What's wrong with science journalism in the U.K.?

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johnnydawg68

Chairperson, People's Front of Saint Domingo
Science in the Telegraph and the Daily Mail: What’s wrong with British journalism?
By Daniel Engber | Posted Tuesday, May 29, 2012, at 6:45 AM ET
| Posted Tuesday, May 29, 2012, at 6:45 AM ET
Slate.com
Dodgy Boffins

What's wrong with science journalism in the U.K.?

For a few hours last week, I'd planned to write a column about the "five-second rule." Scientists at Manchester Metropolitan University in England had released a study showing that some foods (ham, cookies) were safer to eat than others (dried fruit, pasta) after being left on the floor to collect germs. The Huffington Post picked up the story, as did Gizmodo and Good Morning America and the TODAY Show. But the research—if that's even the right word to use here—was rotten from the start.

More damning was the story's overseas origin. The five-second study arrived in the American press by way of the Daily Mail, which explained in its own coverage that the work had been funded by a manufacturer of cleaning products, and then advised readers to replace their mop heads every three months so as to "minimize risk" from dangerous bacteria. When I contacted Manchester Metropolitan University for more details, I learned that the "researchers" and "scientists" described in media reports amounted to one person—a lab tech named Kathy Lees, who did not respond to my inquiries.

Let's not single out the Mancunians, though: Industry-funded science fluff litters the whole of the British Isles. Also in the past few weeks, the U.K. press fawned over a comely chip-shop girl from Kent who was found by a national television network to possess a scientifically validated, perfect face, while the British version of HuffPo reported on a mathematical formula for the "perfect sandwich"—produced by a University of Warwick physicist in collaboration with a major bread manufacturer. Spurious mathematical formulae concocted at the behest of PR firms compose their own journalism beat in England: In recent years, we've seen the perfect boiled egg, the perfect day, the perfect breasts, and many more examples of scientists getting paid to turn life into algebra. As a naive magazine intern, I once took an assignment to write up one of these characteristically English equations—a means of calculating the perfect horror movie, in that case. The team of mathematicians behind the research turned out to be a couple of recent grads from King's College London, who'd watched some movies and gotten drunk on vodka on behalf of Sky Broadcasting. "We only spent a couple of hours doing it," one of them told me, "and didn't put all that much thought into whether it works or how accurate it is."

I'm not the first to notice this trend—see Ben Goldacre's excellent "Bad Science" column in the Guardian, for example—but it has started to worry me. A great garbage patch of science journalism has been forming across the Atlantic, and bits of flotsam are washing up on our shores. What makes the Brits so susceptible to these ginned-up studies and publicity stunts? And what happens when their faux research starts drifting across the Internet?

This sounds like jingoism, I know. Vince Kiernan, a veteran reporter who now studies the history and practice of science journalism at Georgetown, doesn't see much difference between the coverage in Britain and America. Science journalism is globalized, he told me, and U.S. businesses employ their own set of PR shenanigans. Maybe he's right: Even the New York Times makes a practice of letting companies tout their self-serving, unpublished research from time to time in its opinion pages. But it seems to me the Times would never run the shameless labvertisements that get play in the British press. More to the point, I don't think you'd find these cash-for-science stories even in our smaller, less scrupulous newspapers. (Television news may be a different story.) And I can't remember ever seeing a product-sponsored mathematical formula that showed up first in the American press. Why not?

I posed this question to a few of my favorite science journalists in both countries and got some vague answers. Not all British newspapers operate according to the same (low) standards, my sources told me, but even at the best venues it can be a struggle to stay out of the gutter. "When I was at The Times [of London], I judged my success as much by what I kept out of the paper as what I got into it," said Mark Henderson, former science editor and author of The Geek Manifesto. (He also claims to have taken a hard line on dodgy formulae.) The Telegraph, now one of that nation’s most egregious purveyors of junk science, by all accounts maintained a solid reputation until a few years ago, when two of its best reporters left the staff.

