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Jack Shafer
Jack Shafer
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Jack Shafer (born November 14, 1951) is an American journalist who wrote about media for Politico until June 2024.[1] Prior to joining Politico, he worked for Reuters, wrote and edited for Slate, and edited two city weeklies, Washington City Paper and SF Weekly.[when?][not verified in body]

Much of Shafer's writing focuses on what he sees as a lack of precision and rigor in reporting by the mainstream media,[citation needed] which he says "thinks its duty is to keep you cowering in fright."[2] He has frequently written about media coverage of the War on Drugs.[not verified in body]

Early life and education

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Jack Shafer was born on November 14, 1951,[where?][citation needed] and grew up in Kalamazoo, Michigan, describing himself as "the son of lapsed Catholics".[3] As a newspaper boy in his youth, he delivered hardcopies of the Kalamazoo Gazette for five years.[3] He chose not to do an undergraduate journalism degree, graduating instead from Western Michigan University with a B.A. in communications.[when?][3] In his first five years after graduation, Shafer lived in California, "then hitched through Asia, New Zealand and Australia".[3]

Career

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Shafer has been writing and editing as an American journalist since the 1980s, and writing as a columnist since the early 2000s.[3] After his postgraduate travels, he returned to the United States and freelanced until being hired as a managing editor by the libertarian magazine Inquiry; he would remain with it until it ceased publication in 1984.[3] Early, Shafer would also do editing for SF Weekly.[when?][citation needed]

Washington City Paper's Russ Smith hired Shafer as an editor in 1985—described by Mark Lisheron of the American Journalism Review as "his [Shafer's] real break"—a position he'd hold until he joined Slate magazine online, after departing City Paper in 1995.[3] About Smith's hiring, Shafer said, "I will always be grateful, although I reserve the right to be peculiar about how I express that gratitude".[3]

At Slate, he wrote about the media and other topics; his 15 years of writing and editing there included penning its "Press Box" column, which he began in 2000.[3] He was laid off with a number of others by Slate in August 2011,[3] going on to work for Reuters, before joining Politico. [when?][citation needed] Shafer wrote most recently about media for Politico (through June 2024).[1]

Significant series

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Posner plagiarism reporting

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Responding to and confirming a reader tip, Shafer reported that Gerald Posner, The Daily Beast's chief investigative reporter, had plagiarized—presented "identical or nearly identical"—sentences (five in number) from a single story published by The Miami Herald.[4][5] Thereafter, Posner issued a "no-reservation mea culpa", The Daily Beast published a correction, and Shafer responded with approval for the acknowledgment, by both, of the plagiarism.[4][5]

However, three days later, Shafer published further cases perceived as plagiarism—content from a Miami Herald blog, a Miami Herald editorial, Texas Lawyer and a health care journalism blog[6][better source needed]—from Posner's work, leading to Posner's departure from The Daily Beast.[4][7][8] Posner offered an explanation of ways in which the plagiarism might have occurred, and explanation which has received critical review.[4][7]

Perspectives

[edit]

Much of Shafer's writing focuses on what he sees as a lack of precision and rigor in reporting by the mainstream media,[according to whom?] which he says "thinks its duty is to keep you cowering in fright."[2] He has frequently written about media coverage of the War on Drugs.[citation needed]

On journalistic awards

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Shafer "famously had zero use for [journalistic] awards", which "he groused, were a parade of self-congratulatory 'industry peacockery'", and so did not seek them out (the irony of which has been noted, given articles of his, e.g., "So You Won a Pulitzer: Who Cares?").[9] In his further writing on the subject, he proposed consideration of new awards categories, including "Most Compromised Local Paper", "Most Predictable Critic", "Most Tractable White House Reporter", and "Worst Editorial Page".[9]

On his libertarianism

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Shafer wrote early in his career—through the early 1980s—for Inquiry, a libertarian magazine, and has written about "his own libertarian politics"; he has asserted in interview, however, that "they are driven in their criticism by a deep suspicion of authority more than any particular ideology".[3] In particular, he appreciates approaches to criticism that are "clear-eyed", an attribute he ascribes to two "unapologetic leftists" that he admires, A.J. Liebling and Alexander Cockburn (having written a "paean" to Liebling, whom he is said to idolise).[3]

In 2000, following the U.S. national elections, he presented his views as follows:

