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Measuring Accuracy: A Survey of Television News Managers' Attitudes 1 Introduction
Does it make a difference when a newscaster mispronounces a person's name on the air? How much damage is done when Mr. Smythe is mistakenly identified to viewers or listeners as Mr. Smith? In today's multi-channel, multi-faceted media landscape in which information overload is not uncommon, errors such as this one may seem relatively minor. Usually the mistake is corrected after Mr. Smythe or one of his friends calls the newsroom, and his name is pronounced correctly on subsequent newscasts. In most cases, nothing happens to the offending producer or newscaster, other than a reminder to be more careful next time. The above-mentioned error was one of a series of hypothetical examples put to a national sample of television news executives and line producers. Respondents were asked to consider the seriousness of certain errors and to decide what, if any, punishment is appropriate when inaccurate or misleading information gets on the air. The way in which television stations respond to errors goes to the heart of journalism's credibility itself. Industry organizations have found that lack of accuracy hurts the news media's credibility. In separate studies, the American Society of Newspaper Editors and the Radio and Television News Directors Foundation discovered that inaccurate reporting contributes to the overall decline in the public's trust in the media. (Examining Our Credibility, 1998; RTNDF Journalism Ethics and Integrity Project, 1998) In particular, the ASNE study of public attitudes put concerns over factual errors and spelling and grammar mistakes at the top of the list. There is no shortage of anecdotal evidence that suggests the public is, at best, frustrated with journalism's occasional excesses, but it's one thing to paint journalism with the broad brush of inaccuracy and quite another to measure specific inaccuracies in television and newspaper reporting. Research scholars have studied the accuracy of journalism for more than 70 years. Not surprisingly, most of the accuracy research has examined newspapers, but the literature is beginning to reflect several studies that focus on television. For example, earlier research conducted by (Hanson & Wearden, 2002) found a relatively low level of dissatisfaction on the part of sources who were interviewed for television news stories in Cleveland when it came to so-called factual mistakes (e.g., incorrect names, ages, locations). The sources were more concerned about what they perceived to be subjective errors (e.g., stories and interviews taken out of context, events made to seem more newsworthy than they really were). The distinction between factual and subjective errors is a central theme in much of the accuracy literature. The promise to deliver accurate information is part of the unspoken contract that journalists have with their readers and viewers. Accuracy is embodied in journalism's codes of ethics. The Radio Television News Directors Code of Ethics calls on radio and television journalists to report the news "…accurately, in context and as completely as possible" (RTNDA, 2000). The Code of Ethics of the Society of Professional Journalists exhorts journalists to "…test the accuracy of information from all sources and exercise care to avoid inadvertent error" (SPJ, 1996). The Associated Press Managing Editors' Code of Ethics says a good newspaper is "…fair, accurate, honest, responsible, independent and decent" (APME, 1995). The American Society of Newspaper Editors' Statement of Principles lists Truth and Accuracy as one of its six major articles, declaring that "…all news should be accurate, free from bias and in context, and that all sides (be) presented fairly" (ASNE, 1996). A century earlier legendary newspaper publisher Joseph Pulitzer set the tone by demanding that his reporters achieve "…accuracy, accuracy, accuracy" (Ireland, 1921). Accuracy is clearly one of the professional standards that journalists strive to achieve. Yet how much actual care is put into catching, correcting and preventing factual and subjective mistakes? In a perfect world, every newsroom would apply the standards contained in the codes every day and on every story. Unfortunately, that is not the case. Anyone who has ever looked out over a busy newsroom and witnessed the thousands of bits of information that flow through it each day might marvel at the fact that any of it is accurate at all. The earlier study conducted by the authors looked at accuracy from the source's point of view. This study looks at accuracy from the viewpoint of the professionals. How concerned are news managers about issues of accuracy? What happens in a newsroom when someone makes a mistake? Literature Review Accuracy in Newspapers and Other Print Media
The methodological standard for measuring newspaper accuracy was established by Mitchell Charnley (1936) nearly 70 years ago. In his pioneering work, he studied sources' perceptions of the accuracy of stories in which they had been cited. His method consisted of sending copies of the stories to the sources by mail and asking the sources to respond to a questionnaire. Most of the inaccuracies Charnley measured were objective errors of fact such as name wrong, title wrong, mechanical errors, figures wrong, times wrong, misquotations, etc. But he also had a category he referred to as "errors of meaning," which included more subjective errors such as inaccurate headlines, overemphasis, underemphasis and omissions. Interestingly, this category was ranked as the most common type of error by the sources in Charnley's study. Since Charnley's introduction of news accuracy to the scholarly literature, there has been little change to his seminal methodology. Indeed, the issue lay dormant for nearly three decades until a brief article by Charles H. Brown (1965) appeared in Editor and Publisher in the mid '60s. He examined attitudes of sources regarding stories in which they had been cited in a group of Oklahoma weeklies, using substantially the same methodology as Charnley. Like Charnley, Brown examined mostly objective inaccuracies, although he created separate categories for omissions, inaccurate headlines and lack of fairness or objectivity. The next scholarly piece on newspaper accuracy appeared two years later in Journalism Quarterly (Berry, 1967). In this article, Fred C. Berry, Jr. examined source perceptions of accuracy of three San Francisco Bay area dailies. His study was the first to make the important distinction between objective errors (names, titles, ages, outright misquotations, typographical errors, figures, addresses, locations, times and dates) and subjective errors such as inaccurate headlines, overemphasis, underemphasis and omissions. Berry reported that "the errors that Charnley called 'errors of meaning' occurred most often" (Berry, 1967: 490). That is, subjective errors were spotted most frequently by the sources in that study. Berry's work was followed by a minor flurry of activity through the 1970s. Gary Lawrence and David Gray (1969) further refined the distinction between objective and subjective inaccuracy, noting that subjective inaccuracy often is of greater concern to sources. These authors also attempted to address perceptions of the causes of errors. William Blankenburg examined the issue again in 1970 and called for more research on errors in news reporting. J. Richard Cote (1970) studied wire service accuracy using the methodology developed by Charnley and Berry. Although he did not use Berry's terminology, Cote also had two broad categories called errors in interpretation (Berry's subjective errors) and errors in reporting (objective errors). Phillip J. Tichenor and his colleagues at the University of Minnesota (1970) applied a slightly different twist to the study of accuracy in science news. Rather than sending the original articles to sources for their evaluation, these scholars presented the articles to field survey respondents, asking them to read the articles and later to recall what the articles said. The audience statements were then evaluated by scientists quoted in the articles in an effort to examine communication accuracy from initial source, through the news gatekeepers to the eventual audience. T. Joseph Scanlon (1972) also took a somewhat different approach. Rather than using sources to