By Steve
Hayes and Sarah Isgur
Wednesday,
July 05, 2023
Steve
Hayes and Sarah Isgur sat down last week with New York Times publisher
A.G. Sulzberger at the paper’s headquarters. Sulzberger recently wrote an essay in the Columbia Journalism
Review detailing his approach to independent journalism, the alleged
institutional hostility towards conservatives, and the path to rebuilding trust
in news. The three discussed the difference between independent journalism and
objective journalism, the public’s lack of trust in the mainstream media, and
how to rebuild that trust in our polarized times. A transcript of their
conversation follows.
***
Sarah
Isgur: Let’s
dive right in. Thank you so much for being with us. Today we are at the New
York Times headquarters in New York City. An incredible building,
beautiful. You’ll have been here 15 years or so?
A.G.
Sulzberger: I
think that’s about right. We already moved before I joined the Times.
Isgur: You’re sort of in the heart of the
tourism area here in New York City as well. At the end of the T.G.I. Fridays
and Red Lobster.
Sulzberger: It is a lot that doesn’t make
the commute any easier.
Isgur: I wanted to start by asking,
what is your metric of success?
Sulzberger: For the institution or for my
role?
Isgur: I was actually curious how
you’d answer it if I didn’t specify, is the truth.
Sulzberger: Okay. All right. Let me start
with my role. I am the sixth member of my family that served as publisher of
the New York Times. And as you can imagine, stepping in after 125
years of stewardship of the institution, I thought a lot about what success
would look like, particularly in such a dramatically complicated environment.
When I was named, it was not entirely clear whether we’d be able to find a
sustainable business model to keep the lights on. Just a few weeks after I was
named, Donald Trump is elected. And we fully start to process how polarized
this country has become. And then three years later, you have the pandemic,
adding a whole other set of challenges. So anyways it’s been a really
challenging and complicated period. The way I think about success is pretty
simple. Which is, can I hand off this institution in a stronger shape than it
was handed to me? And, you know, one of the things that makes the New
York Times special is that we do think over long time periods, and
that we think over the course of a generation. And, I actually find that a
really exciting animating thought, because it really gives you and helps you
frame, what are the challenges my generation is going to have? I’m happy
to talk about those. One of the main ones is the thing I’ve been writing and
talking about, which is ensuring the commitment, you know, this institution’s
continued commitment to its model of independent journalism without fear or
favor.
Isgur: We’ll get into so much of
that, I think we want to talk a lot about that. But before we do, your metric
of success, that makes a lot of sense. Another pretty open-ended question, what
do you do all day? What is your job?
Sulzberger: Yeah, it’s not a
self-explanatory title, publisher, right? Especially in an institution that has
an executive editor, who has broad autonomy to run the news reporting, also an
institution that has a CEO who has broad autonomy to run the business. So but I
suspect my days aren’t entirely unfamiliar to either of you, a lot of it’s on
strategy. A lot of it is on the challenge of the moment, right? So in a moment,
like now, you can imagine, I’m thinking a lot about AI, among many other
things. And then, at the end of the day, a lot of it’s about people, making
sure that the leadership team is strong and united, making sure that we have
the right people at all levels of the organization. The advantage of my role,
as I see it, is no matter how good and forward-looking your editor is, it’s
really hard for them not to fixate on today’s news. And no matter how good and
forward-looking your CEO is, it’s really hard for them not to fixate on this
year’s budget and this quarter’s earnings. And one of the things that I can add
is just a longer view, you know, someone staring deeper into the horizon. And
that’s where a lot of my energy goes.
Isgur: Are you in the office every
day? Are these mostly meetings or is there a meditation period where he gets to
sit and think his big thoughts about what the next five years look like? Like
literally what is your day?
Steve
Hayes: Are you
looking at me when you do that, like I have meditation periods? Just to be
clear, I don’t have those.
Isgur: You’re all the things, you’re
all three jobs.
Sulzberger: Yeah. So I’m in the office
most days in meetings more often than I would care to be, like most executives.
I do try to take time to think. Honestly, it’s something I learned as a
reporter. I spent most of my career as a reporter. I should say a
superpower of every reporter is the ability to ask questions of people who know
more than you. And so, for me, a big part of my job is making sure that I’m
constantly reporting on the industry, the broader landscape that the industry
sits inside, and even reporting on the Times itself: what’s
working, what isn’t, what am I not hearing in the place, and I do try to carve
out some time every year to really make sure I’m stepping back, because
otherwise, we all know, email is not our jobs, but email can easily become our
jobs. Slack is not our jobs. But Slack can easily become our jobs.
Isgur: I was gonna ask if you’re on
the New York Times Slack channels. And …
Sulzberger: So I spent some time there,
but I really pulled back from Slack, basically, because I think it is to the
advantage of the institution to have someone operating at a slower pace.
Hayes: All right, I’m getting off
Slack, no more participation in The Dispatch Slack channels
for me.
Isgur: You’re rarely on it to begin with.
And it’s mostly to say, I don’t know what that word means.
Hayes: It’s true. You recently wrote an exhaustive piece. I mean that in the most positive
way, in the Columbia Journalism Review …
Sulzberger: Is exhausting the word you
were looking for?
Hayes: Exhaustive. Chose my words for a
reason. And I really thought it was terrific. Did it run at about 12,000 words?
Something like that?
Sulzberger: A little more than that. The
longest thing I’ve ever written.
Hayes: Two questions about that. You
make a distinction between independence and objectivity. And I’d like for you
to explain what you see as that distinction and why it’s important. And the
second question is maybe even simpler. Why did you write it?
Sulzberger: Can I take the second question
first? Maybe? You know that the essay is basically making a case for a vision
of independent journalism that I believe in. And that has a long history at
this institution. My great-great-grandfather writes the phrase in his first day
as publisher: to give the news impartially, without fear or favor, regardless of
party, or sect, or interests involved. And that vision, which then was quite
radical, in the era of the partisan press, then became quite mainstream. Right?
Sort of, through most of the 20th century and into this century, is more
fiercely contested at any point in my lifetime. It’s also harder than at any
point in my lifetime. Just the act and process of independent journalism is
harder than any point in my lifetime. And I talk to reporters every day who
feel like, if they’re going to cover controversial topics, or write things that
certain groups don’t want to hear, that they basically feel like they have to
wake up and put on a suit of battle armor, to prepare themselves for the
harassment and trolling and threatening, and, you know, efforts to, you know, damage
or destroy their reputations. Which I know you at The Dispatch are
aware of, right, a lot of your folks have been really serious recipients of
those campaigns. So it’s more contested than ever, it’s harder than ever, I
also really believe it’s more important than ever. It’s become clear to me that
it’s not intuitive to the public why. And I felt someone should make a case for
it. And make a case that doesn’t just assume why independent journalism is a
good fit for any moment, but particularly this moment of misinformation and
polarization and tribalism, and in my view, is actually the antidote to this
moment. So that’s why I wrote the essay. As for why I talked about
independence, this is sort of an academic, esoteric topic that us journalists
think a lot about.