I agree with the Libertarian Party platform: much smaller government, much lower taxes, an end to income redistribution, repeal of the drug laws, fewer gun laws, a dismantled welfare state, an end to corporate subsidies, First Amendment absolutism, a scaled-back warfare state. (You get the idea.)"[10]

Later he wrote, "Traditionally, the state censors and marginalizes voices while private businesses tend to remain tolerant."[11]

On April 20, 2020, Shafer expressed opposition to the Local Journalism Sustainability Act, saying, "You wouldn't put a dead man on a ventilator, would you?".[12]

Rebuttals

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Judith Miller, writing in her 2015 autobiography, harshly addresses Shafer's criticism of what he termed was her "wretched" reporting on Iraq in The New York Times—in at least six of his pieces in Slate—referring to his writing as "assaults" or "personal attacks", to his own reporting as "erroneou[s]", and arguing that he "never once sought a response from me", suggesting that his motivation was to achieve "buzz and internet clicks".[13]

Personal life

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Shafer is married to Nicole Arthur, who has worked as a features editor in the Style section of The Washington Post; they have two daughters.[3] Mark Lisheron's article in the AJR describes him as "follow[ing] baseball, but... repelled by the $9 cup of beer at the park", and as one who has "force[d] himself outdoors... add[ing] birding to hiking, which has taken him from Newfoundland to the Galapagos Islands".[3]

Further reading

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Citations

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  1. ^ a b Tani, Max (June 25, 2024). "Top Reporters Leave Politico". Semafor. Retrieved September 29, 2024.
  2. ^ a b Shafer, Jack (December 14, 2010). "Stupid Drug Story of the Week". Slate.com. Retrieved April 17, 2018.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Lisheron, Mark (2012). "A Fearless Media Critic". American Journalism Review. 2012 (February/March). College Park, MD: University of Maryland, Philip Merrill College of Journalism. Retrieved March 18, 2025.
  4. ^ a b c d Graham, David A. (April 19, 2010) [February 10, 2010]. "Gerald Posner: 4 Popular Excuses for Plagiarism". Newsweek.com. Retrieved April 18, 2018.
  5. ^ a b Shafer, Jack (February 5, 2010). "Plagiarism at the Daily Beast: Gerald Posner Concedes Lifting from the Miami Herald". Slate. Archived from the original on April 7, 2023.
  6. ^ Shafer, Jack (February 8, 2010). "More Posner Plagiarism". Slate. ISSN 1091-2339. Retrieved October 3, 2024.[non-primary source needed]
  7. ^ a b Shafer, Jack (February 11, 2010). "The Posner Plagiarism Perplex: What to Make of Gerald Posner's Blog Statement". Slate. Archived from the original on June 8, 2023.
  8. ^ Graham, writing in Newsweek, op. cit., states that Posner resigned. Shafer, writing in Slate, "The Posner Plagiarism Perplex", op. cit., quotes Edward Felsenthal, The Daily Beast Executive Editor, stating that "an in-house review of Posner’s work has turned up 'additional examples of copied and unattributed material'", further stating that Posner was dismissed.
  9. ^ a b Oremus, Will (September 30, 2016). ""I Regard All of My Columns as Failures and Hate Them Equally": Jack Shafer Did as Much as Anyone to Forge Slate's Sensibility". Slate.com. Retrieved April 18, 2018.
  10. ^ Shafer, Jack (November 7, 2000). "How Slatesters Voted". Slate.com. Retrieved April 17, 2018.
  11. ^ Shafer, Jack (December 21, 2010). "Whose Internet Is It, Anyway?". Slate.com. Retrieved April 17, 2018.
  12. ^ Shafer, Jack (April 20, 2020). "Don't Waste Stimulus Money on Newspapers". Slate.com. Retrieved March 18, 2025.
  13. ^ Miller, Judith (2015). The Story: A Reporter's Journey. New York, NY: Simon and Schuster. pp. 349–350. ISBN 9781476716022. Retrieved March 18, 2025.
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Jack Shafer is an American and media critic specializing in commentary on and . He served as Politico's senior media writer from 2015 until June 2024, producing regular columns under the "" banner that scrutinized journalistic practices and industry trends. Prior to Politico, Shafer was a media columnist for from 2013 to 2014 and for from 2003 to 2011, where he built a reputation for identifying flaws in reporting, such as reliance on unverified trend narratives and insufficient analytical depth in mainstream outlets. Earlier, he edited the alternative weekly Washington City Paper in the late 1980s and early 1990s, shaping his perspective on alternative journalism amid the decline of print media. Shafer's career has intersected with industry contractions, including layoffs at in 2011 and in 2014, which he attributed to broader economic pressures rather than personal disputes. His critiques, including pointed examinations of journalistic awards like the Pulitzers for fostering complacency, have positioned him as a voice for internal reform within a field often accused of self-protection against external accountability.

