Today, departing from an institution steeped in modernity, you say
farewell to a fine journalism school. Honored to address this graduating
class, I will speak with uncommon candor about the wisdom of your training
and the opportunities that lie ahead.
You have studied how to write news articles and contrive news
releases; how to dig for truth and how to obscure it; how to produce
journalistic sensations as well as public relations; in short, how to
unspin and spin. Like many others around the country, this school of
journalism imparts vital skills of reporting and distorting.
Last year, the national journalism magazine The Quill noted what
is now occurring on hundreds of college campuses: "Future newspaper
reporters and broadcast journalists regularly share classes and crowded
curricula with aspiring public relations managers and advertising
copywriters." What an idyllic, pastoral, almost biblical scene this evokes,
with lion and lamb bedding down together.
Allow me to extend the metaphor. It is neither cost-effective nor
necessary to be at each other's throats. We all rely on the creative use of
words and images. Why perpetuate past rifts between journalists and PR
professionals? Why polarize when we can synthesize? For a fresh generation
of media pros, a new modus vivendi awaits.
Some object to the efficacy of such pragmatism. We hear claims
that public relations and journalism are incompatible. These are different
functions, the naysayers moan. In recent years, they have steadily lost
academic ground. Yet resistance has not disappeared.
At the University of Maryland, in 1998, the college of journalism
went so far as to boot out the public relations program. But some big guns
in the PR industry counterattacked and raised hell with top officials at
the university. According to the publication PR News, the embattled program
got lots of backing from "corporate communicators at deep-pocketed
companies." Surviving handsomely, the PR program found a new home at the
department of communication.
I've heard complaints from people like Dave Berkman, a retired
professor of mass communication at the University of Wisconsin in
Milwaukee, where he was chair of the department for a few years. He argues
that when students take courses in public relations, they're learning to
become "professional liars." He calls PR "the antithesis of what journalism
is supposed to be."
Berkman taught mass communication for 21 years, and now he doesn't
want to give up the ghost. He laments that many college journalism
departments now feature public relations as the dominant program of study
-- and he alleges that "to house PR with journalism is to give public
relations an imprimatur of respect and propriety that belies its inherently
corrupt and corrupting nature." I say, make that guy an offer he can't
refuse! Ha ha.
Unfortunately, he won't pipe down about the public relations biz.
"On the occasions where truth and the client's interests coincide, then you
go with the truth," Berkman grouses. "But because you are paid to make the
client or the client's cause look good, truth can never win when it
conflicts with the client's interests." And he goes on: "The purpose of
journalism is to ferret out the truth. The purpose of PR is to protect your
client."
But consider the glorious career of David Brinkley. After decades
at NBC and ABC News, he moved on to voice lofty TV spots touting the
humanitarian goals of agribusiness giant Archer Daniels Midland. You got a
problem with that?
As students, perhaps you feel a twinge of sympathy for Professor
Berkman when he asks rhetorically, "How do I teach a kid in Reporting 101
to go after the truth and teach a kid in PR 101 how to lie?"
It's best to consider Berkman a spoilsport when he contends:
"Journalism and public relations don't belong under the same academic roof.
It's like teaching astronomy and astrology in the same department."
Hey, the wall has fallen. The free market is our secular faith. To
those who resist the convergence, I say, "Get over it!"
In the current media environment, only the intemperate fail to
realize when missions can be synergistic rather than antagonistic. Look at
it this way: In journalism, the job is to be as truthful as possible. In
public relations, the job is to be as misleading as necessary. Surely, we
can find plenty of common ground. In any case, build your career by
proceeding discreetly to scope out the limits. See what you can get away with.
Congratulations to each and every graduate. Go out there and
search for truth. But please, don't carry the lantern too high.
Norman Solomon's latest book is "The Habits of Highly Deceptive Media." His
syndicated column focuses on media and politics.
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