evaluate news story accuracy, he sent journalism students out to "re-cover" the same stories, interviewing the same sources. Then, comparing their notes with the reporter's original story, an accuracy assessment was made. This was done, in part, because the author and his students were concerned with two issues: 1. the low response rates associated with some of the earlier mailed surveys, and 2. the fact that earlier researchers relied on the sources' word that inaccuracies had occurred. While the first concern appears legitimate, the second issue is easily resolved by making a distinction between accuracy and perceived accuracy, which is what all these studies actually appear to be studying. Indeed, Scanlon introduces new sources of bias with his methodology. First, students likely are less qualified to produce an accurate accounting of interviews than are professional reporters. Second, students' perceptions of stories may have been affected by their own reading of the original articles. Thus it is not surprising that the literature review uncovered no other research using Scanlon's methodology. Michael Ryan and several colleagues published the first in a series of articles on accuracy in science coverage in 1974 (Tankard, Jr. & Ryan, 1974). They were the first to address the notion mentioned above that it is perceptions of accuracy and not accuracy per se that is being studied in all the literature reviewed here. Tankard and Ryan refined the error types to make them more specifically applicable to science. This study was followed by a factor analysis of error types in science stories (Ryan, 1975). Ryan reported three broad factors: errors relating to overemphasis, overstatement and exaggeration; errors relating to underemphasis or understatement; and errors of an objective nature (spelling and typographical errors, specifically). This provided support for the contention of Berry, Lawrence and Grey, and others that objective and subjective errors should be viewed as conceptually different from one another and should be measured separately. The work of Tankard and Ryan was revisited by D. Lynn Pulford (1976). She shortened the error list used in the earlier study and made an attempt to analyze the perceived seriousness of the errors on a three-point scale (not serious, neutral and serious). She noted that Blankenburg (1970) also had addressed error seriousness, but only with a single measure for the seriousness of errors in each story overall. Meyer (1988) later adapted the seriousness measure, which was used in this study from the viewpoint of the news managers. Ryan and Owen (1977) extended the accuracy study to newspaper coverage of social issues, finding more errors reported per story than "in studies of general news accuracy, and roughly the same as the numbers reported for science coverage" (Ryan and Owen, 1977: 32). Marshall (1977) applied the methodology to Tucson newspapers, citing Charnley, Brown, Berry, Jr. and Blankenburg as his primary sources. Although they did not report a study of accuracy per se, Braeken and Huypens (1977) published a brief methodological discussion pointing out that response rates are lower among sources used in a story in which no inaccuracies were perceived to have occurred. They also noted such reasons for non-response as lack of time, forgotten, administrative problems, lost, too difficult, wrong address, etc. Another study appearing in this era that did not replicate the earlier methodology was a piece by Singletary, et al., (1977) which examined editors' views of news accuracy. The Pennsylvania editors queried in the study cited spelling, grammar and typographical errors as those seen most often. In 1980, Singletary wrote a report for the American Newspaper Publishers Association that provided an excellent summary of research to that point. He indicated that studies have repeatedly shown that roughly "half of all straight news stories contain some type of error" (Singletary, 1980: 6). He also concluded, based on a review of literature, that "a large number of psychological phenomena are believed to contribute to (inaccuracy) … authoritarianism, dogmatism, … neuroticism, co-orientation, source-message orientation, cognitive stress and newsmen's fantasies" (Singletary, 1980: 6). He also attributed inaccuracy to editors, sources, writing styles, competitive pressure, imprecise language and distorted headlines. William Tillinghast (1982) called some of the previous findings into question in 1982 when he found that reporters agreed with sources' assessments of error only about 25 percent of the time. Larry Burriss (1985) applied the methodology first developed by Charnley to an examination of perceptions of sources in Time and Newsweek. One interesting change he made, however, was to exclude practiced sources such as government officials, community leaders and corporate leaders and to focus instead on "ordinary people." To the extent that errors were reported by such sources, they typically centered on quotes being taken out of context. A more recent piece on newspaper accuracy, and the springboard for the series of studies being conducted by the authors of this paper, was written by Philip Meyer (1988). His emphasis was on developing a reliable measurement instrument and methodology whereby newspapers could measure their own performance. Meyer examined basic facts (names, dates, places, etc.), other facts, fairness and quotes. He also examined differing response rates depending on whether the questionnaire originated from a newspaper or a journalism professor. The overall response rate was higher for the journalism professor, and the rate of subjective errors reported to the journalism professor also was higher. To address Tillinghast's concerns, Meyer also devised a system whereby the reporter had the opportunity to respond to the source's complaints, and then a third party judged both points of view and ruled in favor of either the source or the reporter. Meyer reported that this technique enhanced validity while preserving reliability, but it tends to be expensive and administratively complicated, and it does not permit a promise of confidentiality to the source/survey respondent. Eleanor Singer (1990) reported, in a study of accuracy in science news, several causes of inaccuracy: errors of commission (outright factual mistakes), errors of omission, non-substantive errors caused by translation from technical jargon to vernacular, errors related to selectivity and news judgment, errors related to brevity and colloquialisms and errors stemming from media's need to dramatize research findings. In 1994, George Kennedy reported on an entirely different approach to newspaper accuracy. His article described the efforts of the Columbia Missourian to ensure accuracy by checking with sources prior to the publication of stories. The report presented an interesting, if logistically challenging, approach to improving newspaper accuracy, but it did not discuss news accuracy as a research concern. A 1999 convention paper by Scott R. Maier revisits print accuracy and attempts to tie the concept to that of print credibility. The Maier article also presents an excellent review of literature. Accuracy in Television News Only two published studies were uncovered that dealt with accuracy in television news, and both had methodological limitations. The first was by Singletary and Lipsky (1977), who sent typed transcriptions of local TV news reports to sources who appeared in the stories. They asked the sources to respond to a set of open-ended questions: "Was the story factually correct, as far as you know? … If the story was not 'entirely correct,' would you give examples of the errors which you observed? … If the news story was not 'entirely correct,' what would you say was the 'cause' of the error or errors?" etc. (Singletary and Lipsky, 1977: 363). Two weaknesses are apparent here. First, the use of taped transcriptions does not allow the source to evaluate the visual cues that also might be sources of error. Second, the open-ended questions are difficult to code and rely exclusively on the memory and perceptions of the sources. The second TV news accuracy study was reported by Moore and Singletary (1985). It is unclear whether this study employed open-ended or closed-ended responses, but the primary complaints that emerged about network TV science coverage were inadequate air time, omission of essential