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ENTERPRISE AND INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING IN THREE METROPOLITAN PAPERS: 1980 AND 1995 COMPARED Joseph Bernt and Marilyn Greenwald Associate Professors of Journalism E. W. Scripps School of Journalism Ohio University Athens, Ohio 45701 614/593-2590 and Mark Tatge Reporter Columbus Bureau Cleveland Plain Dealer 614/228-8200 Presented to the Council of Affiliates and Investigative Reporters and Editors, Inc., Association for Journalism and Mass Communication Annual Meeting, Anaheim, California, August 12, 1996 Abstract Enterprise and Investigative Reporting in Three Metropolitan Papers: 1980 and 1995 Compared This exploratory study measured how enterprise and investigative reporting changed from 1980 to 1995. The study content analyzed 401 "enterprise" stories from 546 editions of the Chicago Tribune, the Philadelphia Inquirer and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch published during March, April and November of 1980 and 1995. The number of enterprise stories actually rose from 199 in 1980 to 202 in 1995, but those enterprise stories coded as investigative decreased from 69 in 1980 to 20 in 1995. Results suggested news managers may still value in-depth stories, but investigative reporting may not carry the prestige it held in the 1970s. Joseph Bernt and Marilyn Greenwald Associate Professors of Journalism E. W. Scripps School of Journalism Ohio University Athens, Ohio 45701 and Mark Tatge Reporter Columbus Bureau Cleveland Plain Dealer 614/228-8200 ENTERPRISE AND INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING IN THREE METROPOLITAN PAPERS: 1980 AND 1995 COMPARED "Newspaper proprietors, a notoriously timid bunch, weighed their various alternative strategies for the Nineties and came to the near-unanimous conclusion: time to hunker down. Boat-rocking is definitely out. Pulling in your journalistic horns is definitely in."1 -- Boston Globe columnist David Nyhan Introduction Despite emerging technologies, changes in ownership and other factors affecting today's newspapers, it seems logical that one thing could never change: the age-old, classic definition of "news." Textbooks and editors alike have for the last century agreed that the conventions of timeliness, proximity and prominence dominate when it comes to deciding what to play on page one. But today, with increasing attention to the bottom line and the compressing of media organizations, defining "news" may not be as simple as it once was. Doug Underwood, James Squires, John McManus and others have written at length about the "corporatization" of America media in the last two decades and how media outlets' increased links to business have affected news coverage.2 Simply put, the goals of business -- to maintain the status quo and increase profits -- and the goals of journalism -- to monitor the establishment -- may be incompatible. To many, one immediate casualty of this merger between business and journalism has been a form of journalism Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 2 that was once held in the highest regard in newsrooms: investigative reporting. To some, modern investigative reporting obtained a certain cache with both journalists and readers with the advent of what is now known simply as Watergate: the downfall of a U.S. president due primarily to a series of stories developed by two Washington Post reporters. Watergate certainly gave all investigative reporting a shot in the arm in the mid- and late- 1970s, although that type of reporting was not invented by Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein. It began shortly after the turn of the century with muckrakers, such as Lincoln Steffens, Upton Sinclair, Ida Tarbell and others who focused their attention on corruption in government and business, including powerful oil, railroad, banking and insurance industries, and published them in such magazines as McClure's and Collier's.3 Edwin Diamond, in his history of newspapers, believes there was little or no sustained muckraking or investigative reporting between 1913 and 1960, and, despite dramatic changes in society, newspapers were complacent and content to maintain the status quo.4 By the late-1960s and early-1970s, however, younger, better-educated reporters began working in newsrooms and some of the spirit of muckraking returned; and this spirit hit its peak with Watergate and with the success and fame of Woodward and Bernstein. Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 3 By the mid-1980s, however, some news managers began questioning the value of investigative reporting. After all, it was expensive and time-consuming; one or more reporters often took months to complete a single series of stories. Others questioned whether readers were interested in such serious journalism. In a 1990 speech to members of Investigative Reporters and Editors, Wall Street Journal managing editor Norman Pearlstine said that declining readership combined with reader disinterest in investigative pieces is prompting many news managers to discourage investigative reporting.5 Without question, however, the threat of libel lawsuits frightened news executives and forced them to draw away from investigative reporting by the late-1980s, according to many. And this fear of legal action extended beyond just financial considerations. Even seasoned reporters who were simply questioned by attorneys began to lose their nerve about pursuing future investigative projects. Pearlstine predicted changes in legal theory regarding journalistic issues: "There are going to be new theories of law developing over the next several years that will increasingly challenge the freedom of reporters ... on issues of trade secrets, proprietary information, embarrassment, shame, humiliation -- all the things we specialize in," he said in 1990.6 Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 4 To some, reports of the death of investigative reporting have been greatly exaggerated. The majority of 550 journalists questioned in a 1986 survey by Investigative Reporters and Editors said investigative reporting increased at their news outlets in the 1980s. On 71 percent of newspapers, investigative techniques were used more widely by newsroom beat reporters than they were during the previous five years. Reporter and former IRE president Joe Rigert, noted in 1986 that most reporters were getting more adept at investigative reporting: "They're better at looking at records, dealing with law enforcement officers, interviewing and handling sources."7 In 1990, former Chicago Tribune editor and press critic James Squires told those at an IRE conference that investigative reporting can thrive, if reporters can show how a story is of value to readers or viewers and if reporters can illustrate to news managers that it is lucrative.8 Even Pearlstine, who in 1990 painted a grim picture of the future of investigative reporting, said newspapers "which do remain committed to really telling it as it is can find a great deal of success."9 Have media outlets, particularly newspapers, cut back on investigative reporting? And has the nature and even the definition of investigative reporting changed from the early 1980s, the immediate aftermath of Watergate, to the mid-1990s? In When MBAs Rule the Newsroom, Underwood blames the new Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 5 corporate mentality at many newspapers for pandering to readers' interests and going overboard in presenting them with what these corporate executives think they want. This fixation on the reader has led to watered-down news and a declining quality of newspapers overall, Underwood believes, and it forces news executives to organize newsrooms around this corporate marketing philosophy.10 James Fallows, on the other hand, believes that increasing greed on the part of journalists detracts from their eagerness to report the news; this greed often comes in the form of huge speaker fees. Further, he believes a jaded attitude and elitism on the part of many reporters is replacing genuine skepticism.11 Squires maintains that the press is no longer dedicated to educating the public but, similar to television, is now dedicated to entertaining its consumers for profit. Responsibility for the news has been taken out of the hands of professional journalists and placed in the hands of experienced business managers, he believes.12 These recent commentators are in many ways followers of Badikian's indictment of media concentration and corporate ideology.13 They developed their critiques of corporate newspapers and the loss of journalism's soul to the bottom line from their own experience as reporters and newsroom managers. More recently, David Pierce Demers has questioned the purported decline of newspaper journalism by reviewing empirical and descriptive studies of the quality of newspaper content and Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 6 newsroom working conditions. While he found some support for charges that chain newspapers concentrate less on local news and place greater emphasis on profits, Demers argues that newspapers and the working lives of journalists have improved as chains and newspapers have adopted the principles and practices of the modern corporation. Demers argues that, while newspapers have changed, they have done so as part of the managerial revolution that has affected all institutions in the twentieth century.14 Methodology This exploratory study analyzed enterprise and investigative reporting -- emblematic of difficult, time-consuming and public service journalism -- in three major dailies. The intent was to use the amount, subject matter or information-gathering techniques of enterprise, and particularly investigative reporting, as indicators of newspaper quality and to determine if this type of coverage had deteriorated from 1980 to 1995 or if the infusion of corporate resources and techniques have improved metropolitan newspapers. The definition of investigative reporting is subjective; reporters, editors and readers have assigned varying definitions to it over the years. For this study definitions provided by Ullmann, Gaines, Mollenhoff and Wicklein were summarized.15 Gaines and Wicklein provide definitions that focus on reporting that reveals something contrary to versions of evenys offered by Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 7 