British journalists also tend to see themselves as tradesmen rather than professionals. They learn on the job. They're more interested in storytelling and entertainment than they are in balance and standards. As a result, some of them don't give a crap. Journalists might indulge in a shameless bit of pseudoscience for the sake of a little fun. They’re just having a laugh.

I'd been hoping for something more specific, so I asked Vince Kiernan to speculate. It could have to do with the history of science coverage in both countries, he said. American journalism started to professionalize in 1934, with the formation of the National Association of Science Writers. "Then in the ’40s, ’50s, and ’60s, the empire strikes back." As the scientific establishment grew in wealth and influence after World War II, its leaders began to push their own, conservative agenda on the members of the NASW. They doubled down on the idea that only "legitimate science"—that is to say, studies that were peer-reviewed and published in academic journals—should be reported to the public. The real science news, they said, was Big Science news. American journalists learned to follow their rules. Could things have developed along a different path in Britain?

While mulling this over—and chanting U.S.A.! U.S.A.! U.S.A.! to myself in front of the computer—I noticed something about all these lousy British science stories that had escaped my attention. Yes, they described fake studies conducted by disreputable scientists, and they used the data promote a product. But they were honest about it. Almost every story announced its lack of quality without shame or serious effort at deception. Scientists at Manchester Metropolitan University studied the five-second rule; a cleaning-supplies company called Vileda paid for the work; and now for a message from our sponsor …

But when the stories drift to the United States, via aggregator sites and blogs and TV news programs, that transparency can boil right off. The five-second rule has "long been considered an old wives' tale, but now actual scientists are actually testing it," said a reporter on Good Morning America—with no mention of the cleaning supplies outfit that sponsored the research. Neither did HuffPo or Gizmodo point out the conflict of interest. That's the danger of receiving this crap from overseas: Once it gets here, we repackage it in the self-serious American style. What starts out as entertainment ends up looking like real news.

http://www.slate.com/articles/health_and_science/science/2012/05/science_in_the_telegraph_and_the_daily_mail_what_s_wrong_with_british_journalism_.html
 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/series/badscience

Each week, Ben Goldacre skewers the enemies of reason. If you're a journalist who misrepresents science for the sake of a headline, a politician more interested in spin than evidence, or an advertiser who loves pictures of molecules in little white coats, then beware: your days are numbered.

From the article: "I'm not the first to notice this trend—see Ben Goldacre's excellent "Bad Science" column in the Guardian, for example—but it has started to worry me".

Journalism as a whole seems to be pretty shoddy over there, from what lids on here have said and from what I can tell. This article sheds a little light on it..."British journalists also tend to see themselves as tradesmen rather than professionals. They learn on the job. They're more interested in storytelling and entertainment than they are in balance and standards. As a result, some of them don't give a crap".

Certainly seems to be true from what I read in the sports pages.
 
It's hardly 'science journalism', it's simply sh*te journalism. Awful tabloid nonsense, written purely to entertain people on a 30 minute lunch break, half-reading an article while they stuff a sandwich down their neck and laugh about 'science' with their mate.

Not sure what this line's is getting at either, to be honest.

The Telegraph, now one of that nation’s most egregious purveyors of junk science, by all accounts maintained a solid reputation until a few years ago, when two of its best reporters left the staff.

Read New Scientist if you want science - The Mirror if you want to hear about the perfect baked bean.
 
A major part of it is that the journalists, often including the Science editor, don't actually understand any Science. They don't read through the paper in question just the press releases, which tend to be sensationalised somewhat anyway.
This combined with a lack of knowledge of the scientific method and/or statistics means that the already sensationalised stuff gets turned into complete bollocks, resulting in the Daily Mailesque "Everything Causes Cancer".

This and the fact that the tabloids are quite happy to copy press releases word for word i.e. 'churnalism' is what is responsible for it IMO. One of my lecturers told me a story a few months back, where a journalist from the Daily Mail rang up to see if he'd comment on a Russian 'scientist' who was claiming that he'd found evidence of life on Venus (resembling a scorpion) in the images from the Soviet missions to Venus, despite the fact that the surface of Venus is hot enough to melt lead. I'm not sure whether they ever printed the story.

