You're Wrong About - We Need to Talk About the New York Times with Tuck Woodstock
Episode Date: May 15, 2023“What if you were writing a profile on someone named Janet and I was your editor, and I was like, ‘I’m sorry, for balance, find someone who wants to kill Janet’?” This week, Tuck Woodstock, ...host of Gender Reveal, takes us on a journey through the New York Times’ coverage of trans issues—and in the end, he points the way to a better future.You can find Tuck / Gender Reveal online here.You can find an episode transcript along with citations here. Support You're Wrong About:Bonus Episodes on PatreonBuy cute merch100% of profit generated via Patreon and Apple Podcast Subscriptions between May 15 - May 31, 2023 will be split between the following organizations: TASSNSouthern Trans Youth Emergency ProjectKind ClinicBlack Trans Women IncGender Reveal Grant & Mutual Aid ProgramsWhere else to find us:Sarah's other show, You Are Good [YWA co-founder] Mike's other show, Maintenance PhaseLinks:https://www.genderpodcast.com/http://patreon.com/yourewrongabouthttps://www.teepublic.com/stores/youre-wrong-abouthttps://www.paypal.com/paypalme/yourewrongaboutpodhttps://www.podpage.com/you-are-goodhttp://maintenancephase.comSupport the show
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You're like, is he the worst waiter in the world, or did he spill that soup in my lap
on purpose?
Either way, I need skin grafts.
Welcome to You're Wrong About, the podcast where we say, what's going on New York Times?
What are you doing?
What's all this about?
And with me today is no longer of the city, forever a portlander in my heart, the legend
Tuck Woodstock.
Thank you so much for having me and acknowledging my past as the former mayor of Portland, Oregon.
I appreciate that.
You did a great job.
You were only mayor for 15 minutes in the middle of the night, but it was the best mayor
done ever.
I was talking to my friends recently about, has there ever been a good mayor?
Like not of Portland, just in history of anywhere.
That wasn't like one of the dog mayors, you know what I mean?
Right.
I know the dog mayors, Richard Splett, possibly Nan Whaley, but like, yeah, who really?
Exactly.
Well, an open question, but in the meantime, Tuck Woodstock, what are you up to and where
can people find your work and so forth?
So I make a podcast called Gender Reveal, which is trans people talking to other trans
people sometimes about gender, sometimes not.
You can find that in the podcast places.
I also have a consulting partnership called Sylveon Consulting, where I mostly work with
journalists to avoid the very problems that we will be talking about the New York Times
encountering.
So much of my work is doing trans media criticism.
And so I am so excited to talk about this topic today because it really is like giving
me the greatest gift of the world, which is just to talk about my number one special
interest, but all of my work is trans media.
And then I also used to tweet too much, but now I just tweet a normal amount.
Yes.
I'm so excited to be talking with you about this because someone had to get to the bottom
of this and it was going to be you.
For better or worse, the New York Times arguably is the paper of record for the mainstream
and left of center United States and their handling of trans issues and really gender
and sexuality generally has been consistently horrible.
My summary of their discussion of trans rights is basically should trans people exist or
should they exist to section extent, experts disagree.
And you're just like, that's how I feel about it.
Yeah.
You're totally right.
The one thing that I would add is when you're like experts disagree on whether trans people
should exist.
It's not really even experts so much as like, we found a woman on a forum called, I hate
trannies.biz and she says that trans people shouldn't exist.
The main points that I'm trying to make today are basically that the concept of objectivity
and balance is noble in a vacuum, but it's being used in manipulative ways to dodge accountability
and shield against critiques of power and just maintain the power of the status quo.
The framing of stories about trans people and trans youth specifically implies this
like urgency and prevalence and novelty that just doesn't actually exist and that could
be malicious.
It could be just ignorant, but it ultimately doesn't matter because the point is that they're
putting trans people in danger with this coverage.
And that actually like does have historical precedent, particularly with the ways that
gay people were spoken about during the AIDS crisis and before that.
And lastly, I just want to get into the way that things have unfolded in the last couple
of months and how queer New York Times contributors and allies have tried to have conversations
with the New York Times about this on the New York Times terms and they've still been
shut out.