Biography

Early life and education

Shafer was raised in a large family of lapsed Catholics. He studied communication, English, and mathematics at in , choosing not to pursue an in .

Personal life

Shafer is married to Nicole Arthur, whom he met while she served as an arts editor under his tenure editing Washington City Paper; he wed her six years after leaving the publication in 1994. Arthur worked as a features editor in the Style section of , later transitioning to roles including editor. The couple has two daughters.

Professional Career

Early journalism roles

Shafer entered journalism as a freelancer in Los Angeles, contributing to alternative weeklies and a political magazine during the early 1980s. In the summer of 1985, he was appointed editor of the Washington City Paper, an alternative weekly, a position he held until 1995. At Washington City Paper, Shafer expanded the publication's investigative reporting and political coverage, including persistent scrutiny of D.C. Mayor , while maintaining an independent editorial stance unbound by partisan alignment. Unable to hire a dedicated press critic for the paper, Shafer began writing media criticism himself in 1985, marking the origins of his specialization in journalistic analysis. Following his departure from Washington City Paper in 1995, Shafer served as editor of SF Weekly, another alternative weekly, for approximately one year before transitioning to online media.

Slate tenure and innovations

Jack Shafer joined as one of its founding editors in 1996, prior to the magazine's official launch under ownership and editor . In this role, he contributed to shaping the publication's early direction, drawing from his experience editing alternative weeklies such as the Washington City Paper. Shafer's tenure as a top editor emphasized an irreverent, combative style reminiscent of alt-weekly , which contrasted with Slate's more intellectual baseline tone while establishing its contrarian voice in online media. From 2000, Shafer authored the "Press Box" column, a regular feature dedicated to media criticism that ran until his in August 2011. The column, which became more consistent around 2002, dissected journalistic practices, power structures in newsrooms, and coverage flaws with concise pieces typically under 1,000 words. During his time at , Shafer also served as , continuing to influence content amid the site's evolution from property to Washington Post acquisition in 2004. Shafer's innovations at centered on advancing media accountability through pointed, skeptical analysis tailored to digital formats. He popularized critiques of "bogus trend stories," routinely exposing overhyped or thinly sourced reporting patterns in mainstream outlets, as seen in his 2007 dissection of a New York Times piece on web-weariness among youth. This approach injected historical context into contemporary media debates, such as his 2009 examination of Huffington Post's disruptive role, fostering a model of criticism that blended dyspeptic humor with optimism about journalism's adaptability. His work helped define 's sensibility as a venue for unsparing institutional scrutiny, influencing online media discourse by prioritizing brevity, irreverence, and evidence-based takedowns over deference to journalistic norms.

Later positions at Reuters and Politico

In September 2011, following his layoff from , Shafer joined as a columnist specializing in media and . In this position, he authored regular pieces critiquing journalistic practices, political coverage, and industry trends, maintaining the independent voice that characterized his prior work. described him as a "fearless media critic," emphasizing his exhaustive reporting style and analytical depth in opinion columns. His tenure at the wire service, which lasted until late 2014, allowed for expanded reach through ' global platform, though he later reflected on the period as part of broader industry belt-tightening amid economic pressures. Shafer transitioned to Politico in January 2015 as senior media writer, a role in which he continued producing columns on the intersection of media, , and accountability. At , his output focused on dissecting journalistic , coverage biases, and structural changes in the , often drawing on primary reporting and historical context to challenge prevailing narratives. editor highlighted his hiring as a boost to the outlet's media , noting his established reputation from prior roles. Over nearly a decade, Shafer's contributions included hundreds of pieces that scrutinized topics such as transparency in reporting and the impact of digital disruption on traditional outlets, solidifying his influence in Washington-based media discourse.