government, business, or other authority; or on reporting that aims to ameliorate a social ill. To operationalize the definition for coding purposes, this study used a version of the definition provided by Ullmann and Mollenhoff and one used for many years by the IRE: investigative reporting exposes wrongdoing or violations of law, regulation, codes of standards or common understanding of decency; is the work of the reporter and not others; is about a subject of importance to readers; and results from the attempts of others to hide or keep something secret.16 Additionally, in this study stories were defined as investigative if they fit these characteristics but the information reported, while not secret, was nevertheless previously unnoticed and was discovered through a variety of standard investigative reporting techniques. These include interviews, unidentified sources, published materials, leaked documents or public documents and so forth. This allowed substantially more of the enterprise stories found in the three papers to be coded as examples of investigative reporting. Although not all editors and reporters may agree with this definition, one element of it has recently stirred debate among members of the IRE. The organization's board of directors is reviewing the third stipulation: whether investigative reporting should have in its definition the element of secrecy. To investigative reporter and editor Bob Greene, this element of Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 8 uncovering secret information is what separates investigative reporting from other types of in-depth or enterprise reporting. To Steve Weinberg, former IRE executive director, including that stipulation disqualifies what he considers classic and compelling investigative reporting.17 This debate about the definition goes beyond semantics. It touches on the subject matter of investigative reporting and how it may have changed over time. To Weinberg and some others, the traditional definition favors organized crime and corruption stories and focuses on bureaucrats concealing documents. A wider definition would recognize efforts that go beyond unlocking closed files and into ferreting out Congressional testimony, government records and other information that is open and available but previously unreviewed.18 Although this study adheres to a slightly wider definition, it specifically codes for secret or hidden information obtained by reporters. The authors realized that this element of the definition, whether information is secret, is pivotal in determining changes in the scope of investigative reporting. In this study, three months each of two years of the Chicago Tribune, the Philadelphia Inquirer and the St. Louis Post Dispatch were examined. The authors coded March, April and November issues for each newspaper in 1980 and 1995. A total of 546 newspapers were searched for enterprise and investigative Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 9 stories. Only stories appearing on page one and stories referenced on page one were coded. In designing this as an exploratory study with an eye to expanding the number of newspapers included in a future study, the authors sought to code large metropolitan dailies operating in different competitive environments. This would indicate if competitive status affected the number and types of stories published. The Tribune, with a circulation of 678,081, was and remains a competitive newspaper. The Inquirer, with a circulation of 478,999, was and remains in a joint-operating agreement with the Philadelphia Daily News. The Post-Dispatch, with a circulation of 333,968, was in a competitive situation in 1980, but was the sole daily in the city in 1995.19 Geographical variety was also sought. The year 1980 was selected for comparison with investigative reporting in 1995 because it was sufficiently distant from the frenzy of Watergate-influenced reporting but prior to many of the corporate consolidations and closures affecting the newspaper industry during the 1980s. Many major cities were still served by two newspapers in 1980. The authors randomly selected three months of each of the newspapers for 1980 and 1995 rather than selecting a constructed sample for two reasons: so whole series of investigative stories would be captured in their entirety and so the chance of missing investigative stories would be reduced. Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 10 Front pages only were selected out of the belief that major investigative and enterprise pieces, requiring significant investment of staff and budget, would be highlighted on page one. It was assumed that even if a major story did not begin on page one, it would be mentioned there by a blurb or "reefer" line. Investigative or enterprise pieces that were promoted on page one but that appeared inside the newspaper thus were also coded. If a story was deemed appropriate for coding, all of its sidebars and related pieces also were coded, regardless of where they appeared. The coding hinged on the definitions the authors used for investigative and for enterprise, since only those types of stories were coded. While the definition the authors used for investigative has already been