And now the Daily Download has apologized for not fact checking the Kurtz 
video and taking it down without correcting it:

http://www.thewrap.com/media/article/daily-download-editor-lauren-ashburn-retracts-kurtz-video-apologizes-89501

On Sunday, May 5, 2013 12:00:17 PM UTC-5, PGage wrote:
>
> Just to follow through on this story, Kurtz did address the issue on 
> *Reliable Sources* this morning - see: 
> http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/live-feed/howard-kurtz-apologizes-jason-collins-452195for
>  an early account).
>
> I give CNN some credit for the way they handled this - they let Kurtz do a 
> mea culpa up front, in which he acknowledged most of his errors in the 
> current series of events, took full responsibility for them and promised to 
> do better. Then they had two independent media critics, Politico's Dylan 
> Byers (one of the authors of the original piece on this I posted the other 
> day) and NPR's David Folkenflik basically take over the show and question 
> Kurtz for a longish segment. These guys did a pretty good job in 
> an awkward situation, pushing him on some of the points that he had 
> finessed in his opening apology, though not getting too much more 
> information or response from him. They both put these recent mistakes into 
> the context of a series of high profile mistakes he has made in recent 
> years (I detailed most of these from Byers Politico piece earlier), and 
> then asked him why viewers should continue to trust him when this was not 
> the first time he had made these kinds of mistakes. Kurtz' response was 
> that he has been so productive on various platforms in recent years that as 
> a percentage of his output he doesn't think he has made that many mistakes, 
> but that of course he regrets any that he does make, and has rededicated 
> himself to making fewer.
>
> CNN seems to have given Kurtz a few weeks to see if he can right the ship, 
> and officially is now saying that there has been no change in his status, 
> though accounts are that CNN has told him they reserve the right to 
> terminate him if there are more problems (or, one suspects, if he is unable 
> to turn the story around). Word also is that when his current contract 
> expires they are unlikely to renew.
>
> The easiest thing in the world is to criticize interviewers for questions 
> they did not ask. As I say, I think these guys did a pretty good job given 
> the circumstances, but there were a few questions I wish they had pursued, 
> including:
>
> 1. What was the point of bringing up Collin's engagement in the first 
> place? Even if Kurtz had not been dead wrong in reporting that Collins had 
> not acknowledged the engagement in his SI article, why did Kurtz think 
> bringing that up was news? Certainly Howie and every other American in the 
> 21st century knows that many closeted gay men get engaged, get married, and 
> father children. What facet of the story did Kurtz think he was reporting 
> on when he made his (false) claims about Collins? This is important because 
> it left the impression with many (including me) that Kurtz was in some way 
> questioning the validity of Collin's identification as a gay man. Does 
> Kurtz have some other evidence to support that? Is Kurtz just skeptical 
> that a pro athlete could be gay? Does he think America has become so 
> gay-friendly that athletes would be tempted to falsely claim to be gay in 
> order to get some kind of benefit?
>
> 2. They asked him about his relationship to the Daily Download, and in 
> particular discrepancies between his own report that he was an unpaid 
> member of the advisory board with no equity participation, and a free lance 
> contributor, and other reports that he had told people he was a co-founder, 
> with a level of commitment and participation that greatly exceeded every 
> other known contributor. But Kurtz just repeated his rather bland statement 
> about his role, without getting into specifics, and they did not follow up. 
> If he is just a free lance contributor like everyone else, then it seems 
> he misrepresented himself on a few occasions (he implied whatever he did 
> was no different than the schmoozing the Washington Post used to ask him to 
> do with advertisers). Was he getting paid the same as everyone else for his 
> contributions (if he was paid a lot more, that might explain why he spent 
> so much time on it)? Does he have some kind of personal or romantic 
> relationship with Lauren Ashburn, the founder of DD (who has also been on 
> Reliable Sources frequently)? All of this is relevant because sources at 
> both the Daily Beast and Reliable Sources have suggested the quality of 
> Kurtz' reporting has suffered because he has been spread too thin, and made 
> the Daily Download a real focus of his attention, to the exclusion of other 
> things. I felt like this was the real elephant in the room that the two 
> critics did not focus on relentlessly enough.
>
> 3. Short Form "journalism - Kurtz made the interesting though perhaps 
> obvious point that most of the mistakes he has made in recent years have 
> been in short form pieces or comments that he has made online, when all he 
> has to do is click a button to go public. He said he 
> has recommitted himself to being more careful in the future. I would have 
> liked to have seen the two critics follow up on this in more depth. It 
> would be great to see high profile journalists take some kind of public 
