A very interesting blog called Status covers the media. It usually has the inside scoop on what’s going on behind the scenes, which journalists are seeing or leaving, what’s happening inside the major corporations.
In this post, Status explains how difficult it is to cover the war in Iran. The regime does not admit journalists. CNN is trying to provide coverage, as is The New York Times, but its reporters are not in Iran. The Washington Post is suffering from self/-influcted wounds because just a few weeks ago, Jeff Bezos eliminated his foreign correspondents in a cost-cutting move. Really smart for a guy with a net worth of $250 billion.
Natalie Korach wrote for Status:
As U.S. and Israeli forces launch deadly strikes on Iran, the inherent challenges of covering the country are exacerbated by recent newsroom cuts, social media distortion, and a White House prone to telling lies. When the U.S. invaded Iraq in 2003, Americans watched the war unfold through footage captured by journalists embedded with troops across the region. Two decades later, when Russia invaded Ukraine, foreign correspondents from U.S.-based networks raced to Kyiv and other areas of conflict, broadcasting live as missiles struck Ukrainian territory. But when the United States and Israellaunched strikes on Iran over the weekend, there were few, if any, Western journalists in the country to document the damage firsthand.
In a nation largely closed to Western media and with broadly limited internet access, the conflict is unfolding as something of an information black box, forcing news organizations to cover one of the most consequential military escalations in years largely from the outside. Adding to the challenge: Whether they can trust pronouncements coming from a Trump administration that has exhibited few compunctions about lying, from the president on down; and the degradation of social media, especially X, which is no longer a reliable source of information in breaking news situations.
Major television news networks and newspapers tasked with covering the war are having to piece together events from government statements, grainy videos circulating online, and reports from Iranian state media. In an era where many news organizations have been forced to scale back foreign bureaus and reporting resources—most notably the recent and devastating cuts at The Washington Post—the conflict is quickly becoming a test for media, exacerbated by the fact that Iran remains one of the most difficult places on earth for journalists to operate safely.
The geographic spread of the reporting team at CNN, the U.S. network with arguably the most foreign reporting resources, illustrates the challenge. The network has reporters fanned out across the region—Erin Burnett, Nick Paton Walsh, and Jeremy Diamond in Tel Aviv, Nic Robertson in Riyadh, Becky Anderson in Abu Dhabi, Paula Hancocks in Dubai, and Clarissa Ward reporting from Erbil in northern Iraq. Elsewhere across cable news, Fox News had Trey Yingst reporting live from Tel Aviv, Nate Foy on the ground in Cyprus, and Lucas Tomlinson in Istanbul. But none appeared to be inside Iran as of Sunday afternoon.
The New York Times is similarly mobilizing its global newsroom to cover the unfolding conflict. A spokesperson for the paper told Status that “hundreds of journalists from across The Times’ global newsroom–in New York, Washington, London, Seoul and a large and growing reporting team on the ground in the region–have been coming together to produce comprehensive coverage of every aspect of this military action.”
But few news organizations still possess the global infrastructure to support half a dozen or more reporters monitoring the situation on the ground in neighboring countries. Years of budget cuts have thinned the ranks of foreign correspondents in the region across the industry. At The Post, recent layoffs hit international coverage particularly hard, with the paper’s entire Middle East desk laid off. In January, Post reporter Yeganeh Torbati, who had been covering Iran, publicly appealed to owner Jeff Bezos on social media alongside colleagues, noting that she had spent months covering developments inside the country and wanted to continue the work. The appeals to Bezos to save the foreign reporting staff went unheeded.
“If I were The Washington Post right now, I’d still want international journalists,” Ian Bremmer wrote on social media, where many experts called attention to the terrible timing of The Post’s retrenchment during this moment of crisis abroad. Spokespersons for The Post did not respond to requests for comment, but the paper’s rolling coverage of the conflict dominated its homepage all weekend.

I just saw a headline that read “No Social Security Check Coming in March.” The story was about a glitch in the timing of SSDI that will cause checks to come a week early. But the editors went with a sensationalist and misleading headline. Same is true of a LOT of the coverage of Iran–all the stories we are being bombarded with about “The Five Best States to Live in during World War III” and so on. So breathtakingly irresponsible.
This is a time for careful recapitulation of the relevant history and analysis of the possibilities and pitfalls going forward. Stuff that one needs responsible, informed, experienced people to do. If only Congress were alive to see this!
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If we look at the way “the Media” has covered other U.S. wars or news ; are we missing out on anything. How long did it take to uncover that babies had not been thrown out of incubators in Kuwait. Or that Saddam was unlikely to have WMD. Judith Miller went on and on for months pushing garbage spoon fed to her by Iraqi defectors selected by the Bush admin. Pretty good at covering “Shock and Awe ” like Celebrations on the 4th. Pretty slow on picking up the disasters that follow. How many times have we heard that Trump is putting pressure on Russia and sanctions are coming. That passes for serious reporting from the Nations paper of record and others . https://www.publicnotice.co/p/margaret-sullivan-interview-media-trump-biden-24
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This.
And I lose brain cells every day that passes without reading one of your comments, Joel.
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A feature, not a bug. Welcome to the new bosses.
I am traveling from a camping trip. Gas jumped to over 3.00 today as I have been driving. They sure can refine crude quick.
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testing
One of the most widely found of folklore motifs ( See the The Aarne–Thompson–Uther Index) is that of the wasteland caused by a curse or moral stain. Many are the tales, worldwide, of the land under such a curse and what must happen for the curse to be lifted. One hopes that this is what is now happening in Iran, that the curse is beginning to be lifted.
In Greek, this curse, pollution, or moral stain was called a miasma. And that’s the source of the English word. Perhaps the most famous of Greek tales of a miasma is that found in the Oedipus trilogy, aka the Three Theban Plays, by Sophocles.
Here’s to a renaissance in Iran after the fundamentalist curse is lifted. The U.S. and its allies must stay the course and do what is necessary to ensure the emergence there of a secular, democratic state. The smartest move right now would probably be to assist in the installation of Reza Pahlavi as head of an interim government, pending elections some few years from now, after the former fundamentalist elements have been obliterated.
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Apparently we bombed Tehran earlier today. I was thinking about the speaker Azar Nafisi at your Wellesley speaker series, Diane.
All war is useless; this one especially so.
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I watched a documentary on public television recently about how the media failed to cover Hiroshima. It wasn’t accidental.
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