mentioned, some further elaboration is required. The coders followed the definition used by Ullmann and Greene, as explained above, although the element of secrecy was not required for this study. If the material consulted by reporters was not secret, but was previously unnoticed by reporters or the public, the story was considered investigative. If the story involved an extensive examination of a topic, used several of the standard techniques of investigative reporting, contained a variety of sources, and reported on illegal or unethical actions or other offenses, it was considered investigative by the coders. It should be noted Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 11 also that the coding sheet (Appendix A) makes a clear distinction between an investigative story involving secret information and one involving information that was available but unnoticed previously. Once the determination was made that a story was investigative, it was coded for one main focus (who or what was targeted), all investigative techniques used and the type of art, if any, that accompanied the story. The categories for focus included a variety of public and private individuals and entities. Standard investigative reporting techniques, such as going undercover, personal interview, surveillance, and so forth were coded. The art category was divided into photographs, line art or illustrations and charts or tables or infographics. Items such as story headline, date, page, and length in paragraphs were also coded; the subject of story was noted qualitatively. Also coded in this study were accomplishment stories, which the authors defined as those stories referring to change or action brought about by an investigative piece. All stories defined as enterprise but not investigative were also identified and coded. Although the definition of enterprise varies, authors of this study considered an enterprise story one that involved extensive work, detail, use of a variety of sources and one that had a news focus. An enterprise story or series may also have illuminated an issue or situation, may have provided new information on an Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 12 issue, and may have been analytical or interpretive. Feature stories, columns and opinion pieces, personality profiles, localization of national or international news and political commentary were not coded. If a story was deemed enterprise, it was coded only for its headline, date, and length, and the subject again was noted. All coding was completed by the authors. Only locally produced stories were coded. A total of 410 stories were coded, including sidebars. Intercoder reliability, based on percentage of agreement,20 was 94.8%, ranging from a low of 80% for type of story, unidentified sources and documents leaked to 100% for newspaper, date, page, personal interview, surveillance, documents provided on request, whistleblower as source, library or published materials, going undercover, photographs, line art and infographic. Level of significance was set at .05 for the study. Results This study found comparatively little investigative reporting was done at all; investigative reporting accounted for about a fifth of the enterprise work these newspapers published in March, April and November of 1980 and 1995. The number of enterprise stories for the issues coded was equivalent for 1980 and 1995, but the number of investigative stories declined dramatically between those years. The focus of investigative Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 13 stories in 1980 and 1995 was overwhelmingly on public officials, employees and entities rather than private executives, employees or entities. Some change was found in techniques employed in investigative stories between 1980 and 1995, with personal interviews the primary source of information in both years, documents provided willingly the second and information from unnamed sources the fourth in 1980 and third in 1995 most common source of information. Leaked documents, the third most common technique in 1980, was noted only once in the stories coded from 1995. At a statistically significant level, investigative reporting constituted 22% of the four types of accomplishment and enterprise stories coded from the three papers (Table 1). All three newspapers did considerable enterprise reporting in each of the two years studied (Table 2). Of the 401 enterprise stories coded, 199 were coded for 1980 and 202 for 1995; but individually the newspapers varied in the number of stories they published in 1980 and 1995, with the number declining substantially in the Chicago Tribune and increasing substantially in the Philadelphia Inquirer. Of 109 enterprise stories in the Chicago Tribune, 67 appeared in 1980 and only 37 in 1995; of the 194 stories in the Philadelphia Inquirer, 79 were published in 1980 and 114 in 1995; of the 106 stories in Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 14 the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 53 were published in 1980 and an equivalent 51 in 1995. A similar pattern of distribution among the newspapers was found in their production of investigative stories. Of the 401 enterprise stories