By James David Dickson on 7.18.07 @ 12:06AM
TAS Young Writers' Workshop provides pearls of wisdom.
WASHINGTON -- "Reporting, reporting, reporting."
If there was but one lesson to take from The American
Spectator's first ever Young Writers' Workshop last week, it
is the importance of news reporting, its primacy in finding success
as a journalist.
"Everyone wants to have an opinion. Fewer people want to do the
work of digging deeper than other people will and finding
information that no one else can. But if you do that, you will have
success as a writer," said Robert Novak.
And who better to learn those lessons from than a panel of
journalists with nearly 200 man years of journalism experience
between them? Moderated by M. Stanton Evans, and featuring Michael
Barone of U.S. News & World Report, John Fund of the
Wall Street Journal, and Paul Mirengoff of the
Powerline blog, the workshop's panel comprised some of the
most experienced and successful journalists in America.
"Journalists starting out today have so many more opportunities and
resources than we had," said John Fund. In this era of what Fund
termed the "citizen-journalist," anyone with a laptop can report or
opine on the news. But for those of us seeking to make a living in
journalism, the panel suggests we focus on reporting.
"I never sought to become a pundit," said Novak, former co-host
of CNN's Crossfire and the evening's keynote speaker. "I
always saw myself as a fact-finder, and reporting is what I do to
this very day."
When asked about the emerging field of opinion journalism,
particularly popular among younger writers who see themselves as
the Charles Krauthammers of tomorrow, Robert Novak all but denied
its existence. The very idea is contradictory: Opinion requires
introspection. Journalism requires sources. "When you're injecting
your opinion, does that mean you will suppress information that
contradicts it? Does that mean you won't ask the tough questions?
Does that mean you won't press your friends the way you would
anyone else? Does that mean you won't go where the facts take
you?"
This means that reporting, discovering what others can't or
won't, is the clearest way for the young writer to set himself
apart from the pack. "While young journalists are great at taking
advantage of all this 21st century technology, they've forgotten
the technology we've had since the 19th century -- the telephone,"
said Michael Barone.
With the explosion of information technology, the online
availability of documents once only accessible by wading through
musty archives, young journalists sometimes get the impression that
their work starts and ends with Internet research.
But information technology is a double-edged sword, and can hurt
as much as help, if not used properly. To drive home his point,
Evans recalled the story of a young sportswriter under his aegis
who wrote of the age of New York Yankee dominance. An age that, in
his estimation, began in... 1996.
Never mind Ruth. Gehrig. DiMaggio. Mantle. Jackson. To hear this
young writer tell the tale, Derek Jeter and Bernie Williams started
the tradition of Yankee excellence. That, explained Evans, is the
danger of replacing old-fashioned shoe-leather reporting with
Google searches.
As with anything in life, the key is striking a balance. The
Internet can be useful in pointing one in the right direction. With
online finding aids, writers can spend less time in the archives
and more time perusing. But the documents must be perused. A
journalist's work may now begin on the Internet, but it can never
end there.
Said Evans, founder and longtime head of the National Journalism
Center, "The trick is to mix in technology with shoe-leather
reporting."
THE AMERICAN SPECTATOR's Young Journalism Training program
is still in its infancy, but if the first Young Writers Workshop is
any indication, the combination of training and networking
opportunities the program offers are a gem of an opportunity.
Headed up by TAS associate editor W. James Antle III,
the program seeks to give conservative journalists -- many of whom
are local to D.C. -- a comparative advantage in a job market
simultaneously more crowded than ever and with fewer jobs than
ever. By providing hands-on training with the opportunity to
publish clips on the Spectator's website, the goal is to
continue in the Spectator's tradition as a forum for
young, "irreverent" writers to springboard their careers.
The Young Writers' Workshop panel closed with Wlady
Pleszczynski, editorial director of The American
Spectator, who offered his thoughts on "the role of an
alternative magazine."
The American Spectator began in 1967 as "The
Alternative," a conservative paper on the liberal environs of
Indiana University's Bloomington campus. The Alternative
foreshadowed the conservative campus newspaper movement continued
by Counterpoint at the University of Chicago, and
Collegiate Network publications such as the Dartmouth
Review and the Michigan Review.
The American Spectator moved to Washington in 1985.
"But unlike a lot of other conservative publications, we didn't
move here to 'become a part of' D.C. And in many ways we still
haven't." Pleszczynski decried the "herd mentality" that's all too
common in a place like Washington, one the Spectator has
been mindful to avoid.
Robert Novak noted that "anyone who wants to be a journalist
can't have too high an opinion of the political class." The
American Spectator, founded and edited by R. Emmett Tyrrell,
Jr. (who could not be present because of a flight delay), has
always operated in that same vein, particularly during the Clinton
years, when the publication became a leading exposer of its many
scandals. Such efforts, in concert with their legitimization by the
Clinton impeachment hearings, "put the Spectator on the
map," according to Evans.
But, as Pleszczynski laments, conservatism's gains from the
Reagan era and the "Revolution of 1994" are all but squandered.
Between ethics scandals and the incompetence of Republican
big-spending leadership, conservatism has lost a lot of trust with
the American people.
"We have to rebuild conservatism's credibility from scratch,"
Pleszczynski contended. "The Right has to do much better...but that
will only happen if journalists force them. That's your job."
Alfred S. Regnery, publisher of The American Spectator,
plans to host Young Writers Workshops every six months.
As the old journalism joke goes, "an editor's job is to separate
the wheat from the chaff -- and then to print the chaff." The Young
Journalism Training program exists to give its writers the tools to
write the wheat, and then ensure its inclusion in print.
"The most powerful instrument of information technology ever
invented is between your ears," remarked Evans. "Use it."
topics:
Sports, Conservatism