Yeah, they're doing irresponsible damaging journalism that goes against what I would
say is any reasonable code of ethics.
But then my question that I feel like might be occurring to a lot of people, is this a
particular to the New York Times problem, is this like a mainstream journalism problem
generally that the New York Times exemplifies because we feel like they should do better
or are they like in specific, particularly doing a terrible job?
Yeah, so I teach workshops to journalists about trans coverage.
And when I started teaching those workshops years ago, most newsrooms were on sort of
the same page, which was we don't know anything.
In the last several years, that has really evolved to where a lot of major newsrooms
are doing decent to great work covering trans issues, by which I mean when they're writing
about trans people, they are treating them with the same respect and dignity as they
would treat any other source that they're writing about.
And the New York Times is failing to do this in a way that feels particularly singular
because other outlets will put out individual stories or have individual writers who clearly
are not seeing trans people as people or who just simply don't know enough about trans
issues and trans people to write about them competently.
But in a way that looks to me like, oh, these are people making mistakes and learning, whereas
the New York Times has this pattern over the last few years and a pattern internally of
the way that they're talking to their reporters and staff about these issues that makes it
clear that regardless of individual facts, phrasings, sources, writers that we can pick
apart, there's this big pattern that you just can't argue with.
You just see that the New York Times is overall creating this pattern of coverage and behavior
that's harmful to trans people that I'm just not seeing in the same way from other mainstream
publications, which in some ways is cool that there's only one, but it sucks that it
is the national paper of record.
Yeah.
You know, and like there are many aspects of their legacy that run hugely counter to
this, and yet they've had a lot of wins.
I feel like they historically are known for being like, you know, they publish the Pentagon
papers and doing things that were actually daring and politically meaningful, it feels
different when you have expectations based on past accomplishments and demonstrating a
past ability to see past the rules.
I think the issues that we're seeing happen at the New York Times for the most part are
coming high up from the standards desk and management, and so when we see a great piece
come out about queer trans issues from the New York Times, I feel that it is despite
the management rather than because of them, and I know for a fact that queer and trans
writers at the New York Times have had to really, really, really fight with their editors
to put out anything that they feel isn't actively harmful.
So I just want to say that I hate to say like, nothing the New York Times says could ever
be good.
That's absolutely not true.
Again, there's just this pattern in the aggregate that's really harmful.
There's not a great way to parry it because it is the New York Times, and so if you're
a trans person and your mom is reading the New York Times and is saying, well, the New
York Times says that there are too many trans kids these days and they're not all actually
trans, what are you going to do as a trans person?
You can be like, well, here's this blog that I read and here's this podcast by Tuck Woodstock.
They don't care.
Your mom doesn't care what I have to say.
They care about what the New York Times has to say.
They're like, Tuck Woodstock is from Portland.
You don't listen to Portlanders in this house.
Right.
There's no higher authority to go to if you are lucky enough to have a parent who doesn't
just watch Fox News, I feel like.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Journalistic objectivity, it might feel like this ancient and mutable concept, but it really
has only come to prominence in the last century or so because in the first 50 years of air
quotes of the United States existing, we were in our party press era, which is basically
the papers were run by the political party.
You worked for the Democrat paper and the Democrats paid you to write nice things about
Democrats.
That's an obvious bias.
That's an obvious partisanship.
Then 50 or 60 years later, the penny paper is invented.
Do you know about the penny papers, Sarah?
No, I do not.
It sounds very promising.
The concept is basically like, oh, this paper is cheap to make.
It costs like a penny.
We're actually just going to support it by advertisements.
We can write anything we want as long as people will buy it.
That's how a lot of media still works today, right, is we're just going to write whatever
we want and as long as it gets clicks, we can run it.
I was reading an old newspaper, it wasn't even that old.
It was probably from the 90s, as am I, and I stumbled across this thing that was from
a relatively small town and it was like people who have gone to the hospital this week.
I was just like, oh yeah, the newspaper used to be a lot like Twitter in that you got your
coffee and you're like, well, what a name shit do I feel like looking at?