coded, only 89 -- about 22% -- were investigative. While the enterprise stories were equally distributed between the two years examined, the investigative stories were not. Of the 89 investigative stories found, 69 -- nearly 78% -- appeared in 1980. Only 20 appeared in 1995. In 1980, the Chicago Tribune published 30 investigative stories, or about 43% of the total number of investigative pieces coded for that year. In 1995, however, no investigative stories appeared in the Tribune in the months coded. This contrasts with the Philadelphia Inquirer, which published 24 investigative stories, nearly 35% of the total found for 1980. In 1995, the Inquirer published 14 investigative stories, or 70% of those found for 1995. The percentage increase was less dramatic for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Fifteen -- nearly 22% -- of the investigative stories coded for 1980 came from the Post-Dispatch, as compared to six stories -- or 30% -- in 1995. All three newspapers devoted substantial space to enterprise reporting. Ranging from a minimum of four paragraphs in a sidebar to a maximum of 200 paragraphs, the average length for the 410 stories was slightly more than 44 paragraphs. Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 15 Overall, the length of the enterprise stories increased from 1980 to 1995. Only the St. Louis Post-Dispatch showed an increase in the percentage of enterprise stories of 30 or fewer paragraphs and a decrease in the percentage of stories of more than 30 paragraphs. In 1980, more than 39% of the enterprise stories were 30 or fewer paragraphs in length; but, in 1995, this dropped to less than 36%. Enterprise stories longer than 30 paragraphs accounted for under 61% of the stories published in 1980 but for more than 64% in 1995 (Table 3). As already mentioned, primary techniques investigative reporters used varied little over the fifteen-year period studied, with one exception. For both years studied, the most common technique used to gather information was personal interviews. Of 69 investigative stories coded for 1980, 63 employed this technique. In 1995, 18 of the 20 investigative stories used personal interviews. The second most common technique was use of requested documents that were not leaked or secret. This source of information was used in 50 of the 69 stories in 1980 and 14 of the 20 stories in 1995. Unidentified sources was the third most common technique used. These sources were used in 21 of 69 stories in 1980 and in 4 of 20 stories in 1995. From 1980 to 1995, there was a dramatic decline in instances where leaked documents or surveillance were used. In 1980, leaked documents were used in 20 of the 69 stories, but they were used in only one of the 20 stories found in Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 16 1995. Surveillance, used in 3 of the 69 stories in 1980, was not used in any stories coded for 1995. There was an increase between 1980 and 1995, especially on a percentage basis, in the use of computer-aided information gathering from no instances to three instances; and in expert analysis, from one instance to four instances. The number of instances of reporters going undercover (2) and the use of published materials (1) was the same for both years (Table 4). In both years studied, the focus in investigative reporting was on public rather than private enterprise. Overall, 72 -- nearly 85% -- of the 89 investigative reports targeted public entities or public officials and employees. Private companies or executives and employees were targeted in 13 of the 89 investigative stories. (The remaining four investigative stories targeted non-profit organizations or officials). Although the focus for both 1980 and 1995 was on public entities or officials, it should also be noted that as a percentage, there was an increase in attention paid to private individuals or companies from 1980 to 1995. Of the 69 investigative stories published in 1980, 57 -- more than 86% -- targeted public enterprise; nine -- nearly 14 percent -- targeted private enterprise. In 1995, 12 of the 20 investigative stories -- or 79% -- focused on public enterprise, and 4 -- or 21% -- on private enterprise. It should be noted that one of the three newspapers coded appeared more willing than the others to Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 17 investigate the actions of private enterprise. In 1980, 3 -- 21% -- of the 14 investigative stories published by the St. Louis Post-Dispatch targeted private enterprise. For 1995, 4 -- 80% -- of the 5 investigative stories in the Post-Dispatch targeted private enterprise. This study also looked at whether the information uncovered in the investigative stories was hidden, or whether it was available but unnoticed. Of the 89 investigative stories coded, 54 -- nearly 61% -- revealed hidden or secreted information. The number of reports that revealed hidden or secreted information rose from 40 of 69 stories -- 58% -- in 1980 to 14 of 20 stories, or 70%, in those months of 1995. Discussion Although the number of investigative stories dropped from 1980 to 1995 in the three newspapers, these newspapers clearly made an effort to provide their readers with informative, sophisticated