Showing posts with label Bloomberg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bloomberg. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 16, 2020

WSJ and Bloomberg behave like biased activists - Shaun Rein

Shaun Rein
The Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg are increasingly becoming biased activists when it comes to China, says business analyst Shaun Rein at the state-owned CGTN. "I'm a big believer that they should have critics of China quoted, but then they should also have supporters of China quoted," he argues.
Over the last 10 years, many journalists from the Wall Street Journal have told me that they've tried to quote me. But at the very last minute, editors have stepped in and cut me out of the article, not because I don't have credibility in the subject matter being discussed, but because of my political leanings, because I generally support the Chinese government. This hasn't been one reporter or even two. This has been around 10 reporters over the past decades that have told me this.
I think one of the problems that's happening right now is publications like the Wall Street Journal, like Bloomberg, are becoming activists. They're becoming very biased, whether it be on how China's developing, on the riots in Hong Kong, on U.S.- China relations.
And they're not being fair. I'm a big believer that they should have critics of China quoted, but then they should also have supporters of China quoted. It's really important that media has different views, and that's just not happening right now because of the politicized situation in the world.
More at the CGTN.

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Friday, May 02, 2014

How Bloomberg started, and killed political reporting in China - Howard French

Howard French
Howard French
In a detailed write-up for the Columbia Journalism Review former foreign correspondent Howard French describes how Bloomberg started to engage in political reporting in China, to compete with the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times, but killed a successful journalism project, after China´s power-brokers turned up the heat.

Howard French:
Meanwhile, just prior to publication, (former Bloomberg reporter Michael) Forsythe, the lead writer on the pending Xi article, who was then based in Beijing with his family, began receiving death threats. The first of these was indirectly conveyed via a China scholar at Columbia University who was passing along a conversation he had heard from a Chinese acquaintance, saying vaguely that Forsythe had better watch out. Later, Forsythe received a similar message relayed via a foreign press colleague in Beijing.
“What was extremely upsetting to me was that when we started getting death threats, Bloomberg told us that we were not allowed to speak about it,” said Leta Hong Fincher, a China scholar who is married to Forsythe. She contrasted the way that Bloomberg handled reported pressure from Chinese authorities with the response of The New York Times a few months later, after its prize-winning work from China was published. The Times had spoken forthrightly about the challenges of doing hard-hitting reporting in China, while Bloomberg sought to muffle discussion, she said.
Both companies have faced bans on their products in China since their groundbreaking investigative work.
For the Times, it has meant the blocking of a costly new Chinese language website, whose primary market is in China, and difficulties obtaining residency visas for its reporters, especially for new reporters rotating into the country as older hands leave.
The differing interests in the market seem to have dictated differing responses to official pressure. In particular, Fincher cited a December 2013 column by the public editor, Margaret Sullivan, which presented the Times’ attitude as stoicism in the face of difficulties like these and quoted the newspaper’s publisher, Arthur Sulzberger Jr., as saying that the Times “doesn’t flinch.”
Fincher said that Bloomberg has threatened legal action against her, but unlike her husband she is not bound by any confidentiality agreement. The Sullivan column appeared shortly after reports that Bloomberg had killed its big new investigative project.
Much more in the Columbia Journalism Review.

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