In the rush for scoops, cause no harm- CheChe Lazaro

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Broadcaster CheChe Lazaro is presented the McLuhan Award by Jamie Christoff of the Canadian Embassy (photos: Cong Corrales)

IN THE DAILY RUSH to cover stories of disaster, conflict, or corruption, journalists must never forget that most basic tenet of journalism: Cause no harm to the victims.

This was the reminder delivered by multiawarded broadcast journalist CheChe Lazaro to more than a hundred students, teachers, and media professionals during the Jaime V. Ongpin Journalism Seminar in Makati City on Thursday.

Lazaro, one of six outstanding journalists chosen to sit in a panel to discuss the issue of Journalism and Accountability, was also awarded the 2014 Marshall McLuhan Fellowship award by the Embassy of Canada for her outstanding contributions to broadcast journalism.

“When disaster strikes, there is the adrenaline rush, the excited rush to the site. We all want to be the first. Our mental set is to get the story quickly, to get an exclusive,” Lazaro said. “In that attempt, we go for what can be ultimately sensational and not ethical.”

“One of the tenets (of journalism) is not to cause harm to the subjects of our stories or the people we interviewed,” Lazaro said.

Lazaro recalled an incident after the July 1990 earthquake, when reporters acted insensitively by interviewing a young child who was still trapped in the rubble of a collapsed building in Cabanatuan. The child would later die of her injuries.

“I want to caution all of us who are practitioners. I hope there will come a time, maybe not in our lifetime, when we move away from the sensational scoop mentality and the entertainment factor that we look for in our stories,” Lazaro added.

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Joining her in the panel were five other journalists chosen for their outstanding work by the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility, the organizer of the JVO Journalism Seminar and the Marshall McLuhan Fellowship. These were Nancy Carvajal of the Philippine Daily Inquirer, Steve Dailisan of GMA Network, Joey Gabieta of the PDI, Miriam Grace Go of Rappler, and Jake Soriano, a freelance journalist.

Go noted how the news media often covers conflict only from the point of view of the warring groups, while ignoring the more difficult and complex story of the roots of the conflict. As well, Go pointed out that journalists should look into problems of governance and corruption in the conflict areas, because these are often the cause of poverty that breeds insurgency.

“Conflict coverage is not just about the firefights or the negotiations,” Go said. “It is a daily coverage where you try to make local authorities accountable.”

Go also said that while it was important to go into the detail of daily coverage, journalists should also learn to take a step back for a broader picture. For example, Go said that while the country was shocked by the depth and scale of the pork barrel scandal that was exposed by the series of stories written by Carvajal last year, the pieces of the puzzle could have been gleaned from the yearly reports published by the Commission on Audit.

“Every day you break the news, but at one point you need to step back and see a pattern and come up with an investigative or analytical report,” Go said.

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Carvajal was also awarded the Certificate of the Most Outstanding Journalist of 2013 for her series of reports on the pork barrel scam.

“We compiled a list of journalists whose content and craft were cheered on the CMFR’s monitor,” explained Dean Luis V. Teodoro, member of the selection committee and CMFR deputy director. He added that CMFR monitors the major broadsheets, news and public affairs programs of TV networks and online news websites.

He said the initial list compiled by the CMFR staff this year had about a hundred journalists. On their first meeting, CMFR trimmed this list down to 40. On the second meeting, they trimmed the list down to a shortlist of 17 journalists, which they then submitted to the selection committee.

As a McLuhan fellow, Lázaro will go on a ten-day lecture tour in Canada.

Lázaro started her career in journalism working as a reporter for ABS-CBN. From July 1986 to December 1987, she served as the director and manager of the network’s public affairs department.

In 1988, she left ABS-CBN and created her own production company, Probe Productions. Under Probe Productions, she has produced several documentary programs: 5 and Up for then ABC 5, now TV5, The Probe Team, I-Witness, and Cheche Lázaro Presents for GMA Network.

It was when she was with GMA Network that she produced the award-winning documentary on the MV Doña Paz maritime tragedy.

From 1992 to 1995, Lázaro headed the broadcast department at the University of the Philippines. She is also a former member of the board advisor of the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism.

Lázaro has garnered numerous awards and citations from the Kapisanan ng mga Brodkaster ng Pilipinas, Golden Dove Awards, Catholic Mass Media Awards, New York Festival and University of the Philippine’s ‘Gawad Plaridel Award.’ Cong B. Corrales

Happy 25th, CMFR!

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CMFR’s Melinda de Jesus with PCIJ’s Malou Mangahas, CCJD’s Red Batario, and NUJP’s Weng Paraan (photo:Cong Corrales)

TWENTY-FIVE YEARS ago, two media organizations came into being in the midst of the turmoil and tempest of the growing Philippine press. In many ways they were sister organizations that had many shared advocacies, many of these dealing with the way the free-wheeling Philippine media was handling the issues and headlines of the day.

The Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ) is proud to be a partner and twin sister of the Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility (CMFR), the watchdog of watchdogs that has taken on the hugely unpopular and daunting task of calling the Philippine press to account for its enormous power and influence in Philippine society.

This short video is a tribute to the CMFR for its role in trying to professionalize Philippine media, and its efforts to push Filipino journalists to further improve their craft. The video was produced and edited by PCIJ Multimedia Producer Julius D. Mariveles.

And here is a short clip of CMFR Executive Director Melinda Quintos de Jesus blowing out the candles of a cake celebrating the CMFR’s 25th year.

