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Bernstein's Big Mistake
By Cyd
Zeigler jr.
Outsports.com
Now-former-Kansas-coach
Roy Williams is known, by reputation, as two things:
a coach who can’t win the big one, and a coach who can’t
hold back his emotions.
A week before
Kansas’ loss in the national championship game against Syracuse, the
University of North Carolina fired their head men’s basketball
coach. Speculation had
immediately turned to Roy Williams – that he would jump at the
chance to accept his dream job with the Tar Heels.
Williams had said, during the previous week, that he would not
be speaking about the job at North Carolina.
Despite knowing all
this – Williams’ reputation and his unwillingness to discuss
Carolina – CBS’ Bonnie Bernstein decided to push forward with two
questions about the job at Carolina, just moments after the most
excruciating loss of Williams’ career:
"Look. I’m
really sorry, but I hope you understand I have to ask you about
Carolina," she said.
Have to?
“I have to” means that she has no choice in the matter;
that she can’t choose to pass on a question.
Up goes the veil: we’ve
all heard this lame “it’s not my fault - I had to do it” every
time a reporter asks a question they know they shouldn’t be asking.
While she didn’t
have to ask him the question, I can almost forgive her for it.
There had been a lot of speculation about Williams’ future,
she had the guy there, the opportunity for her to make more of a name
for herself presented itself, so she went for it.
While I might not like the first question, I get it.
About that first
question, Bernstein writes in her online diary:
“He wasn’t pleased, but I really feel he understood I had
to do my job.”
OK, job done.
Bernstein felt she had to ask the question, so she did.
Williams, as he had said he would do the previous week,
declined to answer.
Maybe she thought she
was Helen Thomas, sitting there in the front row in the White House,
and Roy Williams was George Bush who had just dodged a question about
using a nuclear weapon against Iraq.
For whatever reason, Bernstein felt it was necessary to follow
up her first question with yet another question about whether Williams
would be taking the head coaching job at Carolina.
Williams’ response:
"The guy in your
ear that told you that you had to ask that question ... as a
journalist, that's fine ... but as a human being, that's not very nice
... and I've got to think that in tough times that people should be
more sensitive. I don’t
give a shit about Carolina right now.
I've got 13 kids in that locker room that I love."
You go, Roy!
Keep in mind that
Bernstein is a sports reporter. She’s
not a soldier going to war, on whose jobs lives depend.
She’s not a scientist seeking the cure for cancer, knowing
the lives that could be spared if she press on.
She’s a sports reporter and, if she doesn't ask this one
question of a coach who just lost a basketball game, the First
Amendment will stay in tact and, at some point, Williams will answer
her question.
She can hold back on
a question, or a story. Eason
Jordan of CNN, who last week admitted that CNN has sat on stories
about brutality in Iraq for 12 years, is proof of that.
How many journalists out there know a professional football
player is gay and have sat on that story, in some cases for decades?
Good
taste and personal values come into play when you’re a sports
reporter. They
can act human from time to time.
They can be sensitive. They
can pull back on a question they want to ask, and there’s nothing
wrong with it.
Bernstein, by her own
admission, knew Roy Williams well.
She knew he was an emotional guy.
Everyone knew he was an emotional guy.
But, “Holier Than Thou” Bernstein just couldn’t leave
well enough alone. She
couldn’t let a question she knew wouldn’t get answered just sit in
her head for another day.
At that point
Bernstein made a huge mistake. She
went from interviewing Roy Williams to making herself a part of the
story – something I learned in Journalism Ethics classes that a
reporter should never do. For
the last week, the story has become, “Bonnie Bernstein:
Good Or Evil.” She overstepped her bounds.
Of course, much of
the journalistic community has taken the last week to defend
Bernstein, and have attacked Williams for what they are calling
everything from an “outburst” to “vulgarity.”
Jay Mariotti of the
Chicago Sun-Times, praised Bernstein’s questioning, thanking her
“for defending journalism.”
Rudy Martzke of USA
Today said Williams’ “outburst” was uncalled for, and
“unfairly called into question her ability to do her job in a proper
journalistic manner.”
Defending journalism?
Are you kidding me? Reinforcing
the jackalesque perception most of America has of the press, maybe –
but defending journalism?
Why is asking a guy a
question you KNOW you’re not going to get an answer to “proper
journalistic manner?” And,
when the guy declines to answer the question, how is it “proper
journalistic manner” to ask him the question – which, again, you
know you’re not going to get an answer to in the first place -
again?
Proper journalism has
to take into account a reasonable possibility that you might get an
answer to your question. Roy
Williams said he’s not going to be talking about the Carolina job.
Did Bernstein think that, as the final shot fell short of the
basket, Williams hopped on a phone to talk with Carolina Athletic
Director Dick Baddour to tell him he’d be taking the job?
And, even if he had, did she think he’d just say, “I’m
going to Chapel Hill.”
Bernstein had to know
what she was doing. She
had to know she was putting herself in the story.
She had to know she was overstepping her bounds.
She had to know she was asking a question – twice – that
maybe shouldn’t have been asked at that time.
And if she didn’t, she has no business as a sports reporter
for CBS.
Bernstein wasn’t
the defender, or victim, of proper journalism; she was the perpetrator
of bad journalism. And
bad taste.
For
more columns by Cyd Zeigler and other Outsports writers, click
here.
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