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	<title>The Rumpus.net &#187; Richard Parks</title>
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		<title>The Rumpus Interview with Josh Wolf</title>
		<link>http://therumpus.net/2010/05/the-rumpus-interview-with-josh-wolf/</link>
		<comments>http://therumpus.net/2010/05/the-rumpus-interview-with-josh-wolf/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 06 May 2010 07:01:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Richard Parks</dc:creator>
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		<category><![CDATA[politics]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://therumpus.net/?p=51493</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[At an anti-G8 demonstration in San Francisco in 2005, police and demonstrators clashed. Josh Wolf, then 23, videotaped the whole thing. When he refused to turn over his tapes to a federal grand jury, Wolf was jailed for 226 days—longer than any journalist in U.S. history for protecting sources. While still in federal prison, he [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em><img class="alignleft" src="http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4041/4583473204_4dd8104cc4_m.jpg" alt="" width="120" height="97" />At an anti-G8 demonstration in San  Francisco in 2005, police and demonstrators clashed. <a href="http://joshwolf.net/blog/">Josh Wolf</a>, then  23, videotaped the whole thing. When  he refused to turn over his tapes to a federal grand jury,  Wolf was jailed for 226 days—longer than  any journalist in U.S. history for protecting sources.<span id="more-51493"></span> While still in federal prison, he was awarded a Journalist of the Year  Award from the Society of Professional Journalists.  Since his release, Wolf has run for Mayor of San Francisco, <a href="http://www.colbertnation.com/the-colbert-report-videos/88497/june-12-2007/josh-wolf">appeared  on Colbert</a>, and worked as a reporter at the  Daily Post, a free daily in San Mateo County. </em></p><p><em>A self-styled independent journalist   with a </em>cinema verité<em> approach to covering protests, Wolf follows  controversy—and controversy follows him.  His critics say his involvement in  advocacy discredits him as a journalist.  In November, <a href="http://bayarea.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/04/14/the-curious-case-of-journalist-josh-wolf-round-two/">he locked himself inside Wheeler Hall at UC Berkeley  with a group of students protesting the  UC tuition hike</a>. Now a student at the Graduate School of Journalism,  Wolf faces possible suspension as a result—though he maintains he  was there strictly as member of the press.  He has contributed footage of UC protests to </em> Democracy Now!<em>, the J school website </em><a href="http://oaklandnorth.net/"> Oakland North</a><em>, and national networks including </em> ABC News<em>.</em></p><p><em>I sat down with Wolf in the  sun-splashed,  wisteria-festooned courtyard of the J school, where we met last fall  as classmates in the documentary program. </em></p><p><em>***<br /></em></p><p><strong>The Rumpus:</strong> Maybe we should  start with some Josh Wolf-style transparency. Should we be transparent?  We’re kind of friends.</p><p><strong>Josh Wolf:</strong> We’re both students  at the journalism school, and certainly friends. At what point do you  end up having to disclose that? By the end of the year I had at the <em> Post</em> calling [San Mateo County DA Steve Wagstaffe] every day,  I felt like he was kind of a friend. Reading about <a href="http://www.mercurynews.com/news/ci_15016386?nclick_check=1">him in the stolen  iPhone scandal</a>, I feel like calling him up and being like, “Hey buddy,  what going on here? Have you talked to your brother Jim about this?”  When you know the DA’s brother is a first-amendment attorney named  Jim, that kind of goes beyond the standard source relationship. But  we don’t hang out. I haven’t called him in the year since I stopped  working there.</p><p><strong>Rumpus:</strong> Did this issue come  up at Wheeler Hall?</p><p><strong>Wolf:</strong> I didn’t know the people  at Wheeler Hall.</p><p><strong>Rumpus: </strong> But you’re in trouble now for being in collusion with the people at  Wheeler Hall.</p><p><strong>Wolf: </strong> The University acknowledges that my role there was as a member of the  press. I’m certainly not neutral about my tuition going up, but I  can honestly say that I didn’t know the vast majority of those people  until I found myself locked in a building with them, covering what they  were doing. The <em>New York Times</em> ran a story that mentioned that  the UC police said that they didn’t see a press badge around my neck.  Lo and behold, after that article ran, the Student Conduct Office had  another conversation with UCPD where they said, yes, in fact, we saw  the press badge. The University’s perspective isn’t that I wasn’t  there as a journalist, it’s that it doesn’t matter—that student  journalists are students before they’re journalists.</p><div class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 310px"><img src="http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4055/4583478862_853365d26a_o.