Scenes from PCIJ’s 25th year

WE APOLOGIZE for the apparent hangover from our 25th year anniversary celebrations, but a quarter century really is significant by anyone’s standards.

And with that, we would like to show you some more scenes from the housewarming activity for the PCIJ’s new office in Quezon City, followed by more scenes from PCIJ founding Executive Director Sheila Coronel’s public lecture on Watchdog Journalism in the 21st Century.

We begin with the scenes from both activities last Friday, as edited by PCIJ Multimedia Producer Cong B. Corrales.

And we follow this with words of remembrance and recognition by PCIJ founders and friends, as edited by PCIJ Multimedia Producer Julius D. Mariveles. Enjoy!

PCIJ has a new home!

FRIDAY, JUNE 20, was not just the 25th anniversary of the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism. Aside from celebrating its 25th birthday, the PCIJ also inaugurated its new home.

Two and a half decades after its founding, the Center finally found a permanent home at #11 Matimtiman Street, UP Village, nestled in a neighborhood that borders the state university. Friends, family, and partners of the PCIJ came on Friday for a housewarming ceremony for the PCIJ’s new home. It is, as everyone loved to recall, a far cry from the PCIJ’s early days of living in a borrowed office using borrowed desks and typewriters.

Video produced and edited by PCIJ Multimedia Producer Julius D. Mariveles.

Oh, and you should also know that we have new phone numbers to go with our new house!

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Coronel on Watchdog Journ in the 21st Century

ON THE 25th anniversary of the Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism, Sheila Coronel, PCIJ founding Executive Director and Dean of Academic Affairs of Columbia University in New York, delivered a lecture on Doing Watchdog Journalism in the 21st Century.

This is a recording of Coronel’s lecture, held at 6:30 p.m. at the Sulo Hotel in Quezon City on June 20, 2014.

The following text is a live blog of Coronel’s lecture:

Sheila Coronel began by saying that the PCIJ is one of only two non-profit investigative centers that were set up in 1989, and the first in Asia, as well as the first in the developing world. Certainly, Coronel said, it was clear that the PCIJ is one of the few investigative journalism centers run by women.

Coronel recalled how the nine founders of the PCIJ contributed one thousand pesos each, a huge amount already in 1989, in order to set up the PCIJ. With that pooled money, the nine journalists bought second-hand typewriters and tables to use in a borrowed room of a sympathetic international media organization.

1989, Coronel recalls, was a tumultuous time, a time of coup attempts and revolutions. Yet paradoxically, it was also a good time for journalism. She said it was the time to open governments to scrutiny.

The PCIJ, Coronel said, is really a child of revolution; it would never have existed had the EDSA revolution not happened.

“The Constitution and the laws enabled us to hold those in power to account,” she said. In fact, Coronel recalls always having a copy of the Constitution in her drawer for quick and ready reference. The rules were new, and were worth being explored by journalists, she said.

However, Coronel said that if EDSA was a political revolution, we are now in the midst of what she called a technological revolution that threatens to change much of what journalists take for granted.

Coronel said this technological revolution is “redefining what journalism is, who is the journalist, what the story is, how it can be told, and how information can be disseminated.”

She said new media has radically stripped big media brands all over the world of the powers and money that they used to have.

“Our competition is now the audience. Everyone is now a journalist,” she said. “Everyone is now doing this.” This was seen during Typhoon Yolanda, when storm chasers beat mainstream media in uploading footage of the devastation, and in Syria, where much of the footage used by news organizations are actually shot by citizen journalists.

“Social media are now the primary breakers of breaking news,” she added.

With that context, Coronel asked the question: How would we investigate Joseph Estrada today?

Coronel recalled that the PCIJ investigation into Estrada’s wealth revealed he had 17 properties worth more than two billion pesos. But these days, as shown by the Janet Napoles pork barrel scandal, it is much easier to check on the lifestyles of certain people, mainly because some people cannot help but post their lifestyles on social media.

During the Estrada investigation, for example, Coronel said that PCIJ staffers had to do stake-outs, and physically trace license plate numbers. When the PCIJ tried to take a photo of a P200 million Estrada mansion in Wack-Wack, they had to take the photo of the roof of the mansion from the EDSA MRT station.

“With Estrada, we couldn’t go near because the fences were so high,” Coronel said. “But now we can use Google Earth.” Burmese activists were able to expose the magnificent palace of one Burmese general because of Google Earth, she said.

However Coronel noted that journalists must not think that internet research is the be-all and end-all of modern reportage. In the end, an investigative journalist still has to look for hard data to verify what he learned from, for example, the internet or social media.

“The Net is not a substitute for hardcore reporting,” she said. It is just a tool that enables journalists to do their investigation with less time and resources.

Coronel also noted the paradoxes that continue to afflict today’s journalists and citizens. In her younger days, she recalled that they only had three newspapers and three television stations. Now, the choices are infinite in cable TV alone. However, she says this has not necessarily translated to “greater understanding.”

“There is a gap in sense-making,” she said. The challenge, she says, is to publish data that matters to people, or data they can act on.

Yet another paradox: Coronel notes how, despite the technological advances, global press freedom has been regressing over the past few years. “The Press Freedom Indices since 2012 have been regressing, showing a narrowing of the democratic space.”

“Despite the pluralism of the internet, there has been increased concentration of media ownership globally,” she added.