By Kevin Nance
Chicago Sun-Times
Published: 2/20/06
Excerpt:
To be fair, no one in
the media -- not even Rudy Galindo, who was extensively quoted in a
controversial Chicago Tribune article last week -- has said flat-out
that Olympic figure skater Johnny Weir is gay.
Then again, no one had to...
A quick database
search of major print media outlets turned up 160 uses of the word
"flamboyant" to describe Weir in the past 90 days, with several sports
reporters describing his failure to win an Olympic medal this week as a
"flameout" or other variations on the word "flaming." (The
controversial Olympian Bode Miller, by contrast, was typically
described as "reckless" or "rebellious.") ...
"The first question
is: What's the journalistic purpose of reporting someone's sexual
orientation, especially against that person's will -- why does it
matter?" says Roy Peter Clark, a senior scholar and media ethicist at
the Poynter Institute, a leading journalism research group. "I think
the answer has to be more than, 'It's just interesting.' A news
organization that publishes very private information like that, even
about public figures, has a responsibility to be transparent about
their news judgment."
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