"Why in the name of God are four working journalists among those attending this state dinner — not as reporters with a notebook or a camera but as guests munching on Dover sole and dancing into the night with America's own brand of dukes and earls?[..]
In the last few weeks, the sight of journalists yucking it up with celebrities and the people that they cover at annual events like the White House Correspondents' Association dinner (the one where President Bush famously joked about not being able to find weapons of mass destruction) has caused a growing uproar. Last week, the New York Times said its staffers will no longer attend such dinners…
I think there needs to be a debate about whether journalists should attend these fancy state dinners as well. The reason should be obvious. Reporters — whether they work in Washington, D.C. or a small mountain town in Washington State — ought to be the voice of the kind of people who don't get invited to white-tie affairs, the handymen and school teachers, not the politicians and billionaires."
Tuesday, May 08, 2007
The Regal Press
Crooks and Liars » Journalists Are Not A Royal Class
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