2024 departure and subsequent activities

In June 2024, Jack Shafer departed after nearly a decade as its senior media writer, confirming the exit amid the outlet's reduced emphasis on media criticism amid broader editorial shifts. Shafer described his tenure positively, stating, "I had a really good run with a long leash at and appreciate all the great people I worked with," but noted that "the job has changed in recent years, and they’re less interested in media coverage than they used to be." His departure coincided with those of other prominent reporters, including Alex Ward and Lara Seligman, both moving to , reflecting 's strategic pivot away from certain beats. Following his exit, Shafer transitioned to freelance media commentary, contributing opinion pieces to established outlets. In July 2025, he published "Trump's honest graft" in The Washington Post, critiquing political rent-seeking through historical parallels to Tammany Hall's George Washington Plunkitt. He also participated in a November 2025 Harper's Magazine forum alongside Jelani Cobb, Taylor Lorenz, and Max Tani, examining public distrust in media amid industry contraction and technological shifts. These contributions maintained his focus on journalistic accountability, free speech dynamics, and institutional critiques, without affiliation to a single publication as of October 2025. Shafer remained active on X (formerly Twitter) under @jackshafer, engaging with media developments such as press access policies.

Key Contributions

Press Box column and media critiques

Shafer launched the column in in 2002, where he dissected journalistic practices, media trends, and institutional shortcomings with a focus on empirical flaws in reporting rather than ideological agendas. Running weekly until his 2011 departure from the publication, the column targeted overblown narratives, such as "bogus trend stories" in outlets like , exemplified by his 2010 critique of a piece claiming criminals favored Yankees caps without supporting data. Shafer's analyses often highlighted causal weaknesses, like unsubstantiated correlations masquerading as patterns, prioritizing verifiable evidence over anecdotal hype. The column's style emphasized concision—typically under 1,000 words—paired with irreverent skepticism toward journalism's self-congratulatory conventions, such as mythologizing figures like in a 2005 two-part series that dismantled hagiographic portrayals by citing archival discrepancies and overreliance on unexamined lore. Shafer frequently defended core practices under attack, as in his 2016 piece arguing for "he said/she said" reporting to avoid false balance while ensuring adversarial scrutiny of claims, countering critics who dismissed it as equivalence without evidence of systemic failure. He balanced takedowns with admissions of his own errors, fostering credibility through transparency rather than . Recurring features included "Stupid Drug Story of the Week," launched in 2009, which exposed sensationalized or methodologically flawed coverage of narcotics, such as pieces relying on single sources or ignoring contradictory data from government reports. Shafer also critiqued media clichés and overcoverage, praising aggressive reporting in cases like the 2007 while questioning ethical hand-wringing that ignored public demand for details. These efforts influenced peers by modeling alt-weekly rigor applied to elite journalism, prompting self-examination among readers at major outlets. Post-Slate, Shafer extended his critiques at Politico's "Fourth Estate" section until 2024, addressing structural issues like the 2017 "media bubble" analysis, which used employment data to show 96% of journalists clustered in urban enclaves, correlating with coverage blind spots verifiable via geographic hiring stats. In a 2015 column, he contended public distrust of media—then at historic lows per Gallup polls—was warranted due to perceptual gaps but not indicative of incompetence, citing consistent fact-checking benchmarks. His 2024 piece lamented journalism's eroding "swagger," attributing it to revenue losses exceeding 50% since 2005 per Pew data, without romanticizing past eras. Throughout, Shafer's work privileged data-driven realism over institutional defensiveness, often challenging academia-adjacent narratives on media decline by grounding arguments in circulation figures and audience metrics.