Hayes: But a pretty important
one.
Sulzberger: Exactly, I think central to
democracy, but maybe not one that the average voter feels grounded to then. So
why not choose the word that most of the debate has sort of historically
revolved around—this word “objectivity”? So for one, independence is more of a
history at the New York Times, right? It’s actually the word my
great-great grandfather gravitated towards in describing his vision for
the Times, and it’s actually the only word he uses twice in his
direction to the family about how the Times should be led into
the future. But I actually think there’s also just a more practical reason why,
which is “objectivity: is, for better or worse, one of those words that just
inspires people to pull out the dictionary. And it inspires these very academic
debates over: Can a person be objective? Or is it the process that’s objective?
And beyond even that, I think it’s incomplete. Right? I think independence, you
know, captures objectivity, captures neutrality, it captures impartiality and
fairness, right? I think there’s a lot of words that feel core to me about the
journalistic posture that we want to see that ladder up into independence. And
independence is a colloquial word. It’s a word that when you say it to a
person, they know what you’re promising them. So that’s why I use that
word.
Hayes: You had some in recent months, some
sort of old bulls of the profession make something of the opposite argument
saying: no, no, now it’s time to take sides, we have to be explicitly and
aggressively pro-democracy.The argument takes many forms. Was part of what you
were doing responding to those claims to those cases?
Sulzberger: So, I mean, the thing I’m
slightly ashamed to admit is just how long it took me to write that essay on
the side. it would have been …
Hayes: It could have been a
mini-book.
Sulzberger: Yeah. So it was nights and weekends
for longer than I’d care to admit, as you can imagine, real life of running
the Times kept intervening. So it took me a long time. So it
wasn’t a response to any single argument. What it was was a response to is that
general phenomenon that you just described. I felt like all the intellectual
firepower was going towards dismantling the case for independence. And the
folks on the other side of this debate, I felt their position was just sort of
intuitively right. And didn’t need to make the argument. And as a result, I
felt like our industry and the people who believe in the vision of independent
journalism that I believe in, I felt like we were losing the argument, largely
because we were sitting it out. And so I really wanted to try to reckon with,
to forcefully and assertively make the case for why I think independence is
suited. You know, not, again, not just for any moment, but for this moment when
we know the stakes, right? You guys at The Dispatch are
writing about the stakes constantly. And in some ways, it’s probably the
animating thought of many of your careers, right? You know, in the career
pivots that you all have made. And so I wanted to anchor it to a moment. And
then I really wanted to reckon with the criticism, with the steel man version
of what we’ve heard, rather than the straw man version.
Isgur: Arthur Brooks, a couple years
ago, wrote a piece in The Atlantic. The headline was “Reading too
much political news is bad for your well-being,” and his overall point was …
Sulzberger: His overall point is to play
Wordle.
Isgur: Yeah, exactly. I do every day.
I’m very dedicated to it.
Sulzberger: Bless you.
Isgur: I’m on a 128-day streak, and
the problem with that is that I now take it so seriously. Every day, you build
up this problem. Yeah.
Sulzberger: I know, my streak is not as
impressive as that. But I know the feeling.
Isgur: Well, when you’re at 20 days, you’re
like, whatever, I’ll just guess. But like, as it gets higher and higher, all of
a sudden, the cost just It’s overwhelming now.
Hayes: Nice humblebrag to sneak in there,
isn’t it?
Isgur: You don’t know how short some
of the streaks were before. All right, so he writes this. And he has, you know,
a very Arthur Brooksian line and basically says, reading all this political
news, sharing it with your friends on social media, all of this might make you
less happy, less well-liked, less accurate, and less informed. Contradictory,
right? This idea that you’re reading more news, but in fact, you will be less
accurate. And there’s lots of academic studies about this. They’re really
fascinating. And I wonder how you think then of the role of journalism, that
can be this double-edged sword. Obviously, it’s an important role in any
self-governing democracy and public to inform people about what’s going on with
their government. To ask questions to the powerful and yet at the same time, it
will make you less happy and less well-liked, less accurate, and less informed
to consume too much of it. Are you selling the french fries and cheeseburgers
of this generation?
Sulzberger: I’ve never heard someone describe
the Old Gray Lady as the empty calories of the diet. I’ve tended to hear that
reserved more for the entertainment products. But it’s an interesting take.
Look, I don’t think any of us really believe the broader interpretation of
that. I think there’s clearly some studies that suggest that news consumption
can take health in unhealthy directions, or in particular that you can get
locked into filter bubbles, right? And then end up sort of locking you into a
worldview more than having that worldview challenged. So I think that there are
certainly lrisks that everyone should be aware of, and in how we provide
journalism. But I think journalism is, it’s a pretty nutritious part of your
diet, right? I mean, at its core, I think of facts. So journalists unearth
facts, right? And, we’re one of the main sources of new facts and very
specifically in journalism, we’re reporting on unearthed facts and reporting on
unearthed new facts. And I think of facts, as the essential lifeblood of a
democracy. You go back and you read the writings of the founders, and all of
them understood so plainly that the democratic experiment depended on an
informed electorate. So no, I believe that what institutions like the Times is
selling, but also the Post, the Journal, you know,
smaller places,The Atlantic, The New Yorker, The
Dispatch, right? You know, we’re trying to give fact-based information to
the public. I think it’s essential. And quite frankly, my critique of what’s
gone wrong in this moment, it’s pretty much the opposite, right? Which is 65
million Americans used to pay for a newspaper at the peak of print. I think the
average was something like 1.8, 1.9, may have even been over two. Right? So
that’s 130 million newspaper subscriptions. No newspapers were as big as the
magazines, right? It’s Time, Newsweek US News and World Report, Reader’s
Digest, Consumer Reports. All these were much much, many, many
factors larger than the newspapers. So, so, we had a public, a citizenry that
was really steeped in their communities and their nations. And this has been
particularly lost at the local level but, but also, to some extent, loss at he
national level. That shared evening, broadcast ritual is something that has
disappeared, right? That the modeling of engaging as a citizen by spreading the
newspaper over the kitchen table, and having your kids watching you in the
morning. To understand what it looks like to be engaged like that to some
extent has disappeared. So I feel like news organizations like ours are trying
to build back up that civic expectation that you need to be informed, that you
need to be engaged.
Hayes: There are plenty of news
organizations, well, maybe not news organizations, plenty of of media outlets,
that aren’t doing that. What you’re describing is a certain, I would argue,
slice of the media, as we, as we understand it now. There’s a large group of
people who are dedicated to uncovering facts, new facts, if you can, and the
truth in a broad sense. But there are also an increasing number of media
outlets that are either dedicated to making people angry, monetizing clickbait
outrage, criticizing the people who are trying to find the truth. And there was
a very interesting moment, in your recent interview with David Remnick of The
New Yorker, where you’re talking about how the importance of on-the-ground
reporting and good journalism, and he says, “Are you saying that changed?
