Joe Rogan, Jack Dorsey And Process Journalism

in #news5 years ago (edited)

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There has been a lot of talk as of late about Joe Rogan’s podcast interview of Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, as well as related videos and online mudslinging. I finally watched the entire interview, as well as some followup segments, and several things come to mind. First, in this day and age, almost anyone can be and at times is a journalist. Even though Joe Rogan is a comedian, MMA commentator and podcaster, he is in a position where he interviews prominent people about current events and sometimes breaks news, so he is taking on the role of a journalist and many people look to him as a source of not-so-filtered information. With that said, he is not required to adhere to some code of ethics. Still, a major mediaethics issue did arise in that Jack Dorsey is the CEO of a company that has a financial relationship with Rogan’s podcast. Rogan discussed the issue during the interview with Dorsey, but not in an upfront, transparent manner. He later discussed it in detail in a subsequent interview. Regarding the allegations that Rogan conducted a softball interview and did not press Dorsey on matters he should have (i.e. #socialmedia censorship and Dorsey claiming he did not know why Alex Jones was banned from Twitter — which is very questionable), I view this as indicative of the direction journalism is going — process journalism. Rather than waiting to publish a story or record content until all claims have been scrutinized and facts have been checked, more and more journalists publish or record before verifying.

It’s hard for me to fault Rogan for doing this since I have come to see value in process journalism and engage in the practice myself. For instance, during the peak of Europe’s migrant crisis, I “platformed” many people making questionable claims. I interviewed on camera many asylum seekers who may have been exaggerating or even fabricating stories in attempt to gain legal status in Europe. Likewise, on the opposing side of the issue, I interviewed Bulgaria’s famed refugee hunter, Dinko Valev, who also made some questionable claims. As Joe Rogan has now done with the social media issue, I followed up with more critical reporting on the migrant crisis. Still, I think it was important at the time to give a voice (and a face) to some of the many asylum seekers who were pouring into Europe and about whom there was much confusion in the western world.

Also, a major component of process journalism is audience participation. The audience on YouTube responded very critically to many of the claims asylum seekers were making in my interviews with them. This highlighted a need for some scrutiny and alternative viewpoints. Rogan’s audience steered him in the direction of social media censorship, and he responded by conducting an in-depth interview on the topic and by booking Dorsey for a followup interview. We’ll see if the Dorsey followup materializes. Nonetheless, the initial interview prompted a major discussion on social media censorship. It also included very interesting conversation — a bit surprising I might add — in which Dorsey suggested the world is trending toward decentralization, due in large part to #blockchain tech and #cryptocurrency. The times are changing, and journalism is as well.

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Very interesting and honest account that opens my eye to it a bit more. To be honest I have not watched the interview and think it's got blown out of proportion. Maybe he didn't question he hard enough but I guess he might not have felt comfortable who know. Then deleted comments which more then likely have been Twitter, maybe he had conditions to the interview who know until he makes some sort of statement 💯🐒

I don't know what Rogan's intentions were, or if he even had any. He did at one point suggest that he goes into interviews without any agenda. Since the Dorsey interview, he has been very forthcoming and has gone in depth, particularly with Tim Pool, about social media censorship. He also made a compelling case that he does not need the Cash App as a sponsor.

Yes it seems people wanted him to cover certain topics and when he didn't they are disappointed and turned on him. Maybe he didn't feel comfortable mentioning these but hey he a good interviewer and we can always ask all the questions. And if he has no agenda the topic might not have been there in the conversation to discuss. He needs a break to be honest 💯🐒

Had the interview been focused on censorship, the blockchain and bitcoin discussion might not have occurred. Although to me, blockchain and bitcoin provide an alternative to increasingly centralized social media platforms like Twitter. I think it all worked out fine in the end with regard to the Dorsey interview.

Indeed well said in an interview you can't cover everything. Dorsey would not willing speak about the end of his company to be honest 💯🐒

In a sense he did. That was what came across strange to me. They even mentioned Gab, not that I think Gab in particular spells the end of Twitter. I think Dorsey deserves credit for acknowledging the trends in his sphere that could pose an existential threat to his business.

Interesting maybe I should listen. Have so many podcasts to listen to these days haha. I think people forget Joe does not really present himself as a anarchist, to me people are expecting him to be one in his interviews 💯🐒

I don't know why people would expect him to present himself as an anarchist. The blockchain and BTC stuff is close to the end. No need to listen to the whole thing. You probably have better stuff to do.

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