Self-inflicted.

Via LA Times:

Long before we knew who’d won Tuesday’s special election in Alabama, we knew who had lost: the media. At least, that is, according to conservative media critics.

“Roy Moore Proves Media Only Destroys Itself in Elections” ran a headline Monday in The American Spectator. “The late Charles Manson seems to have gotten a more sympathetic press” than Republican Roy Moore, complained former human events editor Allan H. Ryskind in the Washington Times. “The real reason for a situation that allows the Roy Moores and Donald Trumps of the world to rise above mere laughingstock status,” opined former George W. Bush speechwriter Matt Latimer in Politico, “is that the media has totally lost its connection with a large portion of the nation.”

The view from inside the belly of the mainstream beast couldn’t have been more diametrically opposed.

“ ‘The media’ is not on the ballot in Tuesday’s special election in Alabama,” CNN Reliable Sources anchor Brian Stelter wrote Monday. “That’s obvious, yes, but it bears repeating because Roy Moore has been trying to run against the national news media for the past month.”

How could the same problem look so different to two large sets of people? The answer explains a lot about how we consume and act on political information in 2017. It begins with the two main categories of media criticism: insider and outsider.

Outsider criticism generally comes in the form of correctives aimed at the largest news organizations that maintain a professional pretense of fairness — newspapers, wire services, network news broadcasts, some cable networks, news radio. While occasionally arising from a sincere desire to improve the overall quality of information (see Snopes.com), the primary motivation for most watchdog-watchdogging is political. And because only 7% of full-time American journalists self-identify as Republican (as of this widely cited 2014 study), the most energized outsider media critics of the moment are on the right.

All political media criticism — whether it was the more left-leaning alternative and New Journalism of the ’60s and ’70s, the right-leaning AM radio revolution of the ’80s and ’90s or the social media cacophony we see today — begins as a necessary and bracing reminder to the big media fish that they, too, swim in water, even if they don’t feel it.

But soon, the outsider critique brushes up against the first iron law of media criticism: Partisan skepticism inevitably drifts toward media illiteracy. What starts out as a tool for more sophisticated news consumption eventually degrades into an excuse for those who choose not to believe inconvenient journalism.[…]

The struggle against Trump’s norms-shattering presidency is real. So is the decreasing marginal utility of crying wolf at every opportunity. How to thread that needle? Another CNN anchor, Jake Tapper, pointed the way at the L.A. Press Clubs awards this year.

“We don’t need to give the enemies of the Fourth Estate any ammunition,” Tapper warned. “That means we need to be squeaky clean. We’re not the resistance. We’re not the opposition. We’re here to tell the truth, report the facts, regardless of whom those facts favor one way or the other.”

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