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From the archives

Little Orphan Áine

A story we like to tell ourselves

Green Guides

Two books to help your garden grow

The Gorta Mór

When the blight spread

Twilight of the Pundits

The internet’s welcome transformation of public debate

Andrew Potter

The Public Intellectual in Canada

Nelson Wiseman, editor

University of Toronto Press

252 pages, softcover

ISBN: 9781442613393

Last December, my colleague at the Ottawa Citizen, a Parliament Hill reporter named Glen McGregor, wrote a blogpost entitled “Toward a Dogme95 of Political Reporting.” It was a trim little call for a return to journalism’s basics: pick up the phone, work sources, get stories. It asked reporters to stop filing easy stories skimmed from the froth of partisan posturing or from social media, and to be more judicious about quoting the always-voluble “senior party sources.” It was fine advice. But the first bullet point of McGregor’s manifesto caught a lot of people off guard:

No more quoting political scientists:  It’s lazy and signals the reporter couldn’t find any other apparently neutral or objective source to talk. These people work in academics, not politics, so I’m not interested in their opinions on anything but their own research.

Andrew Potter wrote The Authenticity Hoax and, with Joseph Heath, The Rebel Sell.

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