Investigations into journalistic misconduct

Jack Shafer has conducted several targeted inquiries into instances of within major news outlets, often prompted by reader tips and verified through comparative textual analysis. In , he documented multiple unattributed borrowings by New York Times reporter Alexei Barrionuevo from dispatches, highlighting verbatim passages lifted without credit in stories on topics such as Venezuelan politics and oil production. Shafer argued that such practices undermine journalistic integrity by eroding trust in factual reporting and rewarding intellectual theft over original effort. In a prominent 2010 case, Shafer confirmed and expanded on plagiarism allegations against Gerald Posner, then chief Washington correspondent for The Daily Beast, by cross-referencing Posner's articles against original sources including Newsweek and The New Republic. He identified at least five sentences copied without attribution, spanning reports on financial scandals and political figures, which led to Posner's resignation from the outlet. Shafer further critiqued the excuses offered by plagiarists, compiling a list of twelve common rationalizations—such as "accidental oversight" or "insufficient time"—that he deemed inadequate defenses for ethical lapses in professional journalism. Shafer's examinations extended beyond individual plagiarism to systemic failures in verification processes, as seen in his 2015 analysis of Rolling Stone's retracted "A Rape on Campus" article about an alleged gang assault at the University of Virginia. Drawing on the Columbia Journalism School's review, he faulted the magazine for neglecting basic reporting standards, including failure to contact named perpetrators, over-reliance on a single source, and insufficient corroboration of details like the existence of fictional personas. Shafer emphasized that these errors exemplified broader media vulnerabilities to confirmation bias and deadline pressures, resulting in reputational damage to the fraternity involved and a $7.5 million defamation settlement in 2016. Through these efforts, Shafer has advocated for stricter internal audits and transparency in outlets, positioning plagiarism and unchecked narratives as direct threats to journalism's credibility rather than mere oversights. His work underscores the need for outlets to prioritize attribution and source vetting, even amid competitive news cycles. Shafer has frequently critiqued the geographic and ideological concentration of journalists in coastal urban centers, arguing that this "media bubble" fosters a disconnect from broader American demographics and contributes to systemic misjudgments in coverage. In a 2017 Politico analysis co-authored with Tucker Doherty, he documented how 96 percent of major news outlets' political and policy staff were based in Washington, D.C., New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Chicago, with only seven percent of journalists residing in rural areas despite rural voters' pivotal role in the 2016 election. This clustering, Shafer contended, perpetuates uniform narratives and overlooks regional nuances, as evidenced by the press's underestimation of support for Donald Trump in non-urban areas. He has also exposed tendencies toward in high-stakes investigations, particularly the media's handling of the Trump-Russia narrative. Shafer highlighted how outlets amplified unverified claims from the without sufficient scrutiny, leading to corrections years later; for instance, he praised The Washington Post's 2021 amendments to stories but criticized the initial rush to publish amid competitive pressures. In post-Mueller report columns, he argued that the press's fixation on potential distracted from substantive policy coverage and eroded credibility when Robert Mueller's findings in March 2019 yielded no charges against the Trump campaign. This pattern, per Shafer, exemplified a broader trend where journalistic pack behavior prioritizes scoops over verification, amplifying speculative trends that collapse under evidence. Shafer routinely dismantles fabricated or overstated "trend stories" that rely on rather than data, a flaw he traces to newsrooms' pursuit of viral narratives. In a 2010 column, he debunked a New York Times piece claiming criminals favored Yankees caps as a signal, labeling it a "bogus trend story" unsupported by or expert input, which illustrated how outlets chase superficial patterns for engagement without rigorous sourcing. Similarly, he has critiqued coverage fixations like the 2016 email scandals, where media outlets echoed each other in overemphasizing Hillary Clinton's server while downplaying comparable issues elsewhere, driven by competitive mimicry rather than proportional assessment. These critiques underscore Shafer's emphasis on institutional self-correction amid declining public trust, which Gallup polls showed dipping to 40 percent in 2015 for media credibility. He advocates for transparency in errors—such as mandatory prominent corrections—but warns against punitive overreactions that stifle reporting, positioning flawed trends like groupthink as correctable through diversification and skepticism rather than inherent malice.

Ideological Perspectives

Libertarian principles

Shafer's ideological framework exhibits libertarian tendencies, emphasizing limited government intervention, particularly in realms affecting free expression and markets. Early in his journalistic career during the late 1970s, he contributed to Libertarian Review, a publication dedicated to advancing individual liberty and skepticism of state power, which shaped his foundational perspectives on policy and media. These influences manifested in his advocacy for deregulatory measures, as seen in his 2007 Slate column arguing for the elimination of the (FCC) and the privatization of the to foster competition and innovation over bureaucratic oversight. This libertarian bent underscores Shafer's broader critique of institutional overreach, including involvement in and content , which he views as antithetical to journalistic and market-driven . Contemporaries have noted his views as "libertarian to a fault," reflecting a consistent prioritization of personal and resistance to coercive in professional commentary. His writings often align with principles of minimal state interference, as evidenced by engagements with libertarian discourse, such as commentary on the Libertarian Party's internal processes in 2024. Shafer's principles extend to a defense of untrammeled speech and , rejecting paternalistic controls that could stifle diverse viewpoints, though he applies this scrutiny equally to private media entities prone to under regulatory pressures. This stance informs his media analyses, where empirical outcomes of policy—such as spectrum auctions versus FCC allocations—prioritize verifiable efficiency gains from free-market mechanisms over ideological mandates.

