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Source: https://www.bitchute.com/chann....el/realweekendwarrio
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Washington Post Executive Editor Marty Baron and New York Times Executive Editor Dean Baquet sat down at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia last week for a rare joint interview with CNN Senior Political Commentator David Axelrod.
An edited version of interview aired Saturday on CNN's "The Axe Files," while the full interview is available as a podcast here. Pulitzer.org will post embeddable video footage from the interview as it becomes available.
In the discussion, Baquet and Baron expounded upon the media landscape of the Trump era. According to Baron, "I think this is a new situation for all of us. We were learning throughout the campaign and we are learning still during this administration. [...] [Y]ou know, Neil Postman wrote his book 'Amusing Ourselves to Death' [...] some decades ago about how we are moving toward the show quality of politics and that the show has become the thing.
"And I think the president actually understands that and uses that, uses that to his advantage. Some of the tweets are designed as distractions and some of the tweets are actually a window into his mind."
For Baquet, the president's rhetoric "has sent a message to despots abroad that you can disrespect the press. We’ve had presidents attack the press. We’ve never had a president go on foreign soil and attack the press so both of us have to manage newsrooms with people who operate in a third world. Both of us manage newsrooms with people who cover, you know, governments that don’t like the press."
He continued: "How can my correspondent in Cairo who covers a government that’s often antagonistic to the press — how can he make the case for the First Amendment and the power of the press and for covering that government independently when we have a president of the United States who says the things he says about the press?"
Despite these difficulties, both editors remain sanguine about press freedom in the United States. "[I]t's got to say something that our audiences have gotten larger," Baquet said. "That means that people in this sort of cacophony of stuff in the air and the fake news and the made-up stuff, that when people want to find out the truth, they do come to these institutions that have set themselves up [...] as standard bearers and as institutions that try to get at the truth and as institutions that have sort of, have held on to their soul. I think that’s, I mean, that’s great."
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