretations.
Journalistically, objectivity and truth are closely related phenomena that attempt to get at reality in a confused world by stripping information abinitio of any misinformation, disinformation or self-promoting lines, and presenting (the) facts to the public to form their opinion about an issue. Rather than giving interpretation to an event, the media concentrate on (synthesis and verification) presenting the issue just like it is.
Instructively, practical or functional truth and objectivity do not imply as it were, in the absolute or philosophical sense what they connote in the media. It is not the truth and objectivity of a chemical equation. Journalists do not just stick simply to accuracy, getting the names and dates right. Of course, mere accuracy can be a kind of distortion, for the accounts of a story published can be factually correct but substantially untrue. Therefore, to clearly highlight the twin relationship between truth and objectivity in journalism, it could be safely asserted that the modern day journalism does not only report facts truthfully, it, however, reports the truth about the fact.
Interestingly, truth and especially, objectivity in the media have two basic components which strongly support the basis for their essence: depersonalisation and balance. Whereas the former implies that journalists should present the views or representatives of both sides of a (controversy) story without bias.
From the foregoing, journalists are expected to provide direct quotation or authoritative sources such as politicians, clergymen and other stakeholders to avoid been accused of libel and defamation. Whenever ‘facts’ are clearly separated from ‘opinion’ and ‘hard news’ from ‘editorial comment’, the public is then left with the information of interpreting the products of the media as provided.
Objectivity in the media is truth and truth is objectivity only to the extent that truth is a matter of accurately reporting what has taken place in line with its substantial veracity.
Sharon Beder notes that the rhetoric of journalistic objectivity supplies a mask for the inevitable subjectivity that is involved in news reporting and reassure audience, who might otherwise be wary of the power of the media. What is a good story, the choice of who to interview on a particular issue, what questions will be asked, which parts of the interview will be printed or broadcast, what facts are relevant for public consumption and so on, are very vital.
Therefore, the bottom line is that both the truth and objectivity in journalism are interwoven and are a possibility to the extent that the public is provided with the issue just like it is, and with the event just as it transpired, while distancing itself from possible interpretation which could lead to slanting and taking sides.
Odey is of the Catholic Institute of West Africa (CIWA), Port Harcourt.
Luke Odey
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