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Lies We Tell Ourselves
01 April 2004
Reader Christopher Bugbee writes in with a comment on Jack Kelley, the former USA Today star reporter recently revealed as a serial fabricator:
Along the way to explaining just how much damage Jack Kelley managed to do, John
Gorenfeld expanded on his earlier Salon piece
during the first segment of NPR's "On the Media"
Sunday (you can link to the OTM site for a
transcript).
Check out his last graf for a pretty good
mission statement for the kind of religion
coverage you've been arguing for.
"...I think it's much more serious. It really
gets at how people like this shape visions of
reality, and it, it really, for me, defines the line
between a kind of journalism that is really just
going to not require people to think or question
their assumptions, and the kind that works in
shades of gray and looks at ambiguities. I
think Jack Kelley's fabrications certainly were
designed, not to change people's minds, but to
re-assure them of what they already felt about
certain groups of people."
Terry Mattingly at Get Religion, meanwhile, has a different perspective.

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