Skepticism toward journalistic institutions

Shafer has argued that the American public's historically low trust in media—standing at 40 percent in a 2015 Gallup poll, with only a "great deal" or "fair amount" of confidence reported—is warranted due to journalism's shift toward an adversarial posture since the . This evolution, from deferential reporting to aggressive of power, produces contradictory accounts and invites public skepticism, as consumers who "don't trust everything you see" are "probably doing it right." While Shafer maintains that such does not equate to poor performance—citing journalism's gains in depth and —he concedes that the press's own critical lens, once reserved for and other institutions, has recoiled upon media itself, eroding its former " shine." In examining structural flaws, Shafer has critiqued the geographic and ideological clustering of journalists, which fosters an institutional "bubble" insulating coverage from diverse perspectives. A 2017 analysis co-authored with Tucker Doherty revealed that by 2013, more than half of U.S. journalists worked in the New York, , , and Chicago metro areas, with the proportion rising sharply since 2003 and aligning overwhelmingly with counties that voted Democratic in 2016. This concentration, Shafer contended, risks uniform viewpoints on issues like race, inequality, and class, alienating conservative audiences and contributing to perceptions of slant, even as he downplayed outright as potentially adding "flavor" to reporting rather than undermining truth. Shafer's commentary often attributes conservative specifically to media's post-1960s embrace of interpretive and activist roles, which prioritize challenging elites over neutral transcription, alongside coverage of divisive social topics once avoided. He has rejected simplistic narratives of media decline, arguing in 2022 that polls exaggerating overlook consumers' continued reliance on specific outlets and journalism's enhanced accuracy, yet this defense implicitly validates institutional self-examination amid polarized trust gaps—Democrats trusting media 23 percentage points more than Republicans in data. Such positions reflect a measured : endorsing public wariness of institutional outputs while cautioning against wholesale dismissal.

Advocacy for free speech and media accountability

Shafer has consistently advocated for robust free speech protections, particularly in the context of journalistic practice and public discourse, drawing on libertarian principles to argue against measures that could suppress controversial expression. In a 2017 column, he contended that tolerating even repugnant speech, such as Nazi rallies, strengthens democratic society by exposing flawed ideas to scrutiny rather than driving them underground, citing John Stuart Mill's to emphasize that suppressing opinion deprives humanity of potential truths derived from error's collision with fact. He has warned that advertising boycotts against outlets like threaten journalistic independence by pressuring to appease corporate interests, potentially leading to and bland uniformity. Shafer's defense extends to cases involving leaks and platforms hosting dissent. He criticized the 2019 U.S. indictment of under the Espionage Act, arguing it could criminalize standard journalistic solicitations of classified information via tools like , thereby endangering First Amendment protections for publishers and blurring lines between leakers and reporters. Similarly, in response to Neil Young's 2022 ultimatum to over Joe Rogan's vaccine-skeptical podcast, Shafer decried such celebrity-driven censorship as hypocritical and ineffective, noting that decentralized speech markets allow controversial voices to persist and that muting them limits public access to debate, which ultimately informs better decisions as evidenced by high U.S. vaccination rates despite Rogan's influence. On media , Shafer maintains that toward is warranted and healthy, reflecting the press's own evolution toward adversarial scrutiny since the , which has exposed institutional flaws but invited reciprocal amid proliferating contradictory narratives. He posits that this , with trust levels at 40% in 2015 Gallup polling—down from 55% in the late —stems not from but from media's to consistently apply rigorous standards, urging journalists to embrace as a check against complacency. Through such analyses, Shafer links to free speech by arguing that transparent self-correction preserves press legitimacy without resorting to external controls.

