Why journalism matters: at a time of gloom and doom in
the business, the new Newseum reinforces its
importance.
by Potter, Deborah
Cramped and hard to find: That's my memory of the Freedom
Forum's old Newseum in Roselyn, Virginia, which closed more than
six years ago. Its successor couldn't be more different: a $435
million palace on prime real estate between the White House and the
Capitol in downtown D.C. that finally opens April 11.
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A visit is a busman's holiday for journalists, but
they're not the main target audience. "Our mission is helping
the public understand how important a free press is to a functioning
democracy," says Paul Sparrow, a Newseum vice president. A
worthwhile goal, no doubt, but not an easy sell. As we all know, most
people don't have a very good opinion of the news media these days.
So why would they bother to pay $20 a head to visit a "museum of
news?"
Because it's entertaining and engaging, Sparrow says, and also
because the Newseum puts you face-to-face with history. A gallery
dedicated to the terrorist attacks of September 11,2001, not only
displays front-page coverage from papers around the world but also an
antenna that fell intact from the top of the World Trade Center. The
largest chunks of the Berlin Wall outside Germany are installed so you
can walk all the way around them. The west face is covered with garish
graffiti. The east face is blank; a 40-foot guard tower looming over it
tells why.
Journalists will probably get the biggest kick out of some icons of
the industry on display. The original Conus 1 satellite newsgathering
truck is so big they had to lower it into place with a crane and
construct the building around it. Need a reminder of just how far
we've come since that hulking truck transformed television news
back in 1984? Just check out the Virginia Tech student's cell phone
that captured video and sound during the 2007 shootings there. Then
there's a trunk that belonged to Ed Murrow. It came to the Newseum
from a seller whose price included knowing Murrow's actual first
name [hint: It wasn't Edward].
The back story of some items is more impressive than the objects
themselves. The 1976 Datsun in which investigative reporter Don Bolles
was killed languished in a Phoenix police impound lot for more than a
quarter century. Installed at the Newseum, it's a reminder of
Bolles' courage and of the unusual collaborative journalism project
that picked up where he left off. Bolles, a founding member of
Investigative Reporters and Editors, had been covering organized crime
for the Arizona Republic when he was killed by a car bomb. His IRE
colleagues put competition aside and continued his reporting.
Journalism can be a dangerous business; that's one message you
can't miss at the Newseum. There's the body armor ABC's
Bob Woodruff was wearing when he was seriously wounded by a roadside
bomb in Iraq in 2006. And there's a memento of the deadly fighting
in Bosnia: the pickup truck that carried Time magazine photographers
through a hailstorm of bullets. They made it. But more than 1,600
journalists' names are listed on a memorial wall dedicated to those
killed in the line of duty. Sadly, more will soon be added. (The
Committee to Protect Journalists says 65 were killed last year, almost
half of them in Iraq.)
Another message, embodied in the building itself, is a little more
subtle: The glass front speaks of openness and transparency. Wall
plaques hold quotes that reinforce the importance of the First Amendment
and the value of what journalists do. But there are also reminders that
journalists don't always take themselves too seriously. My favorite
is from Dave Barry: "TV news can only present the bare bones of a
story; it takes a newspaper, with its capability to present vast amounts
of information, to render the story truly boring."
Video plays a big role at the Newseum. There are multiple theaters
and kiosks showing "story of news" documentaries, narrated by
the likes of ABC's Charles Gibson, CBS' Charles Osgood and
PBS' Gwen Ifill. Video interviews with photographers enliven the
exhibit of Pulitzer Prize-winning photos.
Kids will like the "4-D" time travel show in the main
theater, which combines history with some special sensory effects: water
mists, air gusts and shaking seats. Games like "Be a Reporter"
also seem aimed at younger visitors. Adults may prefer to compete
against the clock and each other in a decision-making game on ethics.
Interactive games and role-playing experiences are set up all around the
building.
All of this cost big money, and sponsors like News Corp., NBC News
and Cox Enterprises paid millions to sponsor galleries. Newseum
officials say they don't see that as a conflict of interest because
sponsors had no input on content. "If every other museum in the
world can do it, I don't see why we can't," Sparrow says.
"We are in places harshly critical" of journalism's flaws
and errors.
If the public gets the point that journalism isn't easy and
that it matters in a free society, the Newseum will have served an
important purpose. In the midst of layoffs and buyouts, journalists
could stand to be reminded of that as well. When they are, "they
get inspired and motivated again," Sparrow says. "It will
reenergize them."
Deborah Potter (potter@newslab.org) is executive director of
NewsLab, a broadcast training and research center, and a former network
correspondent.
COPYRIGHT 2008 University of
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