How the Press Covered Newtown and How We Must Do Better

A lot has already been written about how the media covered the Newtown shooting. I want to elaborate a bit.

First off, the interviewing of kids was disgraceful. End of story. Under no circumstances should a journalist ever do that again.

Secondly, the press bungled nearly every fact in this case. I know everyone was trying to get the full story right away, but it was a mess. We need better rules for how to cover these type of things: until a police chief announces the facts, do not speculate. In fact, do not even investigate. Who gets the story first in these types of tragedies is entirely meaningless. The point is to get it correct. That means for journalists on Twitter, on TV, in blog posts or in news stories, until there has been a definitive statement, do not report something as fact and stay away from speculating. Period.

Finally, Forbes Joseph Grenny penned an excellent post on how the media covers mass shootings, just before the tragedy in Connecticut. It’s even more important now:

This week, I watched in horror with most of America, as yet another person unleashed a furry of bullets in a busy PortlandOregon, mall killing two and injuring others. But my horror was twofold. The first misery came as I heard the names and numbers of victims and thought about the pain they and their families will endure for the rest of their lives. The second dose came as I held my breath, hoping and praying the media wouldn’t amplify the violence.

But they did.

They did exactly what they needed to do to influence the next perpetrator to lock and load.

  1. They named the shooter.
  2. They described his characteristics.
  3. They detailed the crime.
  4. They numbered the victims.
  5. They ranked him against other “successful” attackers.

Public shootings are a contagion. And the media are consistent accomplices in most every one of them.

Grenny is absolutely right here. Who cares what the shooters name is? Let him die or rot in jail anonymously. His characteristics are slightly more important, since we should have a debate on mental health care in America. But no sane person commits such a malicious act. If the shooter wasn’t diagnosed with a mental health disorder before, it’s not because that disorder wasn’t there. We don’t need to know whether it was diagnosed. He had one and it should spur on a national debate on our mental health care policy without needing to dive into his background.

Detailing the crime is slightly more important so as to know how to prevent these in the future. If people weren’t convinced before this week’s attack that we need an assault weapon ban, they should be now. Nevertheless, we should’ve done this eight years ago when the previous law lapsed. Knowing the details of the crime doesn’t change that.

Numbering the victims is inevitable. Same with ranking them. But I agree with Grenny. There is no reason to do this. We can release names and mourn their losses without creating a ranking and scoreboard for other future attacks to see as a challenge.

I’m still nowhere near over this tragic event. I’m still really angry. We need a debate on gun control, mental health care and community values. We need it now.

In the meantime, we also need to learn how to cover these stories better, because as much as I hope to God there never is another one of these, that’s very unlikely to be the case. It’s about time the media (including me and everyone else tweeting) decides to put moral values above the story. It’s time to do anything in our power to stop these from happening again. If that means that the American public learns fewer details about these horrific events, that’s a small price to pay.

Praying for Newtown

The shooting in Connecticut is truly incomprehensible. There are no words to describe it.

At risk of blogosphere and Twitter backlash, I’m posting a response to this massacre. If no one reads, that’s perfectly okay. It’s more cathartic than anything else. Once the initial despair subsides, anger takes over. Writing about it helps.

But first, some numbers:

  • There have been SEVEN shootings this year alone
  • Half of the deadliest shootings in American history have occurred in the past five years
  • There were 5,740 kids killed by guns in 2008 and 2009. That’s eight per day. (PDF)
  • There have been 31 U.S. school shootings since Columbine. In the rest of the world, there have only been 14 combined

We are not the greatest nation in the world until we fix this.

The best way to honor the victims is to talk about gun control. Jay Carney and the White House may not think today’s the day to talk about it. Maybe they’re right. Maybe it’s tomorrow or the day after. But the day is very very soon. We cannot push this off.

It’s unthinkable that the .223 caliber assault rifle the shooter used is legal:assault rifle

There is not a single reason why anyone needs to own one of these. Period. It’s not an argument. It’s a fact. It’s about time we ban all assault weapons. No one has any reason to own one of those.

As for those arguments that an assault weapon ban won’t do much, I think that’s ridiculous. It’s not going to prevent all shootings. It’s not going to prevent most shootings. But it’s a signal that enough is enough. America will not sit around and allow these depraved tragedies to occur without a response. The NRA will not hold our Congress hostage.

The time for action was yesterday. The time for a response is now.

If you feel as helpless as me and want to do something about it, head over to the Brady Center and make a donation. It’s not much, but it’s something.  (Image via)

Add Georgetown to the ACC

Why not add Georgetown to the ACC?

Why not add Georgetown to the ACC?

One of the bigger stories in the sports world today is the possibility that the non-football Big East teams will leave the conference and join the Atlantic 10. From ESPN:

“The 21-team model would occur if the A-10 were to add the seven Big East Catholic schools (Marquette, DePaul, Georgetown, Providence, Seton Hall, St. John’s and Villanova) that met Sunday in New York with Big East commissioner Mike Aresco to go over their options.”

Emphasis mine. I’ve mentioned this before on twitter, but why not add Georgetown to the ACC?!

After Pittsburgh, Notre Dame, Louisville and Syracuse enter the conference and Maryland leaves, the ACC will have 14 football schools (Notre Dame still independent in football) and 15 schools in all other sports (or whatever number participate in the given sport). Since Georgetown is a non-football school, why not add them as a 16th team? It’ll keep football at 14 teams to keep a two division format and will make the ACC that much better in all other sports, especially basketball.

In addition, it gets the ACC back into the D.C. market after the loss of Maryland and adds an excellent academic institution.

I’ve mentioned this to friends and everyone seems to agree it makes sense, but I’m not particularly knowledgeable about conference realignment and the politics within it. Am I missing something? Doesn’t this seem like a no-brainer? (Image via)