There's going to be a lot of it in this thing.
The penny paper also lended itself to what we call yellow journalism, which is basically
tabloids today.
It's like exaggeration, scandal, sensationalism, generally making things up.
Causing the Spanish-American war, I believe.
Okay, so that's, is that not true?
Is that a you're wrong about?
That's a you're wrong about.
I love it.
Why do my seventh grade teachers keep failing me?
Yeah, for people who haven't heard.
The most famous examples of yellow journalism are Joseph Pulitzer, which is so funny because
of Pulitzer is named after him, and William Randolph Hearst each had these papers that
were competing for the most salacious coverage, aka the most clicks.
As depicted in newsies, so.
And the legend goes that their stories on Cuba were basically the reason that the US entered
the Spanish-American war.
It's said that this was largely disproven, but it's more convenient for everyone's fun
and narrative and newsies that it happened.
So who can say really?
Yeah.
If newsies is credit, I don't feel like they made that claim specifically.
But I think my seventh grade history teacher did.
So like once again, if I repeat something I learned in school, I have to just be like,
well, let's check on that.
So you know, we have our party press, we have our penny paper, and people were like, what
if we didn't have the party press or the penny paper, but a secret third thing?
And what if we focused on fact-based reporting, nonpartisanship, editorial independence, objectivity?
These are all concepts that sound really good when your choices have been like either the
guys trying to get you into the Spanish-American war or the paper that says, I was paid $50
to say that Thomas Jefferson is daddy or whatever they were writing, I don't know.
It like makes sense that people would be interested in these values.
And I think a lot of the values are really important.
Like I think that journalism should be rigorously reported and fact-checked.
And newsrooms should have editorial independence.
Like it's good that even though Jeff Bezos owns The Washington Post, The Washington Post
can still investigate Jeff Bezos, like that's important.
But when we start talking about balance, I just don't really think that there's a concise
definition or explanation of what balance means.
Like is balance like multiple people?
Is it people with opposite opinions and what would it mean to have opposite opinions?
So like if I was interviewing a young white public school teacher who says, I think kids
should learn about racism in schools, okay, what is the balance to that?
Is it a black teacher, an old teacher, a principal, a student, a parent?
This is a public school teacher.
So maybe it's someone who doesn't believe in public schools.
Maybe it's someone who doesn't believe in racism.
Maybe it's Rhonda Santis.
Who knows like what the balance is?
But what we see in journalism these days is that balance is apparently when you put one
conservative or like status quo supporting viewpoint into every story and that standard
was created literally just because conservatives put huge pressure on newspapers where anytime
they weren't included, they were like, you have to include us.
This isn't fair or balanced.
And so it created not a pressure to actually put balance in your story, but a pressure
to appear balanced so that powerful conservatives won't yell at you.
And you see even to this day that the codes of conduct for newsrooms don't just say, they
don't just say you have to be unbiased, they say you have to appear unbiased.
And there was this one, this isn't the New York Times, it's the Washington Post, but
it like really got me as like an example of this.
So I wanted to share it anyway, because first of all, everyone will say I'm being unfair
the New York Times, so let me spread the blame around and also the Washington Post put out
this story last year where they said that over two thirds of Americans say that transgender
girls would have a competitive advantage over other girls if they were allowed to compete
with them in youth sports.
An incredible thing to pull about.
What if you pulled about a fact?
So why?
I know.
And it's like, so are they qualified to know any, like of course not, right?
It's like, what if you called around and we're like, yeah, like asked a different science
question, like how does crop rotation work?
And then he would be like, 80% of Americans say crop rotation is a myth.
And then you're like, well, okay.
Yeah, you just call everyone and you go, Hey, what do you think is the average height of
an American woman?
And then they publish it.
It's like, well, two thirds of Americans think the average woman is five too.
And it's like, okay, but what is it?
What's the answer?
But they actually don't give that answer in this article.
The only sources that they cite by name is this guy, Mark, who works at a Center for
Sports Journalism, who says that he thinks that most people think that trans women shouldn't
play women's sports.
