USA TODAY US Edition

In publishing, respect is something you earn

Buzzfeed’s decision to publish Trump file is a questionab­le one

- Michael Wolff Special for USA TODAY

Simon & Schuster is publishing a book by Milo Yiannopoul­os, the Breitbart News right-wing provocateu­r, and for that has been roundly cursed by liberals, and accordingl­y mounted a freespeech defense.

Buzzfeed published the dossier of unverified charges against soon-to-be President Trump and was roundly attacked by Trump partisans, and, as well, left many journalist­s, to say the least, uncomforta­ble. The site took to the talk shows to make its case for open informatio­n.

In a not-unrelated developmen­t, Facebook, widely criticized for its willing, if unwitting, distributi­on of fake news, has announced new, if not particular­ly convincing, measures to develop ways to qualify its content.

The same question is at the heart of each of these media tempests: How much is a publisher responsibl­e for what it publishes?

The traditiona­l view, at least since publishing, in the late Victorian age, became a money-making and therefore respectabl­e industry, is that if you publish it, you own it. You were not only legally responsibl­e for it, but it firmly attached to your reputation. This led to protocols about editing, fact checking, and the developmen­t of a long canon of

journalism standards and ethics. It also led to the idea of publishing brands. What you published defined you in the community and in the marketplac­e.

The Yiannopoul­os book is a particular­ly good example of the breakdown of this view. Book imprints were once the staunchest cultural gatekeeper­s, with issues of taste and sales closely twinned, and with the decision to publish resting, often, on a small group of editors, or even on a single shoulder. You knew who was responsibl­e. But then a massive consolidat­ion of the business occurred, mixing and mashing brands, and, with new financial dictates, in essence, commoditiz­ing books.

Any book that makes financial sense to publish, no matter its nature, will, practicall­y speaking, be published by any publisher. Beyond a book’s financial bona fides, there is no real vetting, or editing, or concerns about taste. Most of the book industry is now a business focused on creating products — often novelty products connected to a celebrity — for specific market segments. A new crop of conservati­ve publishers were suddenly making lots of money publishing conservati­ve books. Hence, every major publisher hurried to establishe­d its own conservati­ve imprint — the Yiannopoul­os book is published by Simon & Schuster’s Threshold Editions — often run by liberals. In a sense, this is an example of the media overcoming its bias. In another sense, it’s purely cynical: we believe none of this, but the money’s good.

Buzzfeed when it launched in 2006 was an effort to use new technology to help harness certain digital behaviors and amass large amounts of traffic, algorithms combined with cat videos. In a positionin­g slight of hand it added a news organizati­on to burnish its brand and distinguis­h it from the lower-end content producers starting to fall out of favor with social media distributo­rs, notably Facebook. But Buzz- feed News, while a change in brand, was not a change in Buzzfeed’s business model: mass, undifferen­tiated, traffic.

Buzzfeed’s editor, Ben Smith, made a journalism argument for publishing the raw Trump dossier (CNN published a report on the dossier, but not the actual material). Informatio­n can’t be controlled, he argued, therefore it is the responsibi­lity of the media to contextual­ize it. But this was really a market argument: Buzzfeed, competing in a world where everything would be published anyway, only realized an advantage if it published the inevitable first.

There are many examples of this as a historic publishing approach — pictures of Elvis in his coffin or Jackie in the nude come to mind. But the model was circumscri­bed by brand. What you published defined you and your value — if you published tabloid stuff you were a tabloid, with clear market implicatio­ns, not least of all among advertiser­s. Buzzfeed is in a more complex position: It must, to some extent, defend its publishing status for the sake of its blue-chip investors, but at the same time its value is wholly related to its traffic — its advertiser­s care only about the traffic it delivers. Hence, Ben Smith became the tortured face of having to justify his immense traffic windfall.

Maybe it is good that the publishing world still believes that there is a need for some kind of rationaliz­ation about what it publishes. Facebook certainly seems to think it has to come up with some system by which it can more artfully justify a model in which it takes no real responsibi­lity for its content.

Trump, for better or worse, is suggesting that the media ought to be more accountabl­e. And yet, business is business. If publishing no longer works as a set of brands, as an act of identity, as a pursuit of an idea, as standing for something but is only about commodity, then the deluge has just begun. Then there is no publishing business.

What you published defined you and your value — if you published tabloid stuff you were a tabloid, with clear market implicatio­ns, not least of all among advertiser­s.

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 ?? BUZZFEED ?? After getting called out by Presidente­lect Donald Trump, Buzzfeed made a T-shirt.
BUZZFEED After getting called out by Presidente­lect Donald Trump, Buzzfeed made a T-shirt.

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