Criticisms and Responses

Accusations of contrarianism and bias

Shafer's approach to media has drawn occasional rebukes for prioritizing provocation over consensus. Observers, including media commentator Dan Kennedy, have described Shafer as adopting a "usual self" in pieces challenging mainstream journalistic assumptions, such as his skepticism toward heightened coverage protocols during events like impeachments. Similarly, economist Brad DeLong criticized Shafer's efforts to appear "edgy and " as misguided and ineffective, arguing that such posturing undermines substantive analysis. These characterizations align with Slate's broader reputation under Shafer's tenure for fostering , as noted in internal reflections on the publication's editorial ethos. Accusations of ideological against Shafer are rarer and typically emanate from conservative quarters, focusing on his defenses of journalistic practices amid claims of systemic left-leaning tilt in media institutions. In a 2017 analysis, Law & Liberty contributor Spencer Klavan faulted Shafer for "zealously attempting to refute the charge of liberal " through what he termed "lame hair-splitting," suggesting Shafer's arguments inadvertently shield entrenched media flaws despite empirical indicators of homogeneity in journalistic demographics and viewpoints. Shafer has countered such critiques by arguing that can enrich reporting by introducing "flavor and variety," and that truth need not equate to , positions that critics interpret as complacency toward institutional imbalances documented in studies of . Independent assessments, such as ' rating for Shafer's work, indicate limited partisan skew in his output overall. Despite these pointed criticisms, Shafer's rebuttals emphasize methodological rigor over ideological alignment, maintaining that his scrutiny targets journalistic shortcomings irrespective of political valence. No widespread supports claims of overt partisanship, with detractors often reflecting their own ideological priors—such as conservative outlets' heightened sensitivity to perceived media favoritism—rather than verifiable distortions in Shafer's reporting.

Rebuttals to detractors

Shafer has countered accusations of contrarianism by underscoring his reliance on empirical of journalistic practices rather than reflexive opposition. In response to backlash from left-leaning critics following his 2004 analysis of ' flawed reporting on George W. Bush's service, which questioned the network's ethical lapses and document authentication, Shafer dismissed attacks as "silly" and irrelevant to the evidence he presented, insisting that sustained vilification from ideological opponents only highlights the need for accountability. This approach, he argued, prioritizes verifiable facts over institutional loyalty, as seen in his broader critiques of media precision and rigor across outlets. Detractors' claims of libertarian bias—portraying Shafer as predictably skeptical of mainstream narratives—have been rebutted through examples of his defense of diverse viewpoints irrespective of political alignment. For instance, in defending the ' 2007 hiring of conservative commentator for its op-ed page amid liberal outrage, Shafer contended that opinion sections should provoke debate rather than echo consensus, rejecting demands for ideological purity as antithetical to journalism's role. Similarly, his advocacy for "he said/she said" reporting in 2016 emphasized presenting conflicting claims without premature judgment, countering charges of by arguing that such methods expose flaws in all sides' arguments, fostering reader discernment over editorial fiat. Shafer further bolsters his credibility by demonstrating openness to revision, rebutting notions of dogmatism. In a 2008 column, he retracted his 2002 dismissal of author Michael Crichton's predictions of media industry decline, acknowledging the accuracy of Crichton's warnings in light of subsequent digital disruptions and print losses, a move that exemplifies his commitment to updating views based on outcomes rather than entrenching biases. Reflections on his tenure describe this irreverent style—challenging icons like or defending when evidence warranted—as essential for combating media complacency, not mere provocation.

Involvement in notable debates

Shafer engaged in the debate over journalistic balance during the 2016 U.S. by defending "he said/she said" reporting as essential for allowing readers to assess conflicting claims, even when one side propagated falsehoods, countering critics who labeled such practices as . He argued that preemptively one candidate's statements, as often demanded in coverage of versus , risked undermining the credibility of the opposing side's truthful assertions and eroded journalistic neutrality. In critiques of Russiagate reporting, Shafer faulted mainstream outlets for persistent errors in coverage, specifically lambasting in November 2021 for quietly editing past articles to remove discredited claims without prominent corrections or accountability, which he viewed as evading responsibility for amplifying unverified intelligence. This stance positioned him against defenders of the dossier's role in initial Trump-Russia investigations, highlighting how media reliance on partisan-funded contributed to flawed narratives that lacked empirical corroboration. Shafer contributed to discussions on governance by citing the laptop story as a cautionary example of institutional overreach, noting in April 2022 how intelligence officials and media dismissed it as Russian despite subsequent forensic validation by , thereby fueling skepticism toward government-led efforts like the proposed . He emphasized that such preemptive suppressions, absent rigorous evidence, mirrored past media missteps and undermined public trust in elite fact-checkers.