and carefully researched stories. That the number of enterprise stories and their length actually increased from 1980 to 1995 suggests that newspaper executives valued these more extensive and detailed stories. Still, that the number of investigative stories dropped so dramatically from 1980 to 1995 may indicate that the value of this type of reporting has declined in the eyes of news managers. Whether this is a result of the consolidation Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 18 of media companies or fear of lawsuits is unclear. Interestingly, though, in the reduced number of investigative pieces found in the 1995 issues, the percentage of stories focusing on private enterprise -- those more likely to attract litigation -- actually increased. This may indicate that these newspapers remain willing to take on corporate targets in their investigations, contrary to what Bagdikian, Underwood and other critics have suggested. In addition, in 1995 some excellent and courageous investigative reporting appeared in the two less competitive newspapers analyzed in this study while the highly competitive Chicago Tribune published no investigative stories. The competitive status of the newspaper may not affect the news content as much as Bagdikian and some other critics of corporate newspapers seem to think. This parallels results Lacy and Fico obtained in a large sample content analysis of 114 group-owned and independent newspaper.21 For instance, the Chicago Tribune, which exists in a competitive market, published no investigative stories during the three months of 1995 that were examined. The Philadelphia Inquirer, however, which publishes under a joint operating agreement, printed in November of 1995 two five-part investigative series. One of these contained 718 paragraphs devoted to political corruption and the possible bankruptcy of the Delaware River Port Authority. The second series devoted 617 Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 19 paragraphs to police corruption and misconduct and the failure of the Philadelphia police department to discipline officers no matter how heinous their activities. But it is impossible to discount the theories of Underwood, Squires and others. This study found that the focus and character of these newspapers, at least in the issues sampled, has changed from 1980 to 1995. The nature of enterprise stories, for instance, changed over the 15-year period examined. For example, in 1980, the newspapers published long, detailed stories on such topics as poor medical care at state prisons (Philadelphia Inquirer); the plight and future of children who are victims of child molestation (St. Louis Post-Dispatch); and an analysis of why Republicans lost a local race (Chicago Tribune). In 1995, many of these enterprise stories had how-to angles or focused more directly on how an issue or event affected the reader. Some of these stories included a Chicago Tribune story on how to avoid being a victim of crime; a Post-Dispatch story on how new tax laws affect consumers; and an Inquirer story on the effect of a weakened dollar overseas. This may indicate that news managers are seeking stories that they believe relate more directly to the reader, or that news managers are catering to what they believe are the interests of suburban or upscale readers who are less interested in the problems of government and society and more interested in what directly affects their own lives. Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 20 The findings of this study, especially the anomaly of the highly competitive Chicago Tribune publishing no investigative stories in 1995 after leading in that category in 1980, suggest that researchers should consider the possibility that news managers have redefined the concept of competition. A competitive newspaper environment in the 1990s must produce researched enterprise stories that appeal to wealthy, upscale, conservative, educated readers living in the suburbs surrounding urban centers. Viewing competition from this vantage point may explain why media critics reach such contrasting conclusions about the quality of today's corporate newspaper. Critics, who hold a more traditional concept of the metropolitan newspaper and find fewer investigative stories, see deterioration. Those media analysts, who find an overall increase in enterprise stories aimed at suburban readers, see corporate ownership bringing little change and in many cases an improvement in newspaper quality. No matter the definition or indicator of quality applied to today's corporate newspaper, the apparent decline found in this study in one form of public service journalism -- investigative reporting-- merits further analysis based on a far larger sample that cuts across circulation size, geographic region and competitive status. Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 21 Notes 1David Nyhan, Boston Globecolumnist, as quoted in Doug Underwood, When MBAs Rule the Newsroom (New York: Columbia University Press, 1993), 129. 2See Underwood; James Fallows, Breaking the News (New York: Pantheon, 1996); John McManus, Market-Driven Journalism (Thousand Oaks, Calif: Sage, 1994); and James Squires, Read All About It: The Corporate Takeover of America's Newspapers (New York: Times Books, 1993). 