details, sensationalization, leaving an incorrect impression, editing problems that changed meaning and inaccurate quotes. As with the Singletary and Lipsky study, the Moore and Singletary study involved the use of typed transcriptions of stories rather than the actual video itself. Hanson and Wearden (2002) developed a method for studying source perceptions of TV news accuracy by adapting the methodology developed for print. Instead of sending written transcripts, video tapes of news stories were sent to a random sample of sources who had been interviewed by local reporters in the Cleveland TV market. The results indicated that sources were generally pleased with the so-called factual accuracy of the stories in which they appeared. However, more than one-third of the respondents in that study thought that important information had been left out of the stories. Nearly 20% indicated that their interviews had been taken out of context. The respondents rated the seriousness of the subjective errors to be higher than the seriousness of factual errors. Despite concerns raised about the television reports in which they appeared, the respondents rated the Cleveland television stations to be more credible than the two daily newspapers that serve the Cleveland/Akron metropolitan area, local radio stations and news magazines. Several recent studies surveyed the internal procedures of television newsrooms to determine if systems were in place to catch inaccuracies in stories before they get on the air. Tuohey (2002) surveyed television reporters working in smaller markets to find out how many of them work in stations in which scripts are approved before air time. The study found that many of the reporters get little or no supervision, and few have an opportunity for their scripts to be reviewed. Potter and Mitchell (2001) delved further into the script review process and found that the scripts most likely to be reviewed were those for investigative stories and so-called "sweeps" pieces. Scripts for run-of-the-mill news packages were reviewed considerably less often. A 2002 symposium paper by Mark Harmon, Steven McClung and Amy Varecka duplicated Singletary's method of sending printed copies of TV news stories to sources. This study used the full-text versions of the stories that appeared on TV stations' Web sites. Nearly all the respondents in their survey indicated that the story was either entirely or generally correct. (Harmon, M., McClurg, S. & Varecka, A., 2002) The present study draws on several elements contained in the literature. The first is the perception of the relative seriousness of objective and subjective errors. Singletary (1977) was one of the first to measure the attitudes of news executives, as opposed to other studies that measure the reaction of sources. His study found that editors regarded subjective errors to be the more important of the two broad categories. Generally speaking, news sources interviewed for other accuracy studies tend to say the same thing. (Lawrence and Gray, 1969; Hanson and Wearden, 2002). Unfortunately, the assessment of the seriousness of subjective errors by both groups is, well, subjective. In an often cited study in 1982, Tillinghast found that reporters and sources agreed only about 25 percent of the time on the exact nature of the subjective error. The literature identifies three broad groups that are stakeholders in the debate over journalism accuracy. The first is the public at large, as evidenced by the ASNE and RTNDF studies as well as growing body of anecdotal evidence in the popular press. This group tends of offer generalized feelings and perhaps a sense of what they hear on radio talk shows or read on the Web. The second group is the sources who were the subjects of specific news stories. Sources are asked to react to the individual stories in which they appeared. The third group is the journalists themselves. There are indications in at least some of the literature that journalists' and sources' perceptions of errors are different. This study seeks to determine the perceptions of television news managers. Consequently, this paper looks at three research questions:
1. How do television news managers rate the seriousness of factual and subjective errors in news stories? 2. How often have various types of errors occurred in the news managers' newsrooms? 3. What are the employment-related consequences for newsroom employees who commit errors in news stories?
Methodology The sample consisted of 105 U.S. television markets, which is half of the total of 210 as defined by Nielsen Media Research. The 105 were selected by choosing the odd-numbered markets. (The decision to use the odd-numbered markets was determined by a coin toss.) A station from each market was selected at random according to network affiliation. Independent, non-affiliated stations were included in the rotation. Public television stations were excluded from the sample. Researchers attempted to interview two individuals in each of the selected newsrooms: a senior news manager and a line newscast producer. Senior news managers were defined as news director, assistant news director, managing editor or executive producer. Line producers were defined as producers of an early evening newscast. (For those stations that did not produce an early evening news broadcast, researchers attempted to interview producers of late newscasts.) Telephone interviews were completed between January 15 and March 15, 2003 by graduate students and staff at Kent State University. The questionnaire was built on the results of the authors' 2002 accuracy study.
Results Seventy-five telephone interviews were completed for this phase of the study. The breakdown of the interviews is as follows: 25 news directors, 11 assistant news directors, 5 managing editors, 11 executive producers and 20 newscast producers. Forty of the respondents are male; 35 are female. The median age of the respondents is 36. Nearly all hold degrees in journalism or mass communication. (One respondent majored in biology.) The sample is roughly split between larger and smaller markets.
Q1: How do television news managers rate the seriousness of factual and subjective errors in news stories? Respondents were presented with a list of nine hypothetical errors that might occur in news stories and asked to judge the relative seriousness of each of them. The nine topics were drawn from the authors' 2002 study of news sources and mirrored Meyer's 1988 study of newspaper accuracy. The nine were: (1) mispronouncing a name, (2) misspelling a name, (3) reporting an incorrect name, (4) getting a number wrong, (5) getting a fundamental fact wrong, (6) editing a story to leave out important information, (7) changing the context of a story, (8) producing a misleading news promo and (9) making a story out to be more important than the event really is. The first five examples are considered by the authors to be factual-type errors; the remaining four are more subjective in nature. Respondents appeared to consider the five factual errors to be more serious than the four subjective errors, although the differences between the two categories aren't statistically significant. Not surprisingly, the most common errors (mispronouncing or misspelling a person's name) are among the ones judged to be the least serious. Mispronunciations and misspellings are unlikely to lead to law suits. (The public, however, might have a different view of the seriousness of a mispronounced or misspelled name, especially if the particular member of the public is the person whose name is misspelled.) Responses to the hypothetical situations are listed in table 1. Table 1 News managers' assessments of seriousness and frequency of errors.
Seriousness Occurred in (mean) past three months (percentage)
Factual errors Mispronouncing a name 4.25 85% Misspelling a name 5.13 84% Reporting the wrong name 6.03 16% Getting numbers wrong 6.00 23% Getting a fundamental fact wrong 6.47 8%
Subjective errors Leaving out information source thinks is 4.11 46% important
Changes context or distorts information 5.92 15% Over-promising in a promo 5.19 45% Inflating a story's importance 3.93 48% Notes: n=75. Respondents ranked the seriousness of the error on a scale ranging from 1 (Minor) to 7 (Major.) The percentage of occurrence reflects the percentage of respondents who said the error occurred in their station in the past three months.