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="449" /><p class="wp-caption-text">Photo by Steve Rhodes</p></div><p><strong>Rumpus: </strong> You seem to find yourself in situations as a journalist where questions  about your involvement in activism are raised. Is that an issue that  you’re intentionally forcing?</p><p><strong>Wolf: </strong> I have never violated any protocol or code of conduct for any for any  publication I’ve ever worked at. For the most part, my activism consists   of finding stories that I think are important and don’t get attention  and self-publishing about them. I think that can be construed as  activism.  I mean, clearly I’m going to self-publish about things that I think  need attention. I think there is an editorial decision—there is a  bias there. To commit journalism without an economic engine is a form  of activism. But I think it’s ludicrous to think that because I publish  things without an established outlet I should be precluded from working  with other publications. That’s just paradoxical.</p><p><strong>Rumpus: </strong> How would you characterize your coverage of what’s going on at UC?</p><p><strong>Wolf: </strong> I’d definitely say my relationship to the larger issue of student  protests is not at the level that the <em>New York Times</em> would feel  is appropriate. It’s somewhere between gonzo journalism and embedded  journalism. And I do have a perspective—I don’t like paying more  for tuition that I can’t afford. But I don’t think that my coverage  is any less honest, and I think that I’ve been quite truthful about  my perspective. I think that that’s the line for, “What is journalism?”  I don’t think that journalism is about not being involved and not  having a perspective, I think it’s about disclosing your perspective  when appropriate and necessary. It’s actually more necessary than  is done. No one discloses when they report on a bank robbery that they  think bank robbery is a bad thing—but they probably do. We just don’t  go that far. Maybe we should. Maybe when you report on McDonald’s  earnings for the business section of your paper, maybe you should  mention  you had a Big Mac for dinner.</p><p><strong>Rumpus: </strong> Where does the decision about your suspension stand?</p><p><strong>Wolf: </strong> They offered me a formal censure instead of a suspension—I could just  keep myself out of this issue and get on with my schooling. But I think  there’s a policy shift that needs to happen. The University should  be an atmosphere where student journalists can freely cover what’s  going on in their University the same way that journalists from outside  the student population could cover it. Just because they let me off  with a warning this time, what about next time? I don’t want to be  in a position of saying, “I could cover that, but the University could  kick me out of school. Let me call my friend and give this story to  him because he’s not a student.” At the point that we have student  journalists feeling they can’t cover important stories, then we have  a crisis of press—of democracy—on our campus. I can’t just take  the warning.</p><p><strong>Rumpus: </strong> We’re being taught by people who were at the <em>Washington Post</em> and the <em>New York Times</em>. Has the faculty been supportive of you?</p><p><strong>Wolf: </strong> Definitely they’ve been supportive. In terms of the teachers that  are coming from the straight-and-narrow, old-school news approach, one  teacher’s perspective is the only thing we need to know about ethics  is, do I want a job? From that logic, I guess I made an ethical slip  if this is going to prevent me from getting a job. At the end of the  day, we’re citizens first and journalists second. This old-world way  of thinking that you surrender parts of your role as a citizen because  you’re a journalist seems antiquated and not really sensible. We have  this idea that journalism is this lifestyle that involves not taking  a stand on anything.</p><p><strong>Rumpus:</strong> That you’re always  under contract as a journalist.</p><p><strong><img class="alignleft" src="http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4041/4583473204_4dd8104cc4_m.jpg" alt="" width="240" height="195" />Wolf: </strong> That your duty as a journalist is to not have an opinion or pretend  that you don’t. There’s this great big lie. Journalists are often  the most opinionated people I know, but they build their careers on  pretending they’re not, and there’s something greatly dishonest  about that. To me the basic tenets of journalism are honesty and  transparency.  This neutrality—when you’re not really neutral—goes against both  of those.</p><p><strong>Rumpus:</strong> So that’s your project.  You’re trying to change that paradigm, for the future Josh Wolfs?</p><p><strong>Wolf:</strong> For the future everyone.  For the person who watches Fox News and thinks it’s fair and balanced.  There are people who think Stephen Colbert isn’t a comedian. We have  a crisis of media literacy and we have perpetuated this lie that  journalists  are neutral. Our capital is based on being these dis-invested  individuals  and I think we need to change that. We all have investments. We all  have perspectives.<br /><h3 class='related_post_title_no'>Related Posts:</h3><ul class='related_post_no'><li>No related posts&#8230;</li></ul>]]></content:encoded>
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