Do you think it’s reasonable for
journalists to play a dual writing role in the belief that the one can’t affect
the other?
What
I’m talking about is hacks that are employed by newspapers and voice their
opinions on social media at the same time using language that their papers
wouldn’t countenance.
For example
I had a bit of an altercation on Twitter
with Carien du Plessis who bills
herself as a City Press political
reporter. She claims: Love the job. In fact married to it.
In my newspaper days political writers
were in the top echelons of the profession, who you would not have expected to
behave in a childish way; using attention seeking foul language for all to see.
It would have damaged both their own and their paper’s credibility.
But nobody seems to care now, least of
all the City Press. This is a national Sunday paper with 1.6 million readers
that claims to be the second most quoted paper in South Africa.
Over a period of about a week I tried
to get hold of City Press’ Editorial Policy. I got shunted from
one person to another; given a wrong email address and then just when I thought
I would get the answer from Gayle Edmunds, the Managing Editor,
she referred me to som ebody else.
Does the paper actually have one, I
wondered
Like a good journalist, as I don’t know
what it contains, I will have to guess or better still quote an anonymous
‘source’.
My source tells me that City Press journalists are not allowed
to use swear words and any type of foul language to colour their reports.
So if this is the case is it reasonable
for Carien, who is actually their
Senior Political writer, to spice up
her Tweets with unnecessary words
like crap, fukkit, shit and pee in my pants.
My tiff with her on Twitter began after she Tweeted: Oh crap. I’m not
good at this Lotto thing.
The Twitter conversation
then continued like this.
Jon - A lady doesn’t say ‘crap’. But then I
suppose female journos have to keep up with
the boys.
Carien
- May be ladies don’t, but fortunately
I’m not a lady. So I’ll say crap if I want to.
Jon - Thankfully som e
ladies are extinct because they keep saying ‘crap’ in front of your mother & they are proud of it.
Carien
- It’s my mom
who raised me to be a wom an, free from the crap that limits ladies to behave lady-like.
Jon - I’m surprised because in my limited
experience Afrikaans vrous are extremely lady-like. And they would be shocked
to have a daughter who craps on twitter for the world to see where she’s com e from .
Hopefully they’ve got good editors at City Press because people often com plain that there’s a lot of crap in the papers.(That's two Tweets in one in case you are mystified)
Carien
– Welcom e
to the 21st century, grandpa.
Evidently I’m not the only media grandpa
around who believes that foul language is not appropriate.
Yusuff Abramjee the Head of News & Current Affairs Prime Media Broadcasting and Chairman of the National Press Council no less Tweeted this about Jackson Mthembu, the ANC party’s spokesman, Your language is a disgrace. Using the word “pissing” in not appropriate.
I put this question about Carien’s language on Twitter
to Ferial
Haffagee, the City Press’ Editor in Chief. Is it ok for your political
reporter to crap on Twitter? Does that not
reflect on your paper at all?
Haffagee |
And I added, Ferial don’t’ tell me it’s alright because she
did it in her personal capacity, because reporters can’t divorce their Twits from their work.
Has Ferial’s
staff perhaps taken their lead from
her? When she tells us about her background on Twitter
she says I
tweet what I like in my own capacity.
I assume that means that whatever she says
on Twitter will have no bearing on her work as
the City Press Editor.
What do you
readers think? My view is that journalists on the staff of a newspaper are very
much in the public eye and have a duty to behave themselves in a dignified manner
especially when it com es to the very
public medium of social networks.
And they can’t expect people to believe
that it is alright for them have split personalities that allows them to write
all kinds of garbage in their own capacity on
Twitter and in another capacity for
their newspaper.
Yours truthfully,
Jon, the Poor Man’s Press Ombudsman
P.S. I noticed that Carien changed the Twitter
picture of herself after our set-to. Is this her new, cleaner image? My mistake here's her latest Tweet (the @ Jon is not me)
Plessis
Note. Before posting this I sent it to both Ferial Haffagee and Carien du and invited them to com ment
if they wished. Haffagee, who is also a board member of the International Press Institute and the International Wom en’s
Media Foundation replied: Our editorial policy is guided by the Press
Code which you can find on the website of the Press Council or I could mail you a copy. I’m sorry you had a
run-around finding it. You will notice that journalists around the world add
the rider that tweeting is in their own capacity. The Press Council has not yet included social media in its remit,
though it may do so. Best wishes, Ferial.
Note. Before posting this I sent it to both Ferial Haffagee and Carien du and invited them to c
Carien: I'll let the Tweets speak for themselves.