It is interesting to note the relatively low level of seriousness given to inflating a story's importance. This may be the result of the hypothetical nature of the question, or it may reflect the need for stories to be dramatic in order to hold the audience's attention. Sadly, nearly half of the respondents indicated that this particular error had occurred at their station within the past three months. Indeed the occurrences of subjective errors are disturbingly higher than the rate of factual errors with the exception of the mispronunciation and misspelling of names. The subjective error of changing context or distorting information presents an interesting issue, too. While this hypothetical error was placed in the subjective category by earlier studies, news managers might make the argument that it really falls in the category of factual errors since it deals with factual issues. If that is the case, then the managers' perceptions of its regular occurrence would be in keeping with the other factual mistakes. In the authors' 2002 study, news sources were asked to the rate the seriousness of actual errors, both factual and subjective, using a similar 7-point scale. The mean seriousness ranking for factual errors was 3.57; the mean seriousness ranking for subjective errors was 4.37. The difference between the two was not judged to be statistically significant, but it does indicate within the context of the survey that subjective errors were judged to be more serious. The differences in news managers' attitudes about the seriousness of the hypothetical examples become a bit more apparent when looking at a frequency distribution of responses. Table 2 shows the data is a collapsed form. (Responses 1 – 3 on the seven-point scale were collapsed under the heading of "not serious." Responses of 4 were recoded as "neutral." Responses 5 – 7 were collapsed under the heading of "serious.") Table 2 News managers' assessments of the seriousness of errors
Not Serious Neutral Serious
Factual errors Mispronounced name 30% 27% 43% Misspelled name 12% 21% 67% Incorrect name 1% 8% 91% Incorrect numbers 1% 7% 92% Incorrect facts 0% 6% 94% Subjective errors Important information left out 36% 20% 44% Information distorted 3% 9% 88% Incorrect tease 10% 16% 73% Inflated importance 34% 36% 30%
Notes: n=75. Original data was coded using a seven-point scale (7=most serious, 1= least serious, 4 – in the middle.) Data for this table is collapsed into three categories.
As indicated, the percentage of responses in the "not serious" column is higher for subjective errors.
Q2: How often have various types of errors occurred in news managers' newsrooms? Dealing with newscast errors is a fact of life for television news managers. Nearly half of the respondents reported that errors occurred in stories in their newsrooms at least once or twice a week. This is in keeping with earlier newspaper studies like Singletary's (1980). He found that accuracy studies consistently reported errors in roughly half of all straight news stories. Comparing the error rates in newspapers and television stories is difficult given the distinct nature of each medium and the relative amounts of information contained in newspaper and television reports, but the responses in this study indicate that errors are indeed an ongoing problem in television newsrooms (see Table 3). Table 3 News managers' perceptions of the frequency of errors in their newsrooms
Percentage of respondents
Every day 27% Once or twice a week 50% Couple of times a month 13% Seldom 9% Never 1%
Notes: n=54. Duplicate responses from stations (i.e., both news manager and line produce) were eliminated.
The results in Table 3 underscore the need for formal mechanisms in newsrooms to catch errors before they get on the air. The preferred method of the managers surveyed for this study seemed to be script approval. In response to an open-ended question, managers described the various forms of script review. In most cases, the scripts are read by supervisors and anchors. Scripts in smaller stations tend to be reviewed by the news director. In larger stations, other levels of management conduct the review. The reported level of script review runs counter to Tuohey's 2002 Newslab survey of reporters in smaller-market stations that found that very few scripts are reviewed. Tuohey's finding mirrors another Newslab study regarding script review by Potter and Mitchell (2001). A complete list of the verbatim responses in this study is included in Appendix B. Despite the reliance on script review, most managers agreed that reporters are the first line of the defense in the newsroom for making sure that errors don't occur, followed by producers and executive producers (see Table 4). In larger markets, many senior news managers work on longer-term projects and leave much of the day-to-day management of individual news programs to producers and reporters. Table 4 Staff positions identified as on "the front line" for catching errors
Percentage of respondents
Reporter 59% Line Producer 39% Executive Producer 32% News Director 30% Assistant News Director 20% Assignment Editor 9% Managing Editor 7%
Notes: n=75. Respondents could choose more than one answer.
News managers were asked in an open-ended question to describe the most common error in their newscasts. The answer in one word: spelling. The mispronunciation of names by newscasters and reporters was another common error listed. Other errors mentioned less frequently were the lack of checking on the background of stories, a lack of general knowledge of the local area, minor factual errors in stories, material left out of a story because of time requirements and unintentional bias due to misunderstanding the subject matter. A selected list of the verbatim responses is included in Appendix B.
Q3: What are the employment-related consequences for newsroom employees who commit errors in news stories: Do errors have consequences? In the largest sense, the answer is yes. Studies by the industry indicate that the cumulative effect of errors has led to an erosion of the public's trust in the media. What about the consequences for individual newsroom employees who make the mistakes? Researchers have not investigated what happens when someone allows a factual or subjective mistake to get on the air. Grizzled old journalism professors might suggest that a young cub reporter should be fired for making an error in a story, but in reality, the employment penalties for errors in reporting appear to be fairly minor. The managers interviewed for this study were presented with another list of hypothetical errors and asked what might happen to reporters and editors who commit them. The questionnaire included seven hypothetical errors that might occur in TV news stories. The questions were presented in increasing order of seriousness: (1) misspelling a person's name, (2) mispronouncing a person's name, (3) reporting the incorrect location of a news story, (4) producing a misleading promo or tease, (5) producing a promo that was factually incorrect, (6) incorrectly identifying someone as having been accused of a crime and (7) reporting that someone had died when the person had not. Responses were given a list of seven possible disciplinary actions: (1) do nothing, (2) issue an oral reminder, (3) issue an oral reprimand, (4) issue a written reprimand, (5) suspend the employee, (6) dismiss the employee and (7) take other disciplinary action. A very small number of respondents said they would do nothing, even for the most egregious mistakes. In response to the hypothetical situations, most would issue verbal reminders and an occasional verbal reprimand for an error. Written reprimands are issued only for the more serious mistakes. As one might expect, suspensions are reserved for the most serious infractions. The responses are listed in tables 5a through 5g. Table 5a Disciplinary action for misspelling a person's name
Percentage of respondents
Do nothing 1.4% Oral reminder 73.6% Oral reprimand 23.6% Written reprimand 1.4% Suspend the employee 0.0% Dismiss the employee 0.0% Other 0.0%
Notes: n=72.
