McBride, a distinguished media ethicist, fills the newsroom watchdog role at a time when many other major news outlets have abandoned it.
“I discovered NPR as a journalism student at the University of Missouri in the late 1980s, and converted my parents into supporters during a trip home to Toledo, Ohio,” McBride said in a recent column. “I was listening from the West Coast to a bit by humor essayist Molly Ivins in the early morning hours of Sept. 11, 2001, the last time the world collectively changed.
As an ethics specialist at The Poynter Institute, the nonprofit where my colleagues and I help newsrooms elevate their journalism in service of democracy, I’ve admired the diligence and thoughtfulness of NPR’s extensive ethics code. Over the years, I’ve lent my own expertise in covering suicide, sexual assault, mental health, mass shootings, immigration and vulnerable people to many an NPR journalist. As the Public Editor, I aim to share that expertise with you, the audience, as we collectively work to understand and improve the work at NPR.
For NPR to be consistently great, in my view it must do three things. First, it must constantly deepen its connection to the audience, while building awareness of what that audience needs. Second, NPR journalists must embrace the highest standards of their craft. And finally, NPR must expand its audience and ensure that its journalism be more reflective of a diverse American public (a goal it has openly declared one of its highest priorities.)”
The office of Public Editor was created to ensure NPR is responsive to the concerns of listeners and to help NPR remain steadfast in its mission to present fair, accurate and comprehensive information in service of democracy.
While the Public Editor position is funded by NPR, and is selected by NPR’s CEO, she has complete autonomy to select topics, investigate complaints and address issues.
Follow NPR’s Public Editor on Facebook & Twitter @PublicEditor or at NPR.org/PublicEditor
What is a Public Editor?
The Public Editor stands as a source of independent accountability. Created by NPR’s board of directors, the Public Editor serves as a bridge between the newsroom and the audience. The Public Editor strives to both listen to the audience’s concerns and explain the newsroom’s work and ambitions.
In the age of social media and fake news going viral in nanoseconds, the work of the Public Editor is more important than ever. Split-second newsroom decisions can generate massive misinformation campaigns, as in the case of the recent NPR Public Editor column, In Choosing The Wrong Photo, NPR Editors Paved The Way For Partisan Attack. As Kelly McBride wrote, “that mistaken photo selection created an inaccuracy that fueled an overblown political narrative captured by the hashtag #defundNPR.”
“‘Unarmed Black Man’ Doesn’t Mean What You Think It Means,” is another example of concerns the office addresses. The column generated thousands of emails, clicks and shares as journalists and Americans strive for more balanced language that doesn’t rely on racist tropes.