Legacy and Recent Developments

Influence on media criticism

Shafer's "Press Box" column at Slate, which he began writing in the late and continued through 2011, established a benchmark for media criticism by emphasizing irreverent wit, skepticism toward journalistic conventions, and a relentless focus on craft flaws such as imprecise reporting and institutional hypocrisy. Unlike traditional media critique, which often leaned into and pedantry, Shafer's approach treated criticism as a "peanut-gallery" exercise—hyperliterate, concise (typically under 1,000 words), and willing to admit errors while dissecting targets from editors like to columnists like Thomas Friedman. This style helped shape Slate's contrarian sensibility, encouraging a broader shift in online media commentary toward counterprogramming against mainstream outlets' self-seriousness. His tenure at Reuters from 2011 to 2014 amplified this influence, where his aggressive, pointed dissections of modern media practices—such as take-no-prisoners stances on ethical lapses—earned him recognition as a "fearless media critic" and reinforced demands for rigor over narrative conformity. At Politico starting in 2014, Shafer's senior media writing extended his reach, critiquing trends like declining public trust in polls (arguing heightened scrutiny reveals more flaws than uniform distrust indicates) and the industry's economic "death spasm," which he linked to lost "swagger" and reader disengagement rather than solely external forces. Shafer's idiosyncratic, libertarian-inflected voice—prioritizing precision, historical context, and toward disruption—has modeled a craft-loving alternative to ideologically driven analysis, inspiring peers to prioritize empirical flaws in media output over partisan defenses. His decades-long output, spanning over 20 years across major platforms, has positioned him as a vital, independent gadfly whose departures (e.g., from Politico in June 2024 amid reduced media coverage emphasis) underscore the field's reliance on such unembedded scrutiny. This legacy persists in how contemporary critics engage power dynamics, from AI's journalistic threats to collapse blamed on reader apathy over subsidies.

Writings on industry decline

Shafer has chronicled the decline of the news industry for decades, emphasizing newspapers' and magazines' failure to adapt to digital disruptions despite early warnings. As early as 2006, he argued that the sector recognized its vulnerabilities three decades prior but succumbed to complacency and arrogance, predating common attributions to the or tech giants. By 2012, he described the sharp drop in advertising revenue as the "popping of the bubble," highlighting how major U.S. dailies lost market dominance. In recent analyses, Shafer attributes the industry's cratering primarily to the erosion of its traditional advertising oligopoly, where newspapers once captured broad, untargeted ad dollars from local and national advertisers. The shift to efficient, data-driven web advertising by platforms like Google and Facebook accelerated revenue losses, but he stresses that media companies had ample resources to innovate yet failed to do so, experimenting with digital delivery since the 1970s without seizing control of the open internet. Specific metrics underscore the scale: U.S. newsroom employment fell 26% since 2008, while magazine newsstand revenues plummeted from $6.8 billion in 2006 to $1 billion in 2022. Over two-thirds of newspaper jobs vanished since 2005, forcing widespread closures and layoffs, such as the Los Angeles Times cutting 20% of its newsroom in January 2024, Time magazine reducing 15% of its unionized editorial staff, and the shutdown of BuzzFeed News. Beyond economics, Shafer contends the decline erodes journalism's "swagger"—its historical confidence to pursue defiant, comprehensive reporting regardless of backlash or offense. Wounded outlets, facing legal threats like the 2016 Gawker bankruptcy from a Hulk Hogan lawsuit, have grown timid, with editors prioritizing caution over boldness and producing guarded content. Examples include Esquire and the Hollywood Reporter abandoning a critical Jay Shetty profile under pressure, and Reuters complying with Indian government demands to alter reporting. This shift, he warns, risks journalism losing its central societal role and soul, devolving into bland, risk-averse work unless bold leadership revives it. Shafer rejects proposals like taxing tech firms to subsidize news outlets, viewing them as unfair reparations that absolve media of self-responsibility and could invite government dependency. He opposes special antitrust exemptions for newspapers to negotiate with platforms, arguing the industry must evolve into a contracted, niche-driven field—sustained by survivors like or independent writers—rather than seeking legislative lifelines. This perspective aligns with his broader skepticism toward institutional self-pity, forecasting a leaner but potentially resilient ecosystem.

References

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