Table 5b Disciplinary action for mispronouncing a person's name
Percentage of respondents
Do nothing 0.0% Oral reminder 86.1% Oral reprimand 12.5% Written reprimand 0.0% Suspend the employee 0.0% Dismiss the employee 0.0% Other* 1.4%
Notes: n=72. *Other responses listed in Appendix C
Table 5c Disciplinary action for reporting incorrect location of story
Percentage of respondents
Do nothing 0.0% Oral reminder 45.1% Oral reprimand 45.1% Written reprimand 0.0% Suspend the employee 0.0% Dismiss the employee 0.0% Other* 1.4%
Notes: n=71. *Other responses listed in Appendix C
Table 5d Disciplinary action for producing misleading promo or tease
Percentage of respondents
Do nothing 5.6% Oral reminder 26.4% Oral reprimand 33.3% Written reprimand 23.6% Suspend the employee 0.0% Dismiss the employee 0.0% Other* 11.1%
Notes: n=72. *Other responses listed in Appendix C
Table 5e Disciplinary action for producing inaccurate promo or tease
Percentage of respondents
Do nothing 0.0% Oral reminder 17.1% Oral reprimand 32.9% Written reprimand 38.6% Suspend the employee 0.0% Dismiss the employee 0.0% Other* 11.4%
Notes: n=70. *Other responses listed in Appendix C
Table 5f Disciplinary action for incorrectly accusing person of a crime
Percentage of respondents
Do nothing 1.4% Oral reminder 8.6% Oral reprimand 21.4% Written reprimand 48.6% Suspend the employee 15.7% Dismiss the employee 0.0% Other* 4.3%
Notes: n=70. Other responses listed in Appendix C
Table 5g Disciplinary action for incorrectly reporting a person's death
Percentage of respondents
Do nothing 0.0% Oral reminder 9.7% Oral reprimand 20.8% Written reprimand 44.4% Suspend the employee 18.1% Dismiss the employee 1.4% Other 5.6%
Notes: n=72. Other responses listed in Appendix C.
If these hypothetical situations reflect actual practice, then it appears that the consequences for errors in reporting are quite low. It's clear that no one loses his or her job in a newsroom for making a factual mistake, nor should they perhaps. Very little of the discipline appears to be formal or have any real teeth. Not surprisingly, the level of discipline inches upward as the level of severity of the error increase as table 6 illustrates. The table compares the seven hypothetical errors with the six levels of discipline. (The other category was eliminated from this table.) Table 6 Comparison of severity of error with the severity of possible discipline
Increasing levels of discipline --------------------------------------_ Increasing severity of error-----------_ 1.4 73.6 23.6 1.4
86.1 12.5
45.1 45.1 5.6 26.4 33.3 23.6
17.1 32.9 38.6 1.4 8.6 21.4 48.6 15.7
9.7 20.8 44.4 18.1 1.4
Notes: Numbers of percentages of respondents from tables 5a – 5g. The rows represent the seven hypothetical errors listed in ascending order of seriousness. The columns represent the six levels of discipline in ascending order of seriousness.
There do appear to be consequences for making real errors. Fifty-eight percent of respondents indicated that someone in the newsroom had been reprimanded for making an error. The errors ranged from misspellings in on-screen graphics to potentially libelous situations in which factual material in a story was incorrect. In most cases, the employees were issued oral reminders or reprimands; in a small number of instances, employees were given written reprimands. In one instance, an employee was fired after making repeated mistakes. Not surprisingly, news managers seem willing to hand out more serious penalties for repeated infractions. The verbatim responses to the open-ended question regarding disciplinary action are listed in Appendix B. Other Findings There are no significant differences when looking at the various demographic breakdowns of the data. There is an interesting observation to be made, however, when looking at the responses to the first set of hypothetical errors by gender. Women news managers tended to rate the hypothetical errors as slightly more serious then the men did (Table 7). Table 7 Perceptions of seriousness of hypothetical errors by gender.
Men Women
Mispronounce name 4.10 4.50 Misspell name 5.03 5.28 Incorrect name 5.90 6.19 Incorrect number 5.75 6.41 Incorrect fact 6.32 6.69 Leaving out information 3.85 4.44 Distorting information 5.90 5.94 Promo promises more 4.97 5.37 Making story appear more important 3.79 4.06
Notes: n=40 men; 32 women. Sources ranked the seriousness of the error on a scale ranging from 1 (Minor) to 7 (Major).
Discussion If stations are seeking a zero-tolerance policy for mistakes, then even a single error is one too many. That goal is admirable, but impossible to achieve. The amount of information that passes through a television newsroom on a daily basis makes it inevitable that some errors will occur. The goal for news reporters and managers alike is to minimize the impact of the errors and do as much as possible to make sure that the most serious, libelous errors don't happen. This study comes early in the research of news managers' perceptions about accuracy in their newsrooms. Its purpose is to paint the initial picture of this landscape and not to draw statistical comparisons among the data. Still, the initial painting reveals some interesting details. Errors are clearly an issue for news managers, particularly those directly involved in the production of newscasts. As noted, the major mechanism for catching mistakes is to review the scripts. While there is some discrepancy in the amount of script review actually being done, the script review process itself raises several important cautions. The process appears to be positioned to catch grammar, spelling and other obvious factual mistakes. The difficulty comes in what the proof reader is able to fix. Proof reading assumes that the person doing the proofing knows enough about the story to fix it. What happens if that person is not equipped to spot errors of omission or to flag important information that may be left out of the story? People farther up the editorial line aren't as well connected to the individual stories as the reporters are. Editors may be forced to rely on a type of "smell test" to see if a story passes muster. Several of the stations said that news anchors review the scripts. This is especially important in those stations that enjoy long-tenured news anchors that bring a deep reserve of institutional memory about the community and prior stories to the process. One other issue with script review is that it is not well-equipped to catch potential production mistakes – such as mismatched or poorly edited video. None of the stations indicated any sort of post-review of the finished production pieces to check for video and editing mistakes. The study points up the importance of stressing accuracy at the reporter level and of the reporter-in-training level in schools of journalism. While this fact is not surprising, it does point up the need for training news reporters. Being reminded to double-check spelling, pronunciation and numbers may seem almost rudimentary, but on-going reminders of these issues are important. The levels of these types of errors that were reported in this survey tell us that the reminders are still very much necessary. As noted, nearly 60% of the respondents identified the reporter as the person who is most likely to be the first line of defense for catching errors. This fact is highly relevant for the teaching of journalists, who typically start out as reporters but who often think others will protect them from committing errors. News managers don't view interns and desk assistants as first-line defenders for catching mistakes. In reality, people in those positions do answer telephones, make phone calls, listen to police scanners and check wires and fax machines. Often times, these people are on the front line of the information-gathering process. Any system to improve the error rates in newsroom must include individuals in these positions. In the verbatim responses, several stations shifted responsibility for inaccurate promos to the promotions department. While this may be correct in terms of the internal organizational chart of the TV station, this is an artificial distinction that is important to station employees only and of no significance once the signal leaves the transmitter since most viewers still see the promos as part of the newscast.