That’s not happening anymore? That reporters are just sitting in rooms in front
of a screen? I don’t think that’s the case.” And you jumped in and said, “Of
course, it’s the case. It’s the least talked about, and most insidious result
of the collapse of the business model that historically supported quality
journalism.” I’m on your side on that. I think you’re right. And I can, there
are news organizations in Washington, D.C., that require their young
journalists to crank out as many as “10 stories,” quote, unquote, that are
nothing more than stealing reporting from the New York Times,
slapping an outrage headline and trying to get a Drudge link, basically. Let’s
talk about that, what is happening? Why is that happening? And how does it
relate to the collapse of the model that you’re describing?
Sulzberger: Yeah, well, as you could tell,
from my response, I find this profoundly worrying. So what happened is that the
business model that supports it is, reporting is really expensive, right? It’s
expensive work and it’s uncertain work. You can spend a lot of time on a story
and then find out that your hunch was wrong. And then, your work product is a disproved
hunch. Not one story, let alone five. So reporting is expensive work. And as
the business model that supported journalism collapsed, I don’t think we
tracked how much the Times spent of the jobs that remained. So
the industry hemorrhaged tens of thousands of reporter jobs. And again, tens of
thousands. You know, every community in the country had a reporter. When I was
covering the tiny little town of Narragansett, Rhode Island, I went to every
town council meeting, and every school board meeting on Mondays and Wednesdays,
and I sat at a table. I was working for the big paper, the Providence
Journal, which is basically the state paper. And I was sitting next to two
other reporters, one from the Narragansett Times and one from
the South County Independent, right? So, this tiny little town was,
you know, if 8,000 people, 10,000 people, was still big enough to support three
full-time journalists, that’s remarkable. That has disappeared. And so what’s
replaced it, what’s replaced it is a digital model. That is, much as you
describe, people sitting at their desks, those desks are increasingly located
in four American cities: New York, Washington, D.C., San Francisco, and L.A.
And when I say increasingly, I think it’s basically the percentage of
journalists in America in those four cities has basically doubled over the last
decade or so. And they sit at their desks and they have, they have to produce.
The surprising upside is that next generation, they’re very good writers. Why
are they good writers? Because they have to be fast. And they’re writing about
the same thing everyone else is writing about. So they have to have takes,
right? And they have to make those takes interesting. So it produced very good
writers but it’s also produced a generation that’s just not being exposed to
the breadth of the country. What I said to David Remnick when we chatted is,
you literally went from a model in which reporters are spending their days out
in the world being confronted by the complexity of the human experience, right?
Like literally back-to-back, you will interview someone who has been evicted
from an apartment, and he will interview someone who’s evicted someone from an
apartment. You will go to a court case, and you’ll listen to the prosecution
and to the defense. You’ll talk to the accused and to the victim, right? And if
you’re lucky, you’ll get a few jurors to talk to you at the end of this. So
it’s impossible not to be confronted by the complexity of this incredible
diverse society we live in. Now you’re going to a model in which you’re sitting
at a desk with people who live in the same city and work in the same industry,
indeed, work for the same employer. And instead of having your views challenged
all day, you’re having your views basically hardened all day. And, I think that
that has contributed in a meaningful way to this moment.
Isgur: Do you know the percentage of
your New York Times staff that are people of color?
Sulzberger: Off the top of my head, we publish
these stats publicly, so that’s easily available. Rather than say the wrong
number, I think it’s about 35 percent.
Isgur: Women? That’s increased, I
know.
Sulzberger: Women, I think it’s about 54
percent.
Isgur: What other types of diversity
statistics are you all keeping track of? Do you know what percentage of your
staff came from community colleges, or go to church every week, or own a gun?
Sulzberger: I think there’s a question
implicit in there that I very much agree with, which is there’s all sorts
of kinds of diversity in this country that matter and if the goal of diversity
in a news organization is to better cover the world, right? And the reason to
care about diversity aside fromthe moral reasons is that you will better
cover the world if you better reflect it, right? You know the example that I
always use is that you could never imagine having a parenting blog without any
parents, right? You know, expertise matters and background and experience
matters and we benefit from that. Race and gender. That matters. And if we’re
being honest as an industry, as a society, women and people of color were
systematically excluded from the workforce for far too long, right? Even when I
was named publisher, I think we had a dozen columnists, I think two were women.
And one was a person of color. I think there’s a really good reason to track
those things. But they’re also not the only forms of diversity, right?
Isgur: And you talked a lot about this, and
I want to give you credit for that, because you talk a lot about what you just
said, right? There’s this hardening, there’s a lack of diversity of other types
of diversity. But I find it interesting that in your organization you sort of
measure what matters. Why not measure those other types of diversity that I
think you do care about?
Sulzberger: Yeah. So, you know, I once had a
U.S. senator sort of grill me. Say, “I want you to ask every single person who
you voted for in the last election!” And actually, a leader of a conservative
news organization jumped in and said, “Senator, we would never do that. I have
no idea who’s done that. And I’m guessing you guys have been asked if you guys
asked how many of your staff own guns and, and whether they’re, you know,
attending services every Sunday.” You know, to me, that feels like an
inappropriate intrusion into people’s personal lives. Now, that said, I also
think it’s really important to recognize that a huge number of this country are
gun owners, a huge percentage of this country is going to church every Sunday.
And you know, I’ll give you one example I’ve pointed to. David French, I think
I mentioned this, in a recent interview, but, David French, your former
colleague, who is doing such an astonishingly good job for us.
Hayes: Yeah, we know he’s good.
Thanks.
Sulzberger: But look, you could point to
something obvious, like, say he’s the only evangelical Christian on the page.
And that’s true. You could also say, I think he’s the only lawyer among our
columnists. And I actually think we benefit just as much from that law degree
as anything. Especially in this remarkable stretch of Supreme Court
cases. And you may have noticed, there have been some indictments of some
prominent individuals. So he’s really applied that background. So I think
it’s really important to look at diversity in a number of ways.
Isgur: Do you think that … I
actually, for instance, think that you probably have more pro-life or
gun-owning or religious attending staff, than people would otherwise think
about the New York Times?
Sulzberger: I’m sure that’s true.
Hayes: Color me skeptical.
Isgur: But what’s interesting to me,
is that I know they wouldn’t feel comfortable saying that out loud, right? This
idea that there are still favored and disfavored, there’s cultural
aspects to any workplace, not just the New York Times, God knows.
And that it comes with a certain credibility judgment I think in reporting. I
think there’s this idea that if you are a gun owner, you’re going to write more
gun-friendly pieces. That is not my point on diversity, I don’t even think
that’s true. I grew up in a gun-toting part of the country. And I think it
makes me both more sympathetic and more skeptical of certain arguments. But
it’s a credibility issue. When someone who agrees with you walks in and says a
fact, you sort of assume that’s true if it fits with everything you’ve ever
known living in San Francisco or whatever. And that if someone walks in and
says the opposite, you’re fact-checking it six ways to Sunday. That seems like
the bigger problem. And if folks don’t know that 20 percent of the people that
they work with are pro-life, it can create more of a monolithic culture than
there even actually is.