Edit: It did get printed
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencet...t-claims-seen-scorpion-probe-photographs.html
 

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A major part of it is that the journalists, often including the Science editor, don't actually understand any Science. They don't read through the paper in question just the press releases, which tend to be sensationalised somewhat anyway.
This combined with a lack of knowledge of the scientific method and/or statistics means that the already sensationalised stuff gets turned into complete bollocks, resulting in the Daily Mailesque "Everything Causes Cancer".

This and the fact that the tabloids are quite happy to copy press releases word for word i.e. 'churnalism' is what is responsible for it IMO. One of my lecturers told me a story a few months back, where a journalist from the Daily Mail rang up to see if he'd comment on a Russian 'scientist' who was claiming that he'd found evidence of life on Venus (resembling a scorpion) in the images from the Soviet missions to Venus, despite the fact that the surface of Venus is hot enough to melt lead. I'm not sure whether they ever printed the story.

Edit: It did get printed
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencet...t-claims-seen-scorpion-probe-photographs.html

Depressing.
 
I had to do an essay on this before Christmas.

My conclusion was basically if you want to read about real science put in as simple terms as possible, read something like New Scientist (which can be a fascinating read BTW), but if you want random crap which has no basic evidence then read newspaper articles and the like.

TV shows like Horizon are also really good depending on what part of science you're into.
 
Errr they've got a nerve. I know it's not quite the same but the adverts in the US are absolutely amazing as far a using baseless "science" and things being ok as long as you add the disclaimer at the bottom about the product not being intended to cure or prevent diseases. They have those balance bands constantly on TV when clearly it's muscle memory that makes the difference on those tests and you could paint one hand blue and get the same effect. Constant infomercials taking up half hour slots on major TV channels and they're worried about our newspapers. Dear USA, wind your neck in please.
 
Journalism as a whole seems to be pretty shoddy over there, from what lids on here have said and from what I can tell. This article sheds a little light on it..."British journalists also tend to see themselves as tradesmen rather than professionals. They learn on the job. They're more interested in storytelling and entertainment than they are in balance and standards. As a result, some of them don't give a crap".

The standard of journalism in this country is appalling frankly. The ammount of blatantly untrue stories that make it to the dailys is scary. There's a famous case of a journalist just straight out making up a story for a laugh, about the EU banning bendy bananas I think, and about six papers printed it without doing even the most basic fact checking.

And that's not even getting to the cesspit of morality a lot have.

Mind you yanks can hardly act superior about it. At least we don't have Fox news,
 

It is an embarrassment having the likes of the sun and the daily mail broadcasting their evil stupid sh**e across the world. It's amazing how quickly their 'science' news stories get into the mass consciousness and are believed unquestionably. But come on, I think you have a bigger battle with ignorance in the states.
 
Errr they've got a nerve. I know it's not quite the same but the adverts in the US are absolutely amazing as far a using baseless "science" and things being ok as long as you add the disclaimer at the bottom about the product not being intended to cure or prevent diseases. They have those balance bands constantly on TV when clearly it's muscle memory that makes the difference on those tests and you could paint one hand blue and get the same effect. Constant infomercials taking up half hour slots on major TV channels and they're worried about our newspapers. Dear USA, wind your neck in please.

There's a difference between journalism and the adverts your talking about...or at least there should be.
 
It is an embarrassment having the likes of the sun and the daily mail broadcasting their evil stupid sh**e across the world. It's amazing how quickly their 'science' news stories get into the mass consciousness and are believed unquestionably. But come on, I think you have a bigger battle with ignorance in the states.


Excellent post.
 
Read all the way to the end...it's not a smug piece about how better the US is at everything. But there does seem to be a difference in print journalism.

Here's how I look at it. I'm not a science guy. Was never good at it in school. But I like reading about it. And I ought to be able to that in a newspaper FFS. That USED to be what they were for. The problem is that a lot of American news agencies are lazy too, and they assume the standard of journalism in the UK at certain newspapers is up to standard.
 

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