The study presents some interesting insight into how news executives view the differences between objective and subjective errors. Factual errors are generally easier to spot – either a number is incorrect or it isn't; either a name is spelled correctly or it is not. Identifying more subjective errors, such as deciding that important background information has been left out of a story, is more difficult to spot especially on the fly. News managers tend to focus on factual errors, which may explain why fewer of such errors get on the air and may explain why the sources in earlier studies were less concerned about the presence of routine factual mistakes. Still, this doesn't explain the sources' perceptions of subjective inaccuracies. There may be another factor at work. As Ryan and Owen (1985) pointed out, subjective errors may not be errors in the literal sense as much as they are simply cases in which news sources disagree with the judgment of the news people. In other words, the individual biases of the public (or in this case, the source) play a role in deciding whether or not a story is judged to be subjectively inaccurate. A simple two-by-two matrix shows the relationship: Story contains some legitimate subjective errors Story contains no legitimate subjective errors Source's individual bias agrees with the story Perceived to be accurate Perceived to be accurate Source's individual bias disagrees with the story Perceived to be inaccurate Perceived to be inaccurate
It is not sufficient to dismiss the concerns expressed by news sources and the public as the result of the public's own biases. If stations truly are interested in understanding how the public perceives the accuracy of their reporting, then a systematic approach must be developed that goes beyond the process of script review. Stations would be well served to adopt a system of accuracy audits that include reviews of stories after-the fact and occasionally involve news source's comments about the stories in which they appeared. Stations routinely do audience research. Such surveys and focus groups should include questions of perceived accuracy. There are several obvious limitations in this study. The results are based on self-reported research so the responses from news managers may contain some degree of social desirability. Nonetheless they do give some indication of how each type of error shows up on the radar screens of news executives. The initial study suffered from a lower than anticipated response rate. The telephone interviews were conducted during the February sweeps and the buildup to the Iraq War. There are problems with surveying news managers anyway. This is population that is over-surveyed and extremely busy. Further research is needed to explore the relationship between news source bias and the perception of subjective errors in reporting. This on-going research will help explain why the public's general perception of journalism is on the decline. Additional research of news managers is needed. This study provides a roadmap for refining the study of accuracy issues as researchers continue to explore the complex relationship between the journalists who report the news and the public that watches them.
Acknowledgements: The authors would like to thank Deborah Potter and Newslab for their generous grant to conduct this research. The authors would also like to acknowledge Kent State University graduate students Ron Jongeling, Jonathan Judy, Josie Elseikali, and Annie Cui Peng, School of Journalism and Mass Communication secretary Jeannie Waller and student worker Kristy Miller for conducting the telephone surveys. References APME. (1995). Code of Ethics. Associated Press Managed Editors. New York, NY.
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Appendix A – Questionnaire TELEVISON NEWS ACCURACY PROJECT Check the Appropriate Box Call Letters: News Manager Line Producer Interviewee Name: Interviewee Title: Date Interview Conducted: Interview Conducted By: Questionnaire # Date Data Entered:
Main Station Telephone Number (From the master call list) Newsroom Telephone Number Alternate Telephone Number
Title Name News Director Assistant News Director Managing Editor Executive Producer Line Producers
Call Back Log Date of Call: Time: Name: Call Back Again
My name is ___________________. I'm conducting interviews for a research project sponsored by Newslab in Washington, DC and the School of Journalism and Mass Communications at Kent State University. This survey is part of an ongoing research study of journalism accuracy. You may have seen a letter from us in the past couple of weeks regarding the survey.
You have been selected to participate in this randomly selected national sample of news managers. This interview should take fewer than 10 minutes to complete. You will not be identified by name nor will your station's call letters be used when the final results are reported. The information we are gathering will help all news organizations examine their procedures to ensure greater journalism accuracy. The research project has been approved by Kent State University. You will be able to stop the interview at any time.
(1) Are you willing to participate? (If no, ask when is a good time to call back.)
YES 1 NO 2 CALL BACK 3
(Call back response: _______________________________________)
(If NO, then thank the subject for his or her time and terminate the interview.)
Thank you for agreeing to help.
As I mentioned, we are interested in the procedures that your station uses to catch potential errors in news stories and promos.
I'm going to read a list of potential errors that might occur in stories. Some of the errors may be considered to be more serious than others. Please consider the seriousness of each one and rate it on a 7-point scale where (1) represents what you consider to be a minor error and (7) represents a major error, with (4) representing the middle.
I will also ask if any of these types of errors has gotten on the air at your station in the past three months.
I'll start with objective errors that most everyone could agree are wrong.
The first type of error is mispronouncing a person's name, such as saying SMITH instead of SMYTHE. On a scale of 1 to 7, how would you rate the seriousness?
(2) SERIOUSNESS (1-7)
(Prompt: Has anything like this happened at your station in the past three months?)
(3) YES 1 NO 2
Misspelling a name or title in a Chyron or CG, such as spelling S-M-I-T-H instead of S-M-Y-T-H-E. (Prompt: How would you rate the seriousness?)
(4) SERIOUSNESS (1-7)
(Prompt: Has anything like this happened at your station in the past three months?)
(5) YES 1 NO 2
Reporting the wrong name on the air, such as CHAIRMAN SMITH when it should be CHAIRMAN JONES. (Prompt: How would you rate the seriousness?)
(6) SERIOUSNESS (1-7)
(Prompt: Has anything like this happened at your station in the past three months?)
(7) YES 1 NO 2
Getting numbers in a story wrong, such as Chairman Smith's travel budget was $10,000 instead of $100,000. (Prompt: How would you rate the seriousness?)
(8) SERIOUSNESS (1-7)
(Prompt: Has anything like this happened at your station in the past three months?)
(9) YES 1 NO 2
Getting a fundamental fact wrong, such as Chairman Smith is accused of THEFT when he is really accused of EMBEZZLEMENT. (Prompt: How would you rate the seriousness?)
(10) SERIOUSNESS (1-7)
(Prompt: Has anything like this happened at your station in the past three months?)
(11) YES 1 NO 2
Now, I'm going to ask you about situations that some members of the public might perceive to be errors. These errors are more subjective in nature. Please rate them on the same 1-through-7 scale.
A story is edited in such a way that it leaves out information that a SOURCE or SUBJECT of the story legitimately thought was important to include, such as leaving out key background information about President Smith's company. (Prompt: How would you rate the seriousness?)
(12) SERIOUSNESS (1-7)
(Prompt: Has anything like this happened at your station in the past three months?)
(13) YES 1 NO 2
A story is edited in such a way that it distorts information or removes it from its original context, such as making President Smith appear to be ANGRIER or MORE EXCITED than he or she really was. (Prompt: How would you rate the seriousness?)
(14) SERIOUSNESS (1-7)
(Prompt: Has anything like this happened at your station in the past three months?)