He's just like, my vibe is that most people think they shouldn't, including me, presumably.
And then this is the one that really got me, Cherise, a pharmacy technician in Honolulu.
There's no explanation for how she was chosen.
She says that she knows more than 10 trans people.
Also, she says trans women shouldn't play women's sports because she wouldn't want to
play sports against men.
And that's who's in the article is Cherise who's saying, I know trans women and I don't
want to play sports with men.
You knew they didn't include any trans athletes, any doctors, any experts who could speak to
whether trans girls would in fact have a competitive advantage over other girls.
Well, that's not relevant.
We need to know what a pharmacist thinks.
Just a random woman that they found, they're like, do you know at least 10 trans people?
And she's like, yeah, and they're like, do you think that trans women should be able to
play sports?
And she's like, no, because of this transphobic views that I hold that trans women are men
and they're like, sick.
That's actually the only source we need in this article.
Yeah.
It's like, I would love to know, like was the writer on vacation and their boss was like,
we need your article on trans women in sports.
And then he was like, oh my God.
And he's literally getting like earache medication for like his child at a pharmacy in Honolulu.
And he's like, Cherise, I need a source on this.
It's just so funny that like this concept of balance or in this case, not even balance
but just sourcing like doesn't seem to require a certain level of expertise or lived experiences.
And I think about this a lot because like if I was writing about plane safety, which
I'm not qualified to do, I'd be like, oh, I don't know anything about this.
Let me talk to like engineers and like probably people who inspect planes and pilots and like
people in like the air traffic control tower and get some data.
What I wouldn't do is be like, I'm going to talk to one person who's ridden on a plane
and then one person who hasn't ever ridden on a plane.
And those will be the sources for this.
But that's actually like how they report on trans people is they'll talk to like cis
people who think that trans people are real and cis people who think that trans people
aren't real.
And they're like, that's balance.
And then meanwhile, like my friend, Frankie Dela Crater wrote this incredible story about
trans athletics for inside hook where they cited like five student athletes, two adult
athletes, a therapist, a documentarian, an organizer and like a trans person's mom.
And everyone except the mom was trans.
And so it's like this huge range of lived experiences and perspectives, but because
all of the people except one were trans, like they're automatically seen as like, well,
that's just one side of the story.
We got to get the other side, which is people who don't like those people.
What if you were like writing a profile and someone named Janet and I was your editor
and I was like, I'm sorry for balance, find someone who wants to kill Janet.
Like it's just like, I know.
So yeah, I mean, like, I'm, you know, I don't want to just leave people with questions.
I want to leave them with suggestions.
So maybe balance could be like talking to people with and without structural power or
like talking to at least three to four people who have different like relevant experiences
and points of view.
But if we did that, how would people in power maintain power?
Right?
Gosh, like not to connect everything to newsies, but like it does connect to everything.
And there's a scene in newsies that I love where like whatever paper Bill Pullman works
for is the only paper that's really covering the news boys strike.
And there's a lot of interest because of it.
This is all based on true events.
And then we see like this poker game hosted by Mr. Pulitzer and his friend the mayor and
like all the newspaper guys, and they're all just like playing poker together and agreeing
that no one is going to cover the news boys strike because it's like, because then it'll
give more workers ideas.
The whole system will disintegrate this like economy built on child labor is vulnerable.
They all have to decide to like smother the story together.
And you know, that's just like, you don't have to be a big conspiracy theory person,
I think to understand that power protects itself.
Yeah.
And I am so glad that you brought up this concept of like deciding whether or not to
cover something because there's this concept that I learned about, I believe from the book,
The View From Somewhere, a book by Lewis Raven Wallace.
There's also a podcast version that's all about sort of the myth of journalistic objectivity.
And they talk about this concept called Hallens spheres, which is similar to the Overton
window in that there's like a sphere of consensus, a sphere of deviance, and then a sphere of
legitimate controversy and different concepts get stuck into the spheres and then moved
around.
So like I'm sure you can think of examples.
Totally.
Climate change obviously used to be in the sphere of legitimate controversy.
It moved to consensus.
I don't know.