Sulzberger: So you, you’ve said a few things
there. One is, would people be comfortable talking about this stuff? And I’ll
push back on you on that. And, you know, I encourage you to ask David French,
or or some of our other conservative colleagues. Why am I pointing to the
opinion page? It’s because opinion columnists wear their politics on their
sleeves. About whether they felt welcomed and treated collegially here. But let
me also agree with your underlying premise, and I talked about this in my
piece, which is: Journalism is disproportionately pulling from two populations,
right? And actually, almost exclusively pulling from two populations,
college-educated people and people who live in big cities. Going back to
the statistics I shared earlier, pretty much everyone at the Times is
college educated. Not everyone. Our executive editor didn’t have a college
degree, Dean Baquet ran the paper for almost a decade and stepped down last
year. So not everyone, but disproportionately. And everyone does work in a big
city, right, most here in New York, but we have big offices elsewhere around
the country and, and in the world, but mostly in cities. If you just look at
polling, those populations are less likely than the general public to own guns,
less likely than the general public to be pro-life, and less likely than the
general public to register as a Republican, right? That’s just objectively
true. So then the question is, are you a prisoner to those blind spots? Or can
you actually create a culture that is built around constant interrogation of
one’s own mind spots? And that’s what independence is to me, right?
Independence isn’t like a spirit that lies deep within us that only the
strongest have. Or it’s a continual commitment to journalistic humility, right?
It’s a willingness to have an open mind on the things that people say you
should not think. And have a skeptical mind on the things that people say you
should think, right? It’s a willingness and a genuine curiosity to talk to
people who are different, and to really engage with their ideas and a
willingness to be surprised. And so just to go to the abortion example, because
I think it’s one of the easiest to point to because it’s such a polarized
issue. And I think you’d be absolutely right to say that most American
journalists are probably on one side of that issue. But if you really look at
our coverage—we’re sitting in a podcast studio used by the Daily; go back and
listen to the, I think we did a podcast after the Roe v. Wade leak,
and then the ultimate decision. And the first one was entirely from the view
of, of the pro-life movement, that was celebrating this victory and what it
meant and what they plan to do next. Then the next episode was the exact
opposite, from the pro-choice movement, and what it meant. And then a number of
other episodes that explored the various complexities of the decision about the
consequences, where, where the battle lines are going to be redrawn. And if you
look at our opinion pages, you know, we had guest essays from all those points
of view. We have Ross Douthat as a columnist fiercely making the case against
abortion. And then you have columnists like Michelle Goldberg fiercely making
the case for choice and for abortion rights. To me, a lot of what I’m pushing
for is … these aren’t intrinsic qualities necessarily, that we have? It’sa
process that we commit ourselves to. And when we really commit ourselves to it
I think we produce better work.
Hayes: I think it’s important for you
to articulate that. I mean, I like the phrase journalistic humility, and the
fact that you’re saying that, I think probably will be. … it sends a message to
the newsroom, I think. Let me, if I can, go a little bit further on this
question. Sort of ideology, philosophy, partisanship, covering politics. You
pointed out, in your Columbia Journalism Review essay, that,
you know, journalism faces this pretty massive credibility problem right now.
And I’m tempted to go through all the numbers. I won’t, but suffice it to say
that the latest Gallup polling bears that out. 34 percent of Americans trust
the media to report the news fully, fairly, and accurately. Seven percent of
Americans say they have a great deal of trust and only 27 percent say they have
a fair amount of trust. It’s a big gap. And I think people are, we’re right to
talk about it in terms of a broad credibility gap.
Sulzberger: And it’s worth saying that
those numbers are the lowest in American recorded polling.
Hayes: Yes. When Gallup was first
asking these questions, 72 percent of Americans had a great deal or a fair
amount of confidence, compared to just 26 percent, who didn’t, and that was in
the mid-1970s. So I think it’s important to look at that in sort of a broad
perspective. But there’s a bigger problem. And I think a better discussion of
this involves the partisan gap between. It really isn’t just all Americans of
all stripes don’t buy what they’re getting from journalism. It’s Republicans
and conservatives.
Sulzberger: Yeah. And if you go back and
you look at that partisan gap, it’s really striking. Starting around
Eisenhower, which is basically the beginning of consistent polling in the
country. So around Eisenhower, you see, basically a 5 percent gap between Democrats
and Republicans. That 5 percent gap basically holds to early mid-2000s. So to
G.W. Bush in office. And then it starts to spread. I would describe it as
gently, mildly, it starts to spread. And then with Trump, it widens into a
chasm. And I haven’t looked at the latest numbers, but at one point, it was
something like 80/20. It was 60, a 60-point gap, right, 5-point gap, most of
modern American history. 60-point gap. You know, as recently as a few years
ago, maybe even still today.
Hayes: Yeah, let me recast those numbers a
little bit by relying on Gallup for consistency’s sake. And because I think, I
think the break comes earlier. If you’re looking at the mid-1970s, when Gallup
began asking these questions, 75 to 63, Democrats trusted the media more.
Republicans a little bit less. And then you saw it sort of gradually widen,
until you get to the point where you’re in 2014, 2015. A little bit before the
Trump era, and you have a much more significant gap. You have Republicans
saying that they, it’s, I think, a 25-point gap. I don’t have it right here in
front of me. And then the Trump era comes and you have Donald Trump weighing in
and calling the media the enemy of the people and the gap widened significantly
to the point where it’s a crisis. I think it is a crisis. I guess my question
or starting point for the question is: It seems to me there’s a reason that
Republicans were so open to the argument that Donald Trump made, that they
shouldn’t trust the media. And that there were sort of pretty significant
differences in the way that the mainstream media, and I would include the New
York Times as sort of a driver of this, as you know, the leading media
company in the United States, covered Republicans versus covered Democrats. Do
you buy that? Do you understand why conservatives and Republicans brought that
skepticism and were open to the arguments that Donald Trump was making?
Sulzberger: Look, I certainly understand
it. And I hope you you saw in the piece and are hearing me today point to the
grains of truth in that critique, I also think there’s grains of truth in some
of the critiques on the left, you know, such as our coverage of minority
communities that weren’t represented in our newsroom or other newsrooms. Right?
I also think, on the other side, we have to reckon with the reality that there
has been a systematic campaign to discredit what you just called the mainstream
media. And I think there was a really interesting episode that is worth
pointing back to. So if you could think of someone who is like a classic
American political figure, who sort of, core to their identity, was sort of
riding above partisanship, and not participating in sort of broad campaigns,
calling the journalists the enemies of the people, or they’re fake news, you’d
be hard-pressed to find someone better than John McCain. Right? So if you’re
someone who believes in John McCain, you know for the last 15 years since he
ran for election as the Republican nominee for president, you would have had
good reason to believe that the New York Times tried to sink
John McCain unfairly and his candidacy unfairly because we wrote this
scandalous and untrue thing that John McCain, an honest man, said was a lie.