(15) YES 1 NO 2
A new promo or tease promises more to the viewer than the story actually delivers, such as promoting a major development in an ongoing story when the story contains not much more than a rehash of old information. (Prompt: How would you rate the seriousness?)
(16) SERIOUSNESS (1-7)
(Prompt: Has anything like this happened at your station in the past three months?)
(17) YES 1 NO 2 A news story is told in such a way that makes the event appear to be more important or significant than the event really is, such as covering a mundane event simply because a celebrity is involved with it. (Prompt: How would you rate the seriousness?)
(18) SERIOUSNESS (1-7)
(Prompt: Has anything like this happened at your station in the past three months?)
(19) YES 1 NO 2
I'd like to ask you a couple of questions about your newsroom organization.
Who in your newsroom is initially responsible for the factual accuracy of your news content? Please identify the individuals by title. Again, we're looking for the first line of defense for checking for errors.
(Open-ended. Do not read the following list. Check all that apply. Prompt: "Anyone else?")
20) NEWS DIRECTOR ____ 21) ASSISTANT NEWS DIRECTOR ____ 22) EXECUTIVE PRODUCER ____ 23) MANAGING EDITOR ____ 24) NEWSCAST PRODUCERS ____ 25) ASSIGNMENT EDITORS ____ 26) REPORTERS ____ 27) PHOTOGRAPHERS ____ 28) PHOTOGRAPHERS ____ 29) DESK ASSISTANTS ____ 30) INTERNS ____ 31) OTHERS ____
(Other:_________________________________________)
What are some of the ways that your newsroom catches errors before they get on the air? (Open-end question. Clearly paraphrase responses. Probe: "….anything else?")
32) In your role as a news manager (news producer FOR PRODUCER INTERVIEWS), how often would you say errors in stories called to your attention?
(Read the following list of choices.)
EVERY DAY 1 ONCE OR TWICE A WEEK 2 A COUPLE OF TIMES A MONTH 3 SELDOM 4 NEVER 5
33) In your newsroom, which of the following seven statements best describes what usually happens after a significant error in a story has been made and someone calls it to your attention?
(Read the following list of choices)
WE HAVE NO POLICY FOR MAKING CORRECTIONS 1
WE GENERALLY DISCUSS ERRORS AND MAY NOTE THEM IN A DISCREPANCY FILE 2
WE FIX THE SCRIPTS TO KEEP THE ERROR FROM GETTING ON THE AIR AGAIN 3
WE USUALLY CALL THE PERSON AND APOLOGIZE OFF THE AIR 4
OUR POLICY IS TO MAKE CORRECTIONS AS NEEDED. 5
WE HAVE A CLEAR POLICY FOR THE TIMING AND PLACEMENT OF ON-AIR CORRECTIONS FOR ALL ERRORS. 6
OTHER 7
(List "other" response:_____________________________________________)
What would you say is the most common type of error that happens in your newsroom? (Open-ended question. Probe: "…anything else?)
Here are six disciplinary actions in increasing levels of severity that might be given out to a staff member for making a reporting error: do nothing, issue an oral reminder about the seriousness of making a mistake, issue an oral reprimand, issue a written reprimand, suspend the employee or dismiss the employee. In your newsroom, what would be the disciplinary action if someone on your staff did the following?
34) Misspelling a name in a Chyron or CG DO NOTHING 1 ORAL REMINDER 2 ORAL REPRIMAND 3 WRITTEN REPRIMAND 4 SUSPEND THE EMPLOYEE 5 DISMISS THE EMPLOYEE 6 OTHER 7 (List Other response: _________________________________________)
35) Mispronouncing someone's name on the air. DO NOTHING 1 ORAL REMINDER 2 ORAL REPRIMAND 3 WRITTEN REPRIMAND 4 SUSPEND THE EMPLOYEE 5 DISMISS THE EMPLOYEE 6 OTHER 7 (List Other response: _________________________________________)
36) Reporting the incorrect location of a news story. DO NOTHING 1 ORAL REMINDER 2 ORAL REPRIMAND 3 WRITTEN REPRIMAND 4 SUSPEND THE EMPLOYEE 5 DISMISS THE EMPLOYEE 6 OTHER 7
(List Other response: _________________________________________)
37) Producing a news promo or tease that is misleading in some significant way. DO NOTHING 1 ORAL REMINDER 2 ORAL REPRIMAND 3 WRITTEN REPRIMAND 4 SUSPEND THE EMPLOYEE 5 DISMISS THE EMPLOYEE 6 OTHER 7
(List Other response: _________________________________________)
38) Producing a news promo or tease that is factually inaccurate. DO NOTHING 1 ORAL REMINDER 2 ORAL REPRIMAND 3 WRITTEN REPRIMAND 4 SUSPEND THE EMPLOYEE 5 DISMISS THE EMPLOYEE 6 OTHER 7
(List Other response: _________________________________________)
39) Incorrectly identifying someone as having been accused of a crime when that person wasn't. DO NOTHING 1 ORAL REMINDER 2 ORAL REPRIMAND 3 WRITTEN REPRIMAND 4 SUSPEND THE EMPLOYEE 5 DISMISS THE EMPLOYEE 6 OTHER 7
(List Other response: _________________________________________)
40) Reporting that someone had died when the person had not. DO NOTHING 1 ORAL REMINDER 2 ORAL REPRIMAND 3 WRITTEN REPRIMAND 4 SUSPEND THE EMPLOYEE 5 DISMISS THE EMPLOYEE 6 OTHER 7
(List Other response: _________________________________________) 41) In your recent memory, has anyone at your station been disciplined for making a factual or subjective error in a story?
YES 1 NO 2
(Prompt: "If YES, can you tell me what happened?)
I'm going to ask you just a few questions about yourself. Again all of the information about individuals is strictly confidential and will only be used for reporting group statistics.
42) What is your title? NEWS DIRECTOR 1 ASSISTANT NEWS DIRECTOR 2 MANAGING EDITOR 3 EXECUTIVE PRODUCER 4 ASSIGNMENT EDITOR 5 SHOW PRODUCER 6
43) If show producer, which newscast do you produce 5:00 P-M 1 5:30 P-M 2 6:00 P-M 3 6:30 P-M 4 7:00 P-M 5 9:00 P-M 6 10:00 P-M 7 11:00 P-M 8 OTHER 9 N/A (for news managers) 10 (List Other response:_______________________________________)
44) What year were you born?
45) How many years have you worked in the business?
46) If I might ask, what is your ethnic background? AFRICAN AMERICAN 1 CAUCASIAN 2 HISPANIC 3 NATIVE AMERICAN 4 ASIAN AND PACIFIC ISLANDER 5 OTHER 6 (List Other response:_______________________________________) CHOSE NOT TO ANSWER 7
47) Gender (DON'T ASK THIS QUESTION) MALE 1 FEMALE 2 CAN'T DETERMINE 3
48) What was your major in college? (Open-ended question. We're looking for journalism, communications, radio/television majors.)
