Acknowledgments Introduction: The Problems - and Promise - of Unnamed Sources; 1. Media Culpas: Prewar Reporting Mistakes at the New York Times and Washington Post; 2. ''Blogs 1, CBS 0'': 60 Minutes and the Killian Memos Controversy; 3. Journalists Fight Back: Newsweek and the Koran Abuse Story; 4. Deep Throat and the Question of Motives; 5. ''Journalism on Trial'': Confidentiality and the Plame Leak Case; 6. Rethinking Anonymity: Problems and Solutions Notes; Index
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''Carlson's book is a must-read for people trying to understand what direction journalism should take in redefining itself in the face of rising threats--technological, economic, political, and otherwise.''--Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly''Raises important issues related to sources and to the structural forces currently challenging the meaning of journalism in today's multimedia world.''--Library Journal''Carlson offers sensible prescriptions for less reliance on anonymous sources and for more transparency when they are relied upon by journalists. His book injects calm reason and scholarly rigor into a debate that often arouses passions.''--St. Louis Post-Dispatch''Contributes significantly to understanding not only the use of anonymous sources (the benefits and the dangers) but also journalism broadly. Recommended.''--Choice''Carlson offers an interesting, well-written, and lucid cultural analysis of the unique risks and rewards' that occur from the bargain struck' between reporters and confidential sources.''--Journalism''How does anonymity change the relationship between journalists, sources, and the public? Matt Carlson's important new book tackles this question head-on, arguing, through a close and incisive analysis of the ramifications of using unnamed sources, for a fundamental reordering of the concept of anonymity and the news.''--Barbie Zelizer, author of About To Die: How News Images Move the Public''Matt Carlson addresses an interesting issue in journalism: the use of confidential sources in several recent episodes. He has scoured the public record for what is known about the cases and for the public discussion generated by them. This book serves an important purpose by aggregating and putting in one place these recent cases.''--Elliott King, author of Free for All: The Internet's Transformation of Journalism