And that the Times was pressured into, you know, I can’t
remember if we corrected or sort of amended it, but basically walked away from
and that was an article we wrote about a relationship that said he had…
Hayes: An extramarital affair.
Sulzberger: An extramarital affair with a
lobbyist, a prominent lobbyist. And, you know, I think there was, it’s been a
while since I read the article, so I won’t characterize it. So for 15 years
that had been used against the New York Times by
conservatives, as yet another example of how we’re just trying to knock people
out and we were trying to help Obama win or whatever. Last year his, either
chief of staff or campaign manager, I can’t remember, wrote a remarkable
document coming clean, that he had been asked to lie about it, by McCain
directly, and he called it an unforgivable thing that he had been asked to do
and unforgivable that he had done it. And so for the last decade or longer,
three of my colleagues have had the stain on their reputations, not because
they wrote something that was wrong. This chief of staff or campaign strategist
acknowledged it was correct. They had a stain because someone was trying to
avoid a political hit. And it was really easy to blame the media. And so
anyway, so I am not saying that there’s never any legitimacy to this, I’m
certainly not saying we don’t ever get things wrong, right? We publish more
words than Shakespeare published his entire career every single week here at
the New York Times. Like we basically publish a number of words
that is in the Encyclopedia Britannica, every six to seven months. So it’s a
huge amount of output. So we get things wrong, but we really move heaven and
earth to get it right. You know, you may have heard that we’ve been attacked
for our work exposing Hillary Clinton’s email server. Right? We were the first
to report on the existence of that email server and continued to report on it
aggressively because it was a noteworthy news story through the campaign.
Something that a huge swath of Democrats believe I contributed to her loss and
Trump’s win. So I think one of the realities of this hyper-polarized moment,
and particularly one of the realities of this hyper-polarized moment, when
trust in media is very, very low, is that you know, when, when the media’s
attention turns to you in an unflattering way, it is pretty darn easy just to
blame the media.
Hayes: Yeah. Can I push a little bit
further on that? I think the McCain example is interesting. There’s one from
four years earlier, that I wasn’t gonna bring up, but I think it fits the
moment in this conversation. There was reporting from the Times, I
think it was about three weeks before the 2004 presidential election, on a
weapons depot that was insufficiently guarded by U.S. troops. And the report
was basically that this weapons depot was left alone. Bad guys came and got the
weapons.
Sulzberger: You’re gonna have me at a
disadvantage because I know nothing about this. I’m sorry.
Hayes: Okay. You’ll have to just trust that
I’m describing it accurately. I’m just trying to give you a sense of why there
is some of the skepticism. It was called the A-Qaqaa weapons depot. The Times wrote
a piece that was, “Hey, this is what happened. This was unguarded, this is
bad.” And there was a follow-up piece. This is the Kerry campaign’s response to
what the Al-Qaqaa weapons depot was. And as the Times does, it
leads a wide media coverage of this, right? CBS was doing stories. Because
the Times did it. It was on everybody’s radar. And there were
follow-ups all the time. In total, I think the Times wrote
three dozen, maybe more, stories about this in the lead-up to the 2004
election. It was sort of one of the big discussions in the lead-up to the
election, if I’m remembering this correctly. After the election, the story
basically vanished from the Times’ pages. I think it was
mentioned twice in subsequent years. And certainly, you have Bush
administration figures and Bush campaign figures who will say, “this is just
this campaign to get George W. Bush by piping this thing that they then just
thought it was newsworthy, as long as it was part of the presidential debate,
and then it wasn’t newsworthy anymore.”
Sulzberger: So I really, I’m sorry, I
can’t talk to the specifics. I mean, I think I’m still in college, probably at
that point. So I really can’t.
Hayes: This is why I wasn’t going to bring
it up. But I do think it helps explain some of the skepticism.
Sulzberger: The thing that I want to
convey as much as anything is that no matter who is sitting in your chair right
now, we’re sitting right next to each other in a podcast studio, no matter who
is in that chair they feel this way about something. So the Clintons felt that
way about the New York Times coverage of Whitewater. Then they
ended up feeling that way about our coverage of the email server. Biden,
literally just, at the White House Correspondents Dinner, said “The only person
who cares about my age is my doctor and the New York Times,” right?
Because we’ve been reporting really aggressively on Biden’s age and his
capacity, right? Because it’s a noteworthy and important story. If you were a
supporter of Israel in that chair, you would have a half-dozen examples like
this. And if you’re a supporter of the Palestinians, you would have a
half-dozen examples like this. One of the defining truths of this polarized era
is in-group narratives are as sharply baked in, as they’ve ever been, right?
Again, not to say we don’t get things wrong, it’s possible. Again, I don’t know
that story, that we got something wrong in that story. You know, there’s the
question of volume.
Hayes: It’s just more a matter of
emphasis.
Sulzberger: Emphasis is always a tricky
question, right? You know, that’s, that’s the big critique we’ve had of the
Clinton coverage. It’s the big critique we’ve had of our recent coverage of
trans medical care for transgender minors. These are always tricky questions.
This is why again, I go back and back to process like, do we have a process to
hear those critiques? Do we have a process that’s fairly reckoning with the
critiques?
Hayes: Just to be clear, I don’t
bring this up because we should relitigate this story in 2004.
Sulzberger: No, I really understand
that.
Hayes: But because we were talking
about this credibility crisis among Republicans and conservatives. It is the
case, I’m certain that you hear this all the time, that if anybody representing
any of these groups was in the chair I’m sitting in, they would have their
grievances, they would come to you. But I wonder if when you see this result …
Sulzberger: I recently had a university
president ask about our anti-university agenda. It’s ridiculous.
Hayes: I agree with you that that’s
ridiculous. But given the results of this polling, given the fact that
the New York Times is, I would argue, the most powerful media
institution in the world, certainly within in the United States. And you have
all of these Republicans and conservatives saying we don’t buy it. I mean, it’s
like 57 percent say they have zero trust in the media broadly.
Sulzberger: I’m really not blind to those
numbers. There’s something I reckon with all the time. And I take it very
seriously and I think about but like I said, I don’t think we’re perfect. Like
I said, I’m sure you know, we have certain blind spots, you know, and there are
stories we miss, I’m sure there’s the stories that we cover too much. I also
know that, you know, that we’re trying to get the story, these stories right.
At the same time, I don’t think it should be lost on us, right, that the former
president of the United States, the current leader of the Republican Party,
just spent six years, seven years now calling the New York Times by
name fake news, calling our journalists the enemy of the people, accusing
specific journalists of treason, by name.
if you
are someone who supports Donald Trump and believes in Donald Trump, what
are you supposed to think about an institution that the president of the United
States says is fake, your enemy, and committing treason? Of course there’s
going to be skyrocketing numbers of people who doubt what we do.
