As I wrote about in Tuesday’s newsletter, Adnan Syed, whose case was chronicled in the first season of the popular podcast “Serial,” had his murder conviction thrown out on Monday.
The New York Times’s David Leonhardt had a Q&A with the podcast’s host Sarah Koenig, who led a team of reporters looking into the Syed case. Koenig was in the courtroom Monday when Syed’s conviction was vacated.
Leonhardt asked Koenig what she thought when she first learned that it was actually the prosecutors who wanted Syed released because they weren’t confident in the original case.
Koenig said, “I was shocked. I did not see this coming at all. One of the first things I did was call Adnan’s brother and then his mother — they told me they didn’t know either. The prosecutors who filed the motion to release him kept it pretty tight, it seems. But the shocking part was that this was coming from the state’s side. I felt almost disoriented for about a day. Like the city prosecutor’s office suddenly pulled off a rubber mask and underneath was a scowling defense attorney.”
Be sure to check out a special episode of the “Serial” podcast that was put on Tuesday. In that episode, Koenig said, “(Monday), there was a lot of talk about fairness, but most of what the state put in that motion to vacate, all the actual evidence, was either known or knowable to cops and prosecutors back in 1999. So even on a day when the government publicly recognizes its own mistakes, it’s hard to feel cheered about a triumph of fairness. Because we’ve built a system that takes more than 20 years to self-correct. And that’s just this one case.”
Pew reports
For this item, I turn it over to Poynter media business analyst Rick Edmonds.
The Pew Research Center released Tuesday its latest “fact sheet” reports on news — one on news consumption by platform, the other about preferred social media sites. The findings are consistent with earlier reports: Facebook is the preferred social media news source, followed by YouTube, and digital news consumption gains ground every year on other platforms.
Still, a few tasty nuggets jumped out:
- The loss of market share from print to digital continues, but that has become old news. Now television is seeing a bigger loss. Its share of those who get news has fallen to 31%, and digital’s advantage as the preferred source grew by 6 percentage points.
- News consumption on every major platform (digital, TV, radio, print) fell again in 2022, after also falling from 2020 to 2021. That suggests some combination of a news cycle that no longer commands as much interest and more people who have stopped engaging with the news because it is too repetitive and depressing.
- None of the 11 social media platforms had regular consumers who were more likely to be Republican or lean Republican than to be Democrats. Evidently, conservatives tend to go elsewhere.
The results were based on a survey of more than 11,000 adults conducted in July and August.
A reliable return
CNN’s “Reliable Sources” newsletter about the media has been on hiatus since the network canceled the TV show of the same name last month and pushed out host Brian Stelter, who co-wrote the newsletter with CNN media reporter Oliver Darcy.
Now comes word that a reimagined “Reliable Sources” newsletter will debut next week with Darcy as the lead writer. According to The Hollywood Reporter’s Alex Weprin, the revamped newsletter will publish four days a week — down from six days a week. Darcy told Weprin the newsletter will have a “more concise format” and will “continue to tackle issues relating to newsrooms, partisan media, social media, podcasts, and streaming services.”
Weprin wrote the newsletter will “be organized around specific sections so readers can quickly find the section they are looking for.”
Speaking of CNN …
Variety’s Brian Steinberg writes about CNN in “CNN’s Morning Plan Will Face A.M. Scramble.”
CNN announced last week that prime-time host Don Lemon will move to mornings to host a show with Poppy Harlow and Kaitlan Collins. Steinberg wrote, “Collins will be dispatched often to cover big stories on the ground, while Lemon and Harlow will be able to mix it up while focusing not only on big headlines but also popular culture.”
Steinberg spoke with Jim Bell, a longtime executive producer of NBC’s “Today” who is now head of strategy for NewsBreak, a local news and information platform, and added, “CNN’s new trio represents the latest effort by the news networks to devise a winning a.m. formula. Top producers in the genre say the goal isn’t just to deliver headlines and warm moments. ‘You are letting these people into your home at your most vulnerable time of day, the morning, and you wouldn’t want anyone else in your home, but you’re going to let these people in,’ says Bell.”
An inexcusable rant
A St. Louis radio show host, who also is a TV anchor for the local Fox affiliate, went on a profanity-laced rant against his female radio co-host last week. The comments came off the air, but were recorded and sent anonymously to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
The Post-Dispatch’s Joe Holleman reported, “(Vic) Faust used profanity at least 40 times in a roughly four-minute rant that berated co-host Crystal Cooper for, among other things, her weight and her parenting skills.” (The Post-Dispatch story has a bleeped-out version of the rant. You can also hear an edited version here.) Cooper defends herself in the audio clip and uses a few curse words herself, but nothing like Faust’s verbal attacks, which were, in a word, disgusting.
Faust called Cooper “fat,” “stupid” and “nasty,” and said, “Your kids have a (expletive) terrible mom. I feel sorry for them.” From what I could tell listening to the rant, Faust seemed to be upset that Cooper poked fun at him on the air.
The radio show Faust co-hosts is on KFNS (100.7 FM). It’s a hard-rock station known as “The Viper.” Holleman reported that Faust has been a main news anchor at KTVI (Channel 2), a St. Louis Fox affiliate, since 2015. Faust seemed to confirm to Holleman that the audio is authentic, and said there was “background” to the story, but did not comment beyond that.
Holleman has since reported that “Faust was not on the air Monday and the radio show appears to have been put on hold.” As of Tuesday, Holleman reported the TV station’s management has not responded to messages seeking comment.
Brotherly love