Journalism Prof Suggests Young Reporters Fabricate Stories Because of High Standards, Racism

Journalism Prof Suggests Young Reporters Fabricate Stories Because of High Standards, Racism


An assistant professor of journalism at Marquette University has demonstrated in a lengthy Twitter thread everything that is wrong with the mainstream media today.

Prof. Ayleen Cabas-Mijares, who describes herself as a “Critical/Cultural and Feminist Media scholar” in her Twitter biography, wrote that young journalists should fabricate details in their stories because newsroom standards are too high and because reporters who are minorities are likely going to experience racism (in one of the most liberal professions on the planet, no less).

“In my few years as a journalism educator, I’ve found that the younglings engage in unethical practices (ie, fabricating quotes, etc.) mostly out of desperation mixed with inexperience,” she writes to begin her thread.

“Their failure to meet standards says as much about the unmanageable pressure they deal with and the little support/guidance they have as their personal shortcomings,” she wrote.

Her remarks were in response to USA Today recently removing 23 articles after editors discovered that reporter Gabriela Miranda had fabricated quotes and sources.

“J-schools (and newsrooms for that matter) are supposed to provide the structure and support necessary for reporters (esp young ones) to face the complexities of journalism and apply rigor every step of the way,” Cabas-Mijares continues, using the academic reference to ‘journalism schools.’

“With Miranda we have an early career reporter coming out of one of the most prestigious j-schools in the country and landing in one of the biggest newsrooms. So, how does this happen??” the professor continued.

“Massive layoffs have been shaking the news industry for years and the pandemic brought about more dramatic cuts. Many of the dismissed editorial staff were fact checkers & copy editors who are vital to uphold journalistic rigor,” she said.

“I don’t fully know USA Today’s situation but it had big rounds of layoffs in 2014 and at the beginning of the pandemic,” Cabas-Mijares continued. “Like many other outlets, it also faces huge pressure from Gannett to cut cost while chasing ad revenue + audience engagement to the detriment of good journalism.

“So, as newsrooms get rid of their internal accountability systems, exploit and underpay reporters, and thirst over likes for profit, we get the perfect breeding ground for (intentional and unintentional; disastrous and negligible) errors,” she explained.

“Plug someone like Miranda, a young woman from a minoritized community trying to make it in a big (white) newsroom, and you get a recipe for failure,” she said, essentially excusing the USA Today reporter’s alleged fabrications.

Cabas-Mijares then noted, hypocritically: “(Yes, I know that people fighting greater odds haven’t cheated to succeed. I’m not justifying or legitimizing her actions. I just understand that bigger forces were at play, setting the odds against a relatively vulnerable individual.)”

The professor then appeared to blame USA Today for the reporter’s actions.

“It’s at this point that I resent USA T throwing Miranda under the bus saying that her work didn’t ‘meet our standards.’ Excuse you? You PUBLISHED her work. You created an environment where basic fabrications could get past your team. Gann… USA Today failed her and the public,” Cabas-Mijares claimed.

“I’d be more suspicious of her editor than her. USA Today found out about this due to an EXTERNAL tip,” the journalism prof noted further. “Like, my friend, where were you with your fancy title and years of experience? Where’s your resignation letter? But no, it’s easier to put it all on Miranda.”

We’re pretty sure USA Today did not say, ‘Hey, if you can’t get quotes or details, just make something up,’ when they hired Miranda. We’re also fairly certain that her editors obviously trusted her to write factual stories, as editors do not have time to literally fact-check every single detail at a major paper like that.

“Anyhow, I hope this young reporter is surrounded by loving people and mentors who hold her accountable and give her the tools to grow. As for USA Today, their disloyalty is showing and their broken strategies could keep jeopardizing young reporters and journalism more broadly,” she concluded.

Again — this is why modern American journalism is in crisis, because of enablers like Cabas-Mijares.


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