DiscoverHonestly with Bari WeissNPR Editor Speaks Out: How National Public Radio Lost Americans' Trust
NPR Editor Speaks Out: How National Public Radio Lost Americans' Trust

NPR Editor Speaks Out: How National Public Radio Lost Americans' Trust

Update: 2024-04-096
Share

Description

Uri Berliner is a senior business editor at NPR. In his 25 years with NPR, his work has been recognized with a Peabody Award, a Gerald Loeb Award, an Edward R. Murrow Award, and a Society of Professional Journalists New America Award, among others.


Today, we published in The Free Press his firsthand account of the transformation he has witnessed at National Public Radio. Or, as Uri puts it, how it went from an organization that had an “open-minded, curious culture” with a “liberal bent” to one that is “knee-jerk, activist, scolding,” and “rigidly progressive.” 


Uri describes a newsroom that aimed less to cover Donald Trump but instead veered towards efforts to topple him; a newsroom that reported the Russia collusion story without enough skepticism or fairness, and then later largely ignored the fact that the Mueller report found no credible evidence of collusion; a newsroom that purposefully ignored the Hunter Biden laptop story—in fact, one of his fellow NPR journalists approved of ignoring the laptop story because “covering it could help Trump.” A newsroom that put political ideology before journalism in its coverage of Covid-19. And, he describes a newsroom where race and identity became paramount in every aspect of the workplace and diversity became its north star. 


In other words, NPR is not considering all things anymore. 


On today’s episode: How did NPR lose its way? Why did it change? And why does this lone journalist feel obligated to speak out?

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Comments (6)

Bill Fowlkes

You are the misleader Bari: Robert Mueller pushed back ... that he did not evaluate “collusion” with the Russian government, and confirming that his report did not conclude that there was “no obstruction” of the probe. “The president was not exculpated for the acts that he allegedly committed,” Mueller told the House judiciary committee, adding that Trump could theoretically be indicted. per Politico JULY 24, 2019 3:21 PM

Apr 14th
Reply

Bea Kiddo

I’m just embarrassed how Trump is making our country. It’s so full of hate and ignorance. This episode is ripping on what happened every second of all the days of covid, when it wasn’t handled by our traitor Trump president correctly whatsoever. To not listen to fauci is ridiculous. This sounds like an “educated” Fox “ News.” Thank God npr didn’t report as much on hunters laptop. Unless you’re into nude crack porn. Give me a break. This episode pisses me offme off

Apr 11th
Reply (1)

Bea Kiddo

Political ideology IS about race and identity more!! It’s never been like this, this bad in all my years. I live in Michigan so I know and grew up with all kinds of different races and immigrants, I’m used to it but also I’m not racist like Trump the traitor is. This story is bs, I don’t agree. NPR reports the FACTS. Trump is a traitor first, a dumb ignorant person, CRIMAL, loser, liar and a thief. We all know that Trump made hate, violence the norm.

Apr 11th
Reply

Bea Kiddo

BS. The mueller report uncovered extensive criminal activity. It produced 37 indictments; 7 guilty pleas or convictions; and compelling evidence that Trump obstructed justice on multiple occasions. Mueller also uncovered and referred 14 criminal matters to other components of the DOJ. Trump associates repeatedly lied to investigators about their contacts with Russians, and President Trump refused to answer questions about his efforts to impede federal proceedings & try to bribe witnesses

Apr 11th
Reply

Ruth Gordon

Very interesting! 📻

Apr 10th
Reply
loading
00:00
00:00
1.0x

0.5x

0.8x

1.0x

1.25x

1.5x

2.0x

3.0x

Sleep Timer

Off

End of Episode

5 Minutes

10 Minutes

15 Minutes

30 Minutes

45 Minutes

60 Minutes

120 Minutes

NPR Editor Speaks Out: How National Public Radio Lost Americans' Trust

NPR Editor Speaks Out: How National Public Radio Lost Americans' Trust

The Free Press