Isgur: What if the causal arrow goes the
other way? If we broke down those conservative Republican numbers, I don’t
think they’re that much different. If you look at the Never Trump Republicans
and conservatives. What if the causal arrow isn’t that Trump made people
believe in the media less, but their lack of faith in the media made Trump very
attractive?
Sulzberger: So just going back, lo the
McCain example, right? If you’re someone who believes in John McCain, and John
McCain has just said that we tried to sabotage his campaign at the last minute
by lying about extramarital affairs, what are you supposed to think about this
institution? I just hink we need to be clear-eyed that the Times is
used often as a proxy in larger fights. And that’s true from the right and the
left. If someone from the left is here, they’d be talking not about how against
the Bush administration we were. They would be talking about how complicit in
the Iraq War we were, by our credulous coverage of the intelligence as they
were asserting it at that time. Again, I’m not saying we’re flawless, but I
guess one of the questions I’d ask to you is, you guys know the media landscape
pretty well. How many institutions—and beyond that, I think you guys are
classic institutionalists, right? You believe that institutions matter in our
society, whether they’re academic institutions or the military or the church,
or media organizations like this one—how many institutions are you aware of
that are more explicitly trying to bring different people together, trying to
actually go to every part of the country? When you know when 15 Republicans
refused to return our calls, we’re calling the next 15 to make sure that we’re
fairly representing the views. Again, not saying we do it perfectly, but we
really believe in this.
Isgur: I’ll ask a philosophical question
about the independent journalism thing that touches on this as well, because
you talk about it in your CJR piece, and I know, you’ve talked about it
publicly. This internal tension between independent journalism, and there are
things that we all agree are off limits. We’re not really going to have a
debate anymore about whether Nazism had some good points. Or whatever that
thing may be. And it’d be so much easier if we could say, there’s no red line.
There’s nothing out of bounds. But there are, in terms of what we’re going to
debate. And it’d be much easier if we could say, it’s all red lines, and we
have red lines on every single thing. We know how we can debate NS what we
can’t, but that’s not true, either. And so you’re constantly having to
agenda-set. And that’s what people are complaining about from the New
York Times. And in particular, and this is what you’ve talked about, is
this idea that the New York Times is unabashedly
pro-democracy, for instance, is something that I think David Remnick brought up
probably, and this idea of like, well, maybe that’s not independent enough.
Maybe you should be, you know, contemplating that question more. And how that
could affect one’s coverage of say, a former president running on potentially a
really explicitly anti-democracy agenda or saying that the last election was
stolen.
Sulzberger: I love this question. Can I
jump in? Because I really, this is, this is the heart of what I want to talk
about as much as anything So there’s basically two ways that society
decides something is settled, right? Is beyond reasonable debate? There’s fact,
so it’s factually settled. And then there’s morally settled, right? So there’s
no fact that one can point to say that, women deserve equal pay, right? It’s
not like a factual matter. It’s a moral matter. We just know that to be true.
And society is no longer litigating that. Or interracial marriage should be
allowed. That’s not a factual thing. That’s a moral truth in this country at
this point. Now, on facts, you will always find fringe people who say, you
know, that the facts aren’t the facts, right? You will even find some people
say that the last election was won by Donald Trump. So, it being factually
settled, you know, doesn’t necessarily mean that you won’t find …
Hayes: It’s not really much of a
fringe anymore, I’m afraid.
Sulzberger: And you’ll find that on the
stuff that’s, that’s morally settled. Here’s my view on those two categories.
On the first one, you cannot ever pretend the facts aren’t the facts in order
to try to signal fairness, right, because that’s actually not what fairness is,
right? Fairness is, you know, a full and complete and accurate representation
of the world as it is, and so our job there is to unapologetically follow the
facts. And look, I’m like, I’m keenly aware of this. If more than two-thirds of
Republicans still believe, as many polls show them, that Donald Trump was the
legitimate winner of the last election. And we are treating that as factually
inaccurate, in just very plain, unapologetic language. I’m aware that’s gonna
make it harder for us to reach this giant audience that I would love to be able
to reach, because I think what we’re doing here is valuable to everyone. But
you’ve got to follow the facts. So that’s one. Then the second one, I think you
need to have a lot of humility in what is settled. So again, we can’t, we can’t
be chasing fringe views to your point about Nazism, or whether women have a
role in society to try to pretend that there’s two sides of these arguments. Or
whether democracy maybe isn’t that important after all right? These are things
that society has regarded as settled questions, and I think journalism should
legitimately treat them as settled questions. So I’ll say two other things.
One, right now, there is such a pull on both the right and the left to expand
the realm of settled questions, right? Everyone wants their question to be
settled, right? So for example, my guess is something like 80 percent or 60
percent of America wants abortion to be treated as settled, regardless of which
way it is. But it’s a profoundly unsettled question. America is working through
it and will probably always continue to work and they will never stumble upon
the fact that says “this is the moment in which abortion becomes okay or
doesn’t become okay.” So I think we need to have a lot of humility on that. And
I think to the degree to which we err, I think that we need to err on the side
of inclusivity because erring on the side of inclusivity actually means erring
on the side of fully representing the messy debates our pluralistic democracy
is having, right, so that’s one so. So I think we need to resist the
journalistic urge to treat more and more as settled. And honestly, going back
to one of the things we talked about earlier, the more we’re out in the
country, the more intuitive it is that you can’t treat everything as settled,
right? Because you’re just dealing with all sorts of different people from
different backgrounds, and you can just see plainly that society is working
through questions that you might have strong views on. So that’s one. The other
tricky thing is even if something is factually settled, or even if something is
morally settled, it doesn’t mean everything underneath it is settled. And the
other form of pressure that gets put on independent media organizations like
ours is that we treat climate change as settled. It is real, it is happening,
it is human-caused and if unaddressed, it will continue to have worsening and
devastating consequences. Right? We treat that as a settled fact pattern. You
won’t see debate on that. But how fast it’s going to happen, whether human
innovation will remedy any of it, or be able to mitigate any of it, whether
specific remedies like wind farms or solar power, or nuclear power, is the
right answer. We can’t treat any of those as settled. Society is working through
those questions, science is working through those questions. But we we
regularly get protested by climate change activists who come in to our building
once every few months and have a huge protest about how backwards our coverage
of climate change is. And what they’re doing is a standard thing that other
activists do as well, which is they’re trying to get us to treat more and more
things as off-limits. And on the moral side, right, I can point to another one,
which is transgender people exist in this country. And, you know, I think
everyone in this country deserves basic human rights. The science of care for
transgender minors is still developing, right? So at no point have we ever
written in a story saying transgender people don’t exist or shouldn’t exist,
something that we have been accused of many, many times. That’s just not true.