3For a brief of history of investigative reporting, see Underwood, 38-54, and Leonard Downey, Jr., The New Muckrakers (Washington, D.C.: New Republic Book Co., 1976). 4Edwin Diamond, Good News, Bad News (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1980), 232-240. 5For summaries of criticisms leveled by news managers, see, for example, Mark Fitzgerald, "Finances seen behind the investigative slowdown," Editor & Publisher, 1 July 1989, 13; and M.L. Stein, "The chilling effect," Editor & Publisher, 4 July 1987, 10. Pearlstine is quoted in Staci D. Kramer, "Investigative reporting in the '90s," Editor & Publisher, 21 July 1990, 17, 41. 6James Squires, former Chicago Tribune editor, speaking at a regional Investigative Reporters and Editors conference in October 1990, said many large media companies are led by people who care more about the bottom line than about journalism. See Mark Fitzgerald, "Former editor touts investigative journalism," Editor & Publisher, 27 October 1990, 26. See Stein's "A chilling effect," for a discussion of reporters' self doubts. 7Stein, "Investigative reporting -- alive and well," Editor & Publisher, 5 July 1986, 9, 31. 8Fitzgerald, "Former editor touts investigate reporting," 26. 9Kramer, "Investigative reporting in the '90s," 17, 41. 10Underwood, xiii, 131. 11See Fallows. Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 22 12Squires, 211. 13Ben H. Bagdikian, The Media Monopoly, 4th ed.(Boston, Mass.: Beacon Press, 1992. 14David Pearce Demers, The Menace of the Corporate Newspaper: Fact or Fiction? (Ames, Iowa: Iowa State University Press, 1996), 236-38. 15See Hiley H. Ward, Reporting in Depth (Mountain View, Calif.: Mayfield Publishing, 1991), 2, and William Gaines, Investigative Reporting for Print and Broadcast (Chicago: Nelson-Hall Publishers, 1994), 1-3. 16John Ullman, Investigative Reporting: Advanced Methods and Techniques (New York: St Martin's Press, 1995), 2-3; for an up-to-date explanation of this IRE definition, see the IRE Journal, January-February 1996, 1-2. 17IRE Journal. 18Ibid. 19Circulation figures from Editor & Publisher 1995 International Yearbook (New York: Editor & Publisher, 1995). 20Guido H. Stempel III and Bruce H. Westley, eds. Research in Mass Communication, 2nd ed.(Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice Hall, 1989), 133. 21Stephen Lacy and Frederick Fico, "Newspaper Quality and Ownership: Rating the Groups," Newspaper Research Journal,11,2 (Spring 1990), 51, found size and ownership status did not predict quality as defined by eight aspects of content. Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 23 Table 1 Type of Enterprise Story Published by the Chicago Tribune, the Philadelphia Inquirer, and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch in March, April, November of 1980 and 1995 1980 1995 Investigative (hidden info) 40 (19.4%) 4 (2.0%) Investigative (available info) 29 (14.15) 16 (7.8%) Accomplishment 7 (3.4%) 2 (1.0%) Other Enterprise 130 (63.1%) 182 (89.2%) TOTAL STORIES CODED 206 204 Chi-Square = 44.64585 df = 3 p > .0001 Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 24 Table 2 Enterprise and Investigative Stories Published by the Chicago Tribune, the Philadelphia Inquirer, and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch in March, April, November of 1980 and 1995 1980 1995 Chicago Tribune Investigative 30 (44.8%) 0 (00.0%) Other Enterprise 37 (55.2%) 37 (100.0%) Total Enterprise 67 37 Philadelphia Inquirer Investigative 24 (30.4%) 14 (12.3%) Other Enterprise 55 (69.6%) 100 (87.7%) Total Enterprise 79 114 St. Louis Post-Dispatch Investigative 15 (28.3%) 6 (11.8%) Other Enterprise 38 (71.7%) 45 (88.2%) Total Enterprise 53 51 TOTAL ENTERPRISE STORIES 199 202 Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 25 Table 3 Paragraph Lengths of Enterprise Stories (including Investigative) Published by the Chicago Tribune, the Philadelphia Inquirer, and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch in March, April, November of 1980 and 1995 1980* 1995** Chicago Tribune 30 or fewer 29 (40.3%) 11 (29.7%) 31 to 60 23 (31.95) 20 (54.1%) 61 or more 20 (27.8%) 6 (16.2%) Philadelphia Inquirer 30 or fewer 33 (41.3%) 31 (27.0%) 31 to 60 32 (40,0%) 56 (48.7%) 61 or more 15 (18.8%) 28 (24.35) St. Louis Post-Dispatch 30 or fewer 19 (35.2%) 31 (59.6%) 31 to 60 29 (53.7%) 17 (32.7%) 61 or more 6 (11.1%) 4 (7.7%) TOTAL STORIES CODED 206 204 * Chi-square = 8.323557 df = 4 p < .08042 (ns) ** Chi-square = 19.33219 df = 4 p < .00068 Enterprise and Investigative Reporting - 26 Table 4 Investigative or Information-Gathering Techniques Employed in the Investigative Stories Published by the Chicago Tribune, the Philadelphia Inquirer, and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch in March, April, November of 1980 and 1995 1980 1995 Personal Interviews 63 18 Documents Provided on Request 50 14 Unidentified Sources 21 4 Documents Leaked 20 1 Surveillance 3 0 Failure to Identify (Undercover) 2 2 Whistleblower as Source 1 0 Library or Published Materials 1 1 Expert Used for Analysis 1 4 Computer-Aided Reporting 0 0
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