Shout out some more, Sarah.
Yeah.
I mean, yeah.
I mean, some germ theory and like, you know, slavery was in consensus or controversy moved
to deviance, right?
So they can move in different directions.
You know, a few decades ago, even like objective air quotes, outlets didn't talk about gay
people at all, not because it was like actually somehow not objective to talk about gay people,
but because gay people were seen as in the sphere of deviance and thus an activist topic.
If something's in a sphere of deviance, like we don't talk about it in mainstream publications,
right, deciding what stories you're going to cover and what framing you're going to
use is a huge part of this issue.
When we're looking at how you decide what gets covered and where it gets covered and
how it gets covered, that's an incredibly subjective question.
And there's this quote by Luke O'Neill that I really like that says, I love clocking in
at my job at the neutral journalism store where we harvest and process every new fact
of the day, then type them up and shuffle them so as to not show favor to any fact and
then dump the new 10,000 page tome on our reader's doorstep each morning.
Like that's the only way to do like actually objective news judgment would be if you just
took everything that happened and shuffled it and distributed it randomly.
And that's not what we do, obviously, obviously all the choices.
Well, and also so much of it is decided like in an intentional way or just a very utilitarian
way in terms of like, you know, I always like to point out that like a lot of the most destructive
things that people do in sort of daily life, at least in America and so many other places
is not because they have specific evil intent, but because Kyle needs new shoes, the kids
are going to need new coats every, I don't know how often kids need new coats a lot.
And just that like everyone has to pay the bills and like newspapers and other journalistic
outlets are like typically run by parent companies, which are run by corporations, which like
have stockholders to please and like everyone understands that there are ways to make the
kind of profit that we're at least aiming to make in media and that catering to the
already existing whims of your readers rather than trying to install new software in them
will tend to be more lucrative.
That's 100% true.
And I also think that even that is giving them a little bit of an out by saying like
we're feeding existing thoughts when in fact I think they are in many cases introducing
new thoughts into people's heads and then claiming they're not right.
So like or being like what, you know, the famous lowest common denominator, like what
are the thoughts we can count on being able to like the feelings we can kind of being
able to drum up on you like whenever like discussed fear, hatred, revenge.
Yeah.
Yeah, absolutely.
And this comes up with what they do cover and what they don't cover, right?
So when we're thinking about things that they don't cover because they feel like it's simply
not news, like why would our readers care about this?
The New York Times didn't put AIDS on the front page until 1983 when more than 500 people
had died, right?
Even to this day, they are generally slow to cover the anti-translots that are currently
being passed.
So in the last few months, Mississippi and Tennessee both banned gender-affirming care
for minors.
It was not substantially reported on until a month later.
And I looked at this for so long last night, the only place I can find it covered is in
this weird online-only slideshow that I don't really understand how to access.
And like that was the coverage.
Meanwhile, Kentucky passed one of the worst anti-trans bills in the country.
It was covered two weeks after it passed the state legislature and they put it on A23.
So like buried in the middle there, Wyoming and Arkansas recently passed anti-trans laws
that they didn't seem to report on at all.
A CPAC speaker recently said transgenderism must be eradicated.
That wasn't really mentioned, but I say all of this because in the last 10 months, the
New York Times has run at least four front page stories about the air quotes controversies
surrounding the concept of trans youth.
And I do want to name them.
They said in June, they wrote report reveals sharp rise in transgender young people in
the U.S. In September, they said more trans teens are choosing top surgery.
In November, they said they paused puberty, but is there a cost?
And in January, they said when students change gender identity and parents don't know.
So that's 14,000 words of front page coverage.
That does not include Emily Bazalon's cover story for the New York Times magazine that
was all about the minutiae of the official standards of care for trans youth, which was
another 11,000 words.
And it also doesn't count two stories by Michael Powell, one about whether trans women athletes
are ruining competition and another about how progressive groups are allegedly banning
the word women.
And those were also on the front page.
And so readers are going to trust that if the New York Times is putting something on
the front page over and over and over and over again, of course, it's an emergency.
Of course, it's a legitimate debate.