Thank you for participating in the survey. Again, you won't be identified by name in any way. But if you are willing, someone from NewsLab might want to interview you for an article on this topic.
49) Would you be willing to be contacted separately? YES 1 NO 2
Appendix B – Verbatim Responses
Verbatim responses
What are some of the ways that your newsroom catches errors before they get on the air?
Reading scripts Reading scripts Have as many people read over stories (as possible) Asking questions; everyone looks at everyone else's work Call ahead and verify Producers and anchors read stories. Graphics production staff double checks spelling Stories and facts are discussed and then proofread and reference searched Different staff re-reads stories; several filters; anchor is final check Have more than one person read story; checking wire copy and Internet Anchors read scripts; asst. ND reads scripts; both ask questions; producer and asst. ND check all CGs and Chyrons before airing Stories double checked by reporter, anchor, ND and TD Producer/anchor and ND reads script before airing Producer/anchor or ND (looks at script) before it gets edited Checks and balance; reporting doing story and producer looks at it. ND looks at it Three people – producers, anchors and news director Reporter, producer, executive producer and assistant news director; second and third set of eyes Executive producer reads all scripts as does assistant ND Producers and assistant ND proofread (Multiple sets of eyes review the scripts) Proofreading or spell-check in system; two people proofreading Proofreading scripts by the anchors; management spot-proofreads scripts; reporters realizing they made mistakes before they get on the air. Producers go through series of checks; executive producer also checks Second party and third party reads them; if sensitive stories we also have attorney look at them Producer proofread and (correct) them Tiered system; reporter works on piece; producer looks at piece and ND looks at it Read script; question reporter; compare information from separate sources; call interviewee and ask questions Scrutinize the story though multiple people More than one person reads copy; follow-ups verify facts; understand the story before heading out the door Try to verify with more than one source All scripts are read before airing by news director and/or ME and anchors Having stories copy edited and checked by manager Each story read by senior staff; anchor, assignment editor or ND Each script read by assignment editor, producer and anchor Producer or anchor sits with reporter and goes over script line by line Every script read by three people before it airs Proofreading; several people, at least two, look at each script Executive producer checks; news director checks Read by producer and news director (to proof script) ND reviews scripts reviews script or Asst. NW; producer looks and directs reporter after airing the error Asst ND looks; ND looks; producers' check Script review process Anchor, producer, assistant ND proofread Reporters, desk and producers check (stories); executive producer approves Copy editor; anchors read pre-air; directors try to look at supers Go over many times by many people Multiple people reading (the scripts) Anchors proofing scripts; executive producer and manager proof, too. Read copy before (it is) aired Re-read and triple-check stories All copy goes to executive producer before (it) gets into newscast Reading scripts and promos Stories reviewed by executive producer and ND before (going) on air Reading scripts; asking reporters and double-checking with sources Cross references; re-read stories; ideas are tossed around; multiple checks Reading them (stories) Goes through two to three people before (a story is) aired All copy read and edited by news manager Double-checking; multiple checking Everything gets read (by someone else) Script review (by) news director and producer Managers read scripts before they air Managing editors look at all scripts Proofreading by others in newsroom Stories triple-checked by producer and anchor after writer Producers review reporters' scripts; newsroom managers also check scripts; anchors also check copy they prep to read Anchor pre-reads copy; so does producer; script approval by executive producer or news director Proofreading; double-check tape against script by newscast director Managing editor reads and assist ND reads each script; editor and reporter go over video; all information comes strictly from the desk All check each other; re-read; checks and balances; graphics very specifically checked; system spell-checks; newscast spell-checked three times Good review by line producer; bounced up the ladder if questions occur Editorial process; oral review of story; supervisor reads copy; all scripts are read Tend to rewrite and double-check scripts; two sets of eyes Every script is reviewed by manager or producer People in the know read Afternoon meeting; ask reporters questions; get familiar with story and direction they are heading; proof script
What is the most common type of error that happens in your newsroom? (selected responses)
Misspelling on graphics or CG Mispronunciation of names Grammar Incorrect dates CG formatting (viewers don't notice, though) and story details Not maintaining correct tense (grammar) Retelling of background of story is done from memory, not fact checked. Titles or location errors because (of) lack of knowledge of the area Anchor misspeaking, especially on foreign story Police and court terminology; anything legal (handing up a verdict when it should be handing down.) Spelling and grammar; name and place familiarity Factual errors in scripts; saying someone is charged rather than convicted of a crime Misspelling on chyron; poor editing of video, writing technique. Current focus is on story development. Sin of omission; TV is so "time of the essence" that it often changes flow of story Poor writing Miscuing video of story Writing a tease to make a story better (more sensational) than it is Mispronunciation; careless errors, like misspellings; less-that-attentive editing; unintentional bias due to misunderstanding subject matter Lack or loss of (information) Simple factual errors Spelling; numbers; low-level factual errors Something that is uncatchable by a reviewer; something a source says that cannot be known by a producer; something presented as a fact. Misspelling, perhaps not only a newsroom problems because operations (dept.) involved Appendix C – Responses to other category
Written reminder Tough to answer Discrepancy report every day General Manager would reprimand employee News director would make the call. Promotions department is on its own Written plus verbal reprimand Decided on a case-by-case basis No policy needed because the event (reporting that someone had died) never happens If problems are continuing, then the level of discipline increases News director writes the promos, so problems with promos are not an issue Depends on the severity of the error Depends on the history of the person Written reprimand and possible additional action for serious errors Go whine to the promotions department Promotions department would have to handle the problem Yell and scream! If sued, then fired Never had the problem at the station Problems with teases would involve other departments; GM would handle Make on-air correction Don't know; error has never happened Oral reminder the first time, then oral reprimand Written reprimand; after three written reprimands, employee is suspended Oral reminder and correct on-air Total embarrassment for reporting that someone had died incorrectly Supervisors of promotions department involved in promo problems On-air correction Oral reminder the first time; more strict for subsequent infractions Review of promos should avoid problems Employee may be dismissed if the nature of the error was particularly serious Depends on who and what story Oral reminder for the first instance; more severe if it happens again Pull the promo from the air Unsure of the discipline since the hypothetical situation has never happened Producing a misleading or incorrect tease wouldn't happen Misleading promos wouldn't be allowed on the air Promotions department is separate from news; problem is theirs Oral reminder most times, but depends on the errors Teases not handled by the news department Promotion department would correct promo mistake; news department can't discipline them Depends on the reason for a mistake; are we reporting the source correctly? Oral reprimand for first offense if not a pattern of mistakes
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