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Kurtz criticizes Game Change sourcing; will anyone defend Halperin & Heilemann?

January 18, 2010 9:43 am ET by Jamison Foser

Last week, Bob Franken led the charge in criticizing the sourcing rules Mark Halperin and John Heilemann devised for Game Change, calling their explanation of those rules "the most convoluted explanation I've heard in a long time" and adding: "There's one thing that you have to remember in Washington: You don't burn sources."

Now Washington Post/CNN media critic Howard Kurtz joins in:

"Game Change" caused an immediate furor by quoting Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid as having said "privately" that Obama could win the presidency because he was "light-skinned" and had "no Negro dialect." Reid apologized for the clumsy remarks, which his office confirmed he made to Halperin and Heilemann. But even with their source admitting the conversation, the authors refuse to confirm that they interviewed Reid. It's not "in the public interest," Halperin argues, for them to "get on the slippery slope" of acknowledging interviews.

Deep background means that you can describe someone's thinking or reconstruct verbatim dialogue when you're writing about events involving that person. As an author who has used the technique, I don't believe it entitles you to directly quote what someone said to you, which effectively puts it on the record, and several other journalists have said they agree.

I have not, however, seen a single journalist offer an unqualified defense of the sourcing techniques Halperin and Heilemann used.  If anyone has an example, please let me know in the comments.

UPDATE: A reader points out that in an article by Politico's Michael Calderone, several journalists -- including Bob Woodward and Jonathan Alter -- broadly defended the use of anonymous sources. None, however, defended Halperin/Heilemann's treatment of the Reid quote, or the specifics of the way Game Change relied upon unnamed sources.

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    • Author by nerzog (January 18, 2010 1:11 pm ET)
         
      I have mixed feelings about this, since the book apparently portrays Scary Palin as a chowderhead.
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    • Author by CrashGordon (January 18, 2010 3:12 pm ET)
      1  
      I stand strictly on the side of good journalism. I don't care who the author is defending or criticizing, they should do it properly. I haven't read this book, but I've heard so many criticisms of the reporting in it, that I am unlikely to read it.

      Harry Reid said this. Well, I'm sure everyone on the Hill has said something in the last 24 hours that they don't want to see in print. Bill Clinton has had affairs. Well, DUH! Sarah Palin is dumb. I said, "DUH!" I think just about everything in this book that supposed to be "shocking" has already been covered on the news (nice free advertising) and I didn't find any of it particularly shocking--or interesting, for that matter.
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      • Author by fourechodog (January 19, 2010 8:43 am ET)
           
        Where do you find this 'good journalism' these days? The font-history expert Dan Rather? Maybe the NY Times who recently claimed that they would NEVER print something that was supposed to be 'off the record'? (Don't give me the credit, real comedy writes itself...)
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    • Author by fourechodog (January 19, 2010 8:38 am ET)
         
      Liberals live by 'hit-piece' journalism, they should die by 'hit-piece' journalism. Stop whining untill you stop treating your political enemies the same way.
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