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Suppressed

Confessions of a Former New York Times Washington Correspondent

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Suppressed is the book the media would prefer you not read. The book may change the way you read a newspaper, listen to the radio, watch TV, or consume digital media.

Please look at the Follow the Author Page for videos by Robert M. Smith.

Incisive behind-the-scenes details about the Times and other media outlets. — Publishers Weekly

A forthright indictment of the media's shortcomings. — Kirkus Reviews

Half of all Americans do not trust the media, and many Americans believe the media are to blame for the country's division. The U.S. ranks dead last of all countries in media trust. But no one in the media is talking about this.

This well-reviewed book tells you why and shows you the inside of the media machine. It includes a look behind the scenes at some of the biggest stories in the history of journalism. The author — a former New York Times White House and investigative correspondent — was there and is ruthlessly honest about what he saw.

In fact, the author unearthed Watergate before Woodward and Bernstein, but saw the story ignored by the New York Times Washington Bureau when he gave it to them.

Margaret Sullivan, media critic for the Washington Post, called the book a "very engaging read."

Smith is an attorney and barrister who has written a law book for lawyers. This is a different kind of book, but it is written with the same careful attention to the evidence.

Coming to the present, Suppressed shows how some media, including the New York Times, stepped into the ring and began slugging it out with President Trump, instead of staying outside the ring and neutrally reporting what it saw. The book argues that the media would have been more effective if it had remained neutral — and credible.

On the other hand, Times stock dropped 17 percent in the first two quarters of 2021, after President Trump left. During the same time the S&P 500 index rose 18 percent.

The book offers entertaining tidbits — some hard to believe — but also shows you how to be a knowledgeable consumer of something that you spend time on every day and depend on.

Written with candor and humor, Suppressed traces a young investigative reporter's arc from naïveté to cynicism, from covering the White House to leaving journalism for Yale Law School and ultimately becoming a barrister in London and teaching at Oxford.

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    • Kirkus

      March 15, 2021
      A former journalist's memoir serves as a call to reinvigorate investigative reporting. Lawyer and mediator Smith, a former New York Times Washington correspondent, mounts a sharp critique of journalism in his frank, often digressive debut memoir. Smith contends that "suppression of news is alive and well, even at the New York Times," reflecting both editorial bias and the media's cozy relationship to those in power. "Power," writes the author, "oozing from the paper, forms a protective barrier around its correspondents and editors. People shy away from offending Times reporters," fearing bad publicity. Smith recounts an accomplished career: education, jobs, salient assignments, and battles won and lost. The son of Eastern European immigrants, he attended the prestigious Boston Public Latin School, went on to Harvard, spent a year in Germany as a Fulbright Scholar, and continued his education at the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism. Characterizing himself as na�ve, he was disillusioned when, working at Time magazine, he saw news manipulated to fit the publications's conservative views. Smith also encountered suppression elsewhere, including the Boston Herald and the Times. Central to the memoir is one traumatizing incident: With evidence from a trusted source, he learned about the Watergate break-in, but when he brought the story to his editor at the Times, it was ignored, to his astonishment and dismay. The paper's failure--or refusal--to cover the story "was the result of conscious bias," he insists, which still shapes whatever the paper sees fit to print and has evolved into "reflexive, unconscious bias" that, he believes, thwarts its efforts to effectively undercut critics like Donald Trump. Frustrated with reporting, Smith opted for the law. In the intellectually stimulating atmosphere of Yale Law School, he began to see the world not as black and white but "a dubious gray." Smith cautions readers to watch out for bias, ask who is reporting, and consider outside pressures that influence a paper's focus. A forthright indictment of the media's shortcomings.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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