But we will write stories about debates within the medical community about the
appropriate time and methods of intervention. For, children who identify as
transgender, and hat’s gotten a lot of blowback by people who want to say that
the science is now settled there. And it’s not. And I’ll say one last thing,
sometimes we get this wrong. I think we treated the lab leak story as more
settled than it ended up being. And we ended up reporting a ton on it, and very
aggressively on it. But at the beginning, think mainstream media as a bit of a
fringe theory and it probably too tidily fit some of the president’s natural
biases. And he had a history of misrepresenting intelligence. So there was good
reason to be skeptical. That skepticism can go too far as well. And now iit
certainly hasn’t been confirmed. But it’s one of two legitimate theories
thatlots of smart people are arguing about.
Isgur: Quick follow-up on that. So if you
say democracy is one of those settled moral questions, for instance, to take
that one, and a candidate is running as against democracy or your reporters
think that he is a threat to democracy, what responsibility then do they have
to say, “You know, here’s this story we shouldn’t publish it because it could
help him”?
Sulzberger: See, that’s where I think
people get themselves into real danger. You know, this essay, I start this
essay with this really remarkable moment. Um, do you mind if I share it with
your listeners?
Isgur: You know it involves me?
Sulzberger: Oh, I didn’t know that it
involves you, I’m sorry about that.
Hayes: Agree to disagree on some aspects of
it.
Isgur: And actually, some of this
comes from that. So, okay, the transgender story or the story about Rod
Rosenstein saying that the 25th Amendment should be invoked. Those stories are
treated much more carefully. I mean, I’ve spent 20 years being on the other
side of your reporters, it’s actually kind of a fun thing to get to talk to you
and explain what it feels like to be on the other side. This idea that “We have
to be really careful with this story. Because it could help Donald Trump, it
doesn’t mean we won’t report it. And it doesn’t mean we won’t follow down the
facts.” All of that is true. But they’re more careful. And on the care for
transgender minors, what you’ll hear is that they’re gonna run all this by
people within that community to make sure that it was written sensitively
enough that it’s accurate, all of those things are good. But that sensitivity
then doesn’t carry over to the other side, there’s no, “This could help Joe
Biden, let’s make sure it’s really, really accurate.”
Sulzberger: Look, I don’t buy it. And I
get that’s how it’s felt on one side as you’ve been a partisan player. And,
candidly, one of the things I often say to people is “Even I work at the New
York Times, even I, the New York Times drives me crazy on
the things I care most about, right?” I’ll sometimes read media coverage in
the Times, and as you can imagine, I have strong feelings about
media coverage. And I’ll be like, “Why didn’t they get this nuance? Why didn’t
they, you know, this is too tough. This is too hard.’”
Hayes: Do you have a specific story in
mind? Just kidding, just kidding.
Sulzberger: I mean, there are plenty,
because we report really aggressively on ourselves, too. And that’s, that’s
part of, literally, just to give you a sense of what independence looks like in
practice. We hired a new CEO, the New York Times at this point
is really on the brink.We’ve got this huge amount of debt, a really
unsustainable amount of debt. The financial crisis has made the ad market just
absolutely fall out. We don’t yet see a path in digital. So it’s a really dark
moment for the institution. And we hire a new CEO. The old CEO leaves in a sort
of a noisy way. It’s a tough moment for the institution. Something within days
or weeks of the announcement, it may have even been within days, there’s a
newsbreak of a scandal at his previous employer, the BBC. And there are questions
about whether he knew about it. And it’s a bad, ugly scandal. And so what does
this institution do? The executive editor at the time decides that it’s going
to be too hard for a reporter to … this is big and hard. And she wants
the most independent person she can find. So she takes the investigations
editor, so one of our most experienced journalists, one of our most senior
journalists, and says, “I’m detaching you for two months. You’re gonna get to
the bottom of the story, whatever, wherever it leads. And for two months, we’re
trying to onboard this new CEO, while the institution is also reporting on him
incredibly aggressively.” Now. Was that fun for him? It was not. But, you know,
my point is, everyone feels a version of this. Now, to go to the Rosenstein
story, because I want to explain why your previous question about do you have
an obligation to make sure that your reporting doesn’t allow bad things to
happen. I think that’s really insidious, because I think that once you start
doing that, then the conspiracy theories are right. Then the public does have a
reason to believe that you have an agenda. Right. So, the Rosenstein story,
basically, we find out that Rod Rosenstein, the No. 2 official in the Justice
Department has secretly recorded President Trump early in his administration.
Out of concern for Trump’s fitness for office, and …
Isgur: Again, something that Rod, and
the Department of Justice through his spokesperson, disputes.
Sulzberger: We feel really solid in our
story. So anyway, as you can imagine, you know, the right was extremely unhappy
about this story, extremely unhappy about this story. Because it painted
President Trump in an unflattering light, raised questions about his fitness,
and raised questions about his own team’s loyalty to him. The left really lost
its mind over the story and went very aggressively at us. And the reason was
that Rod Rosenstein at that point—you call him Rod, I shouldn’t call him Rod.
I’ve never met the guy. But Rod Rosenstein, at that point was overseeing the
Mueller investigation. And people on the left thought that the Mueller
investigation was going to save America from someone that they regarded as
temperamentally unfit for the office of presidency.
Hayes: And the reporting could lead
to the firing.
Sulzberger: So the left believed that we had
offered the pretext to fire Rosenstein, thereby, Trump could directly meddle
into the investigation. And the thing I kept saying to folks who raise concerns
is, “Do you really want to live in a country in which one of the country’s
leading news organizations finds out that one of the highest-ranking law
enforcement officials in the nation has profound concerns about the fitness of
the President of the United States, his ability, his variability to serve and that
we hide that information from the public?” I mean, to me, it’s just a
disastrously bad idea. And when you look at some of the other criticism we get
from time to time, so much of it comes back to these two questions. Volume? And
can it be misused? But the “can it be misused” argument is often dangerous.
Let’s just imagine us covering the rise of the Taliban in Afghanistan, and the
reasons behind it. And one of the reasons, as we know, was government
corruption. Like, you know, the Afghan people really believed that there was
this corrupt and somewhat incompetent government there, right? You can make a
case that every time we report on government corruption now that we’re actually
making the Taliban stronger. I would argue that it’s a dangerous, dangerous
argument to make, because I would argue that in a democratic society, we still
have troops on the ground, they’re still officially at war in that nation. We
need to know if the people we’ve put into power are corrupt, are incompetent.
And so that argument it’s not that we never consider arguments like that.
Sometimes we’ll be told by the CIA or the military that reporting certain
information, at a certain moment will lead to direct loss of life, and in very
rare cases we’ll hold. But I think we should be incredibly skeptical of
arguments like that.
Hayes: Everything you say leads me down a
different path with a different question that I have. And I know we don’t have
endless time. But I would love to push you on the decision to run the op-ed by
Siraj Haqqani or the reporting that the Times did on the Tom
Cotton op-ed. But I’ll table those in order to ask you a question about
something that was in the paper today, which I think is interesting. And I’m
just eager to get your thoughts on this. A story today in the Times written
by Glenn Thrush, Michael Schmidt, two, I think, reporters with terrific
reputations about the Hunter Biden stuff. And I will say that covering Hunter
Biden is one of the most difficult things that we wrestle with at The
Dispatch. How do you cover it? How do you treat the laptop story? How
much should we trust the people who are telling us stories who are involved in
the oversight when some of the other things that we’ve listened to them on
haven’t checked out? There’s a volume question, a “what’s news” question.
