DavidK vs. The El Paso Times

DavidK laments what he perceives as bias in the El Paso Times coverage of the local political scene, in this post on his RefuestheJuice blog.

Personally, I think the local print media is a little too cozy with the existing power structure. Remember how the El Paso Inc. erased this story from Google search results?

The story is back, now, but that doesn’t negate the fact that it disappeared in the first place.

I can understand our local media’s reluctance to bite the hands of their advertisers. Dead tree media is dying because more readers are getting their news from the intertube. But in El Paso, the print media, and their online counterparts, still hold major sway with the citizens.

But remember this?

“The job of the newspaper is to comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable.”

Chicago Evening Post journalist and humorist Finley Peter Dunne put those words, or something like them, in the mouth of a fictional 19th century Irish bartender named Mr. Dooley.

That tenet may lead to a greater public good, but that’s not the only reason that our local media should adopt that policy.

They should adopt it because it’s good business.

There’s no reason for the comfortable to increase their advertising buy in a complacent public medium. When the comfortable get too comfortable, they don’t feel the need to spend any money at all.

I suspect that local government may be the one of the El Paso Times biggest advertisers, because of the legal notices they are required to publish. And the City could take their business over to The Inc. if they didn’t like the coverage they were getting from the Times.

Likewise, the Inc. gets lots of advertising from our local community trusts, who, in turn, are affiliated with the existing power structure.

Both of those papers could benefit by putting a little squeeze on the local movers and shakers. The media wouldn’t necessarily have to cut them, but the rags could at least show them the knife. Additionally, the community would benefit by having strong, independent, media keeping an eye on the entrenched operators.

The wall between editorial and advertising is supposed to be inviolable, but principles are for the guy that doesn’t have to put food on his family’s table.

But remember: The dog that never barks never gets fed.

3 comments

  1. That the way it should be, but let’s also be honest. David KKK’s gripe is not because of his love for democracy and the 4th estate. It’s because the EPT is not giving positive coverage to his and his family’s gal candidate. When said gal was busy pushing for the biggest school district tax increase in El Paso history, the rag was cheering her and her co-horts. I’m sure then, depending on whether the measure stood to butter his family’s bread, he was fine with the rag’s objectivity. He and all those paid talking mouths are as biased and as quick to prostitute their independent soul for a bag of coins. So let’s not canonize him just yet.

  2. Interesting to note that the Times is getting so desperate for readership they had someone outside the WalMart grocery on Hondo Pass handing out free Sunday editions. I truly wish I could read Spanish or El Diario had an English language edition because they seem to be the only media reporting on the corruption.

  3. DavidK didn’t complain about the Slimes when it gave favorable reporting of his ‘lil buddy Tolbert’s character assassination of the District 2 representative and City Manager. When DavidK runs out of material he gripes about the EP Slimes. It’s been a lousy newspaper for years and needs to die a natural death, as does DavidK’s blog.

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