±«Óătv graduates are well prepared to enter an increasingly media-centric world because of the formidable liberal arts education they just completed and the mentorship of alumni already playing key roles in this digital age.
That was one of the messages delivered â in person and through a live webcast â at the universityâs 190th commencement exercises by Howard Fineman â70, editorial director of the Huffington Post Media Group.
Fineman urged the 698 graduates of the Class of 2011 to navigate the nonstop âmega-swarmâ of content available through multiple technologies by becoming editors and reporters in their own right.
âIf war is too important to be left to the generals, then the news business is too sprawling and chaotic to be left just to people who call themselves journalists,â said Fineman. âYou have the minds and means to help journalism thrive, and to see that American democracy survives along with it.â
Here is a sampling of Finemanâs Journalism 101:
âNever assume. The French philosopher Jacques Ellul noted that the real danger is not the flat-out lie, but the half-truth, the twisted truth, the truth taken out of context. The best antidote to propaganda is skepticism.
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âNever rely on one source, be it a person, a newspaper, website, tweet, or a government official. Decide, as the late David Foster Wallace said, not how to think, but what to notice. Choosing what to notice is a journalistic decision. It is also a moral one.
âTreasure verifiable facts. The late Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, who spoke at a ±«Óătv commencement in 1977, had a famous dictum. âEveryone is entitled to his own opinion,â he said, âbut not to his own facts.â A photoshopped picture is not a fact, neither is half a quote.â
Fineman also shared advice he gathered, in true journalistic fashion, from fellow alumni in the media, film, and television industries.
He cited Jeff Fager â77, chairman of CBS News; Ken Schanzer â66, president of NBC Sports; Gloria Borger â74, of CNN; Kevin Heffernan â90, of Broken Lizard; and Chase Carey â76, president of News Corp, who said: âAlways pursue your goals with passion and energy. And if things get really tough, call a ±«Óătv friend for a beer.â
President Jeffrey Herbst, speaking at his first ±«Óătv commencement, noted the incredible changes the seniors witnessed during their four years on campus and the turbulent world they now enter as graduates.
He told the seniors not to be afraid of failure and to be flexible and adaptive.
âIt is no surprise to me that one of the most common mantras in Silicon Valley â the heart of innovation in this country and the area where people are, not coincidentally, the most optimistic about the turbulent future â is âfail faster.â
âFor your generation, the question of the next few years will not only be if you reasonably succeeded at what you attempted but also if you failed enough. Because if you did not fail, you probably did not set your sights high enough.
âGo into the world with your eyes wide open, yes, but also with your mind open. There are great days ahead for you.â