Today, there’s a story about some documents that were provided by
whistleblowers that allegedly show Hunter Biden sending text messages to a
Chinese businessman, with his father present, in effect threatening this
businessman. “Hey, my dad is sitting here, he really wants to know why you’re
not being responsive,” is sort of the close paraphrase. The story goes on. And
the Times piece sort of says on the one hand, this is what
these people are saying. On the other hand, this is what these people are
saying. These two whistleblowers, one of them by name, one of them not by name,
are cited throughout the piece. And then there’s this extraordinary statement
in the 21st paragraph of the piece, and I want to read it so that I get it exactly
right. There’s a discussion of this request that the U.S. attorney has made to
prosecute, potentially prosecute, Hunter Biden on these things to bring
charges. And one of those requests takes place in California and the Times reports
“that episode was confirmed independently to the New York Times by
a person with knowledge of the situation.” So I’m reading this and I think
you’ve got two whistleblowers, one of them by name saying on the record that
this thing happened, and the Times independently verifying
that the Department of Justice may have blocked this investigation into the son
of the president of the United States. That felt to me, like a “holy s–t,” like
a top-of-the-fold bold letters. “Oh, my gosh. It wasn’t played that way.” And
there are all sorts of reasons you can imagine that it wouldn’t have been
played that way. Maybe that was, that verification came in at the last minute,
and I’m not asking you to comment on that. But given all of that, what do you,
what do you, what do you make of the Hunter Biden story generally? And what do
you make of this story, specifically?
Sulzberger: So I should be honest, I
really don’t get deeply involved in the day-to-day editorial decision-making.
And I think there’s good reason for that. I do get involved at the level
of standards, at the level of big questions.I was involved in a decision to
beef up certain desks. But at the story level, like, I literally know nothing
about the specific decision-making of that story. So I really can’t comment on
it. But I will say sort of going back to the broader theme about what
seems to be one of the main themes of this conversation, how the Times covers
the American right, or, you know, or conservative issues. You know, the
question we often hear is, is one of volume and one of play, right? I would
point out that according to your version of the story, we’re reporting, and
we’re putting it on the front page. And to me, that’s what independent
journalism looks like. Crucially, we would rather be right than fast. And I think
that stands really countered to this moment as well.
Hayes: I think that’s one of the reasons
this hit so hard for me was because it was in the Times. I’ve read
similar claims, anonymously sourced in some conservative outlets that I don’t
find credible. And I didn’t have the “holy s–t” moment. It was because it was
in the Times that I thought, “This strikes me as a huge deal.
If the Times believes that they’re independently verifying
that the DOJ blocked this investigation, that strikes me as a major deal.”
Sulzberger: What can I say? Like that’s
the dream, this is why independence is so important, right? This is why society
needs neutral actors. Because when you actually have neutral actors,
independent actors, it means something different when they say something, and
it’s why the desire of everyone to make us partisans in their often quite
worthy campaign, the campaign against global warming, campaign for democracy.I
think the way we are contributing to democracy is to be an independent actor
that is covering the challenges to it. And I don’t think if we dialed our level
of volume up to Fox News and MSNBC levels, we would somehow have more impact on
the world. I don’t think that if we hid the stories that were inconvenient, or
could yield damaging outcomes, we would contribute to greater goods in the
world.I have a fundamental optimism in people and in democracy. And I believe
that if we commit ourselves as much as humanly possible, with all our human
flaws and failings, to try to arm the public with the information that they
deserve, as fully, fairly, and independently as possible that it’ll just bring
some more trust into the system.
Isgur: You’ve given us so much of your time
and we’re so appreciative. I do have one last question for you.
Sulzberger: Okay. I’m guessing from your
expression that it’s going to be a doozy.
Isgur: It is. No, it’s actually just
something that I’m just curious about. You’re a dad. You’re sixth
generation in this business. Not this business, this job. You think you parent
differently knowing that your kid may take your job someday? Are you inculcating
them in independent journalism from the get? Do you make sure that they feel
like they can go do anything they want? Or, you know, God, in my household
we’re two lawyers, and every day, you know, anytime he’s like, “What do you do
for work?’ We’re like, “Don’t worry about it, be a doctor.”
Sulzberger: Is this your first?
Isgur: This will be my second.
Sulzberger: Second, okay, well,
congratulations. So I just had my second actually. So we have a 5-year-old and
a 9-month-old. So if I seem a beat slower than you expected I should seem,
you’re probably correct. So, I love that question. Actually, I haven’t gotten
that question before. There’s so little that it’s early. I feel very lucky,
actually. And I haven’t said this publicly, but I feel very lucky that I had
kids late. So the one thing I can be damn sure of is that, that my child will
not be a successor. Which allows me to focus on the broader family. And this is
a family enterprise, the family is now quite large, we’re almost 100 people.
And there are so many brilliant people in this family who have been steeped in
the values of independence. Again, do you mind if I do something corny? So, the
phrase I taped above my desk when I was named as publisher, was the phrase from
my great-great grandfather, Adolph Ochs, who was a working-class Jew from
Tennessee, who started in the printing presses and worked his way up to running
the paper in Chattanooga, and then leveraged that to buy what was then actually
the failing New York Times. And, and, and to basically start in
American journalism on this path towards independence, right? And the phrase he
left in his will, which is the charge to his family. And he had put the New
York Times in trust. And, he wrote this phrase, that “the mission of
the family is to maintain the editorial independence and integrity of the New
York Times. And to ensure it remains an independent newspaper, entirely
fearless, free of ulterior influence, and unselfishly devoted to the public
welfare.” And if you open up the proxy statement, we’re now a public company
with a controlling shareholder base. And if you open up the proxy statement
that we have to put out every year, you will find that same statement is the
core of our family mission. So what am I excited about? I’m excited about being
able to put that energy a beat farther from home, to the next generation of
people in my family, who are steeped in those values and, and continue to
believe so, so deeply in that mission.
Isgur: So you’re not reading him the
front page?
Sulzberger: Her, her. She is aware that I
have an unusually deep relationship with the newspaper. But the thing I tell
myself is it reads as less neglectful than just staring at your phone and
reading the digital version. Right? I think there’s something about modeling,
that this is what it means to be a citizen. Right? Like engaging news about the
communities you live in, in the world you live in. So I hope it’s not just
paternal neglect. I hope there’s some modeling in there too.
Isgur: Thank you so much for your
time today.
Sulzberger: Oh, it’s a real
pleasure.
Hayes: Thank you.
Sulzberger: Thank you and good luck with everything
you’re building. I really admire it.
Hayes: Thank you very much.
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