> oath not to engage in any reporting or journalism via twitter or facebook, 
> or any electronic format that bypasses traditional editorial control 
> procedures. Kurtz stopped well short of making such a vow - if I were 
> asking the questions I would very much have wanted to pin him down on what 
> specifically he was going to do to ensure that he did not repeat the kind 
> of impulsive errors he has made in the past.
>
> While I am far from letting Kurtz off the hook, I do give CNN credit for 
> the way they handled it this morning, and I think the response of putting 
> him on a very short leash is at least defendable.
>
> On Fri, May 3, 2013 at 9:39 PM, PGage <pga...@gmail.com <javascript:>>wrote:
>
>> On Fri, May 3, 2013 at 3:01 PM, PGage <pga...@gmail.com <javascript:>>wrote:
>>
>>> Well, I gave in and just used the headline from the actual piece linked 
>>> here, since it is both so obvious and apt:
>>> http://www.politico.com/story/2013/05/howard-kurtz-daily-beast-90881.html
>>>
>>> Howard Kurtz's relationship with the Daily Beast ended Thursday (not 
>>> quite a firing, but one senses it was a bit more than the mutually agreed 
>>> upon decision to split up in Kurtz' version), and CNN announced that his 
>>> "Reliable Sources" is under review. The instant offense appears to be his 
>>> report that Jason Collins had not revealed that he had been engaged when he 
>>> came out as the first active athlete in a male professional team sport this 
>>> week (even though Collins did reveal this, both in this original Sports 
>>> Illustrated piece and in his ABC interview), and the associated and (to me 
>>> at least) odd and inexplicable obsession that Kurtz seemed to have with 
>>> what seemed to be his suspicion that Collins was not *really* gay. It 
>>> seemed almost as if Kurtz was implying that Collins was falsely identifying 
>>> himself as gay because he thought it would improve his chances of getting 
>>> signed by a new NBA team next season. 
>>>
>>> But several sources have reported that it was more than just this one 
>>> incident - Kurtz has over the years increasingly been seen both as 
>>> something of a joke (well, I guess that is my summary, perhaps more 
>>> objectively it could be stated that he is no longer widely assumed to be an 
>>> authoritative media reporter and critic). And probably more to the point, 
>>> he has been spread very thin, as more of his energy has been devoted to a 
>>> third project - “The Daily Download”, which has interfered with the 
>>> attention he gives both The Beast and "Unreliable Sources". As many 
>>> commentators have noted, it is unclear why Kurtz is even doing that, as it 
>>> seems redundant with his other two gigs, rather than complimentary.
>>>
>>> My real interest in this story is that it illustrates a case of the 
>>> media world basically getting something right (which is rare enough) - 
>>> especially when contrasted with a similar case this week, that of ESPN's 
>>> Chris Broussard. Broussard had made much more negative and (IMO) hateful 
>>> and offensive comments this week, which led to many to call for his 
>>> termination. While ESPN did issue a clarification of its own support for 
>>> Collins, it did not fire or suspend Broussard - nor should it have. He is 
>>> entitled to his opinion, however wrong headed and mean spirited it might 
>>> be. He did not inject it into his ordinary coverage of the NBA for ESPN, 
>>> but instead honestly responded to a question put to him during what was 
>>> clearly an opinion section of Outside the Lines. He did not use any violent 
>>> or inappropriate terms for gay men, nor did he say that Collins should not 
>>> be allowed to play in the NBA. He just repeated typical fundamentalist 
>>> homophobia. Kurtz on the other hand, made comments that were much more 
>>> ambiguous and less directly negative or offensive, but he A) injected it 
>>> into his coverage of the story and B) allowed it to bias his work, leading 
>>> in one or two cases to clearly inaccurate reporting. This is just the kind 
>>> of thing journalists should be fired for - and again, in Kurtz's case it is 
>>> not this once incident, he has been in a long and prolonged slide to lazy 
>>> and shoddy journalism for some time now (as documented in the linked 
>>> article). As Josh Barro of Bloomberg put it (cited in the Politico piece: 
>>> “Between Dick Morris and Howard Kurtz, we’re seeing a dangerous trend where 
>>> commentators lose their jobs for being bad at them.”
>>>
>>
>> Update: 
>> http://www.mediabistro.com/tvnewser/howard-kurtz-status-unchanged-at-cnn_b177926
>>
>> "CNN “Reliable Sources” host Howard Kurtz may not have a job at The Daily 
>> Beast anymore, but he still has his CNN hosting gig… for now. A CNN 
>> spokesperson tells THR:
>>
>> “There has been no status change with Howard Kurtz, he remains the host 
>> of Reliable Sources,” said a network spokesperson on Friday. “He will 
>> address this issue on the program this weekend.”
>>
>> We heard from a CNN source yesterday that Kurtz’s future at the network 
>> is up in the air. Since then, we have heard from others, who say that Kurtz 
>> is on a week-to-week contract with the channel.TVNewser has also confirmed 
>> that CNN has reached out to other media critics about potentially doing 
>> something for the channel over the last year or so, although so far nothing 
>> fruitful has come from those discussions."
>>
>>
>>
>>
>

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