Why would we be devoting 29,000 words of front page and cover story space if this isn't like
a huge issue?
It's clearly more important than the anti-trans pills that are being passed because we're
not covering those at all or we're burying them, you know, in the middle of the paper.
We're putting them like throwaway lines in other articles.
Of course, this is the most important thing.
And so it just feels really disingenuous to me to have the New York Times be like, we're
providing a broad array of trans coverage.
Look at all of the different trans coverage that we've done.
And when you ask them to point to that, I can like pull up the examples that they give,
but it's very clear that they're weighing some of this a lot more heavily than they're
weighing other stories.
Yeah, right.
And I feel like, and it feels like this is a kind of perspective where if you were to
try and turn in a story that was like, I don't know, like say there's the slight trans girl
who's like this up and coming folk singer in Appleton, Wisconsin, you're like, she's
playing in coffee shops and she's got, she's influenced by Pete Seeker, whatever.
It feels like it would be controversial based on the style of reporting to like not to just
be like, here she is, she's doing it, she's crushing it, you know, like that that would
feel like too biased in favor of like just accepting trans youth as people who are there.
When people reached out to the standards desk and was like, hey, it really seems like you're
running a lot of front page stories about whether trans kids should exist.
This representative of the standards desk gave a real example that says, actually we've
covered a wide array of trans topics.
Let me give you some examples.
And the actual examples that he gave was one 800 word story on anti-trans violence that
was from 2015, some front page coverage about the trans military ban in 2017, a brief Q&A
with a trans film historian, a piece about anti-trans laws that went back to 2020, a
nice pro trans op-ed from 2015, a short film that they embedded in the op-ed section about
a Mexican trans person, another article that's being criticized as transphobic, like there's
not a comparable example in that list.
Like a countervailing argument sort of to what The Times is doing, I think would be
a paper talking about the sort of the systematically genocidal approach.
And it feels like that's the kind of thing where like you could find all the evidence,
you could actually get good sources, you wouldn't have to talk to Cherise, but that that would
be like considered too controversial not because it was like too partisan and unsupported,
but because it like is supported and it does sound true.
Right.
And what's so interesting is that the right wing has said, and I believe that The New
York Times has reported on this, they have said openly that they are targeting trans
kids as part of a larger strategy to eliminate trans people because it is easier to whip
up support of going after trans kids.
They have said that openly.
And so if you are going after trans kids, you are doing their work, whether you want
to or not.
So to claim that it doesn't count as partisanship or bias or advocacy, when you know that they
have said out loud that they're going after trans kids as part of a strategy to eliminate
trans people, like it's just dishonest to be like, well, that has nothing to do with
us.
We're simply doing our jobs, like in a tiny vac, we're doing our jobs in a vacuum and
you can't possibly think that it like matters how that is, I don't know, I can go into that.
That's a whole thing, but it's just so, it's so wild to hear.
Right.
And yeah, I don't know.
And anyone who's like, look, I'm just doing my job.
It's like, that's never, that's never good.
Right.
Right.
These stories are really demonstrably hurting trans people in a number of different ways.
And part of it is just that a little over half of Americans don't think that they know
a trans person.
And so this is where they're getting their information is from the media.
But also in that the New York Times's trans coverage has been cited in amicus briefs supporting
anti-trans legislation.
And so for example, in Arkansas, the attorney general filed an amicus brief supporting a
law that will imprison medical providers for up to 10 years for administering puberty
blockers or hormones to trans youth, the same puberty blockers or hormones that you can
distribute to cis youth, that's fine, but not trans youth.
And in that amicus brief, they cited three of these New York Times articles.
And the New York Times is like, that's not our fault.
You can't possibly hold us to account for the ways that our articles are being used.
And like, sure.
But I have talked to former New York Times reporters who's like, actually the New York
Times loves to brag about how an article like incited change impacted someone influenced
a legislator.
Like those are the articles that win awards is they're like, we're so proud of the way
that our coverage of this issue actually impacted the way that the world works.
But then when you bring that into taking health care away from trans kids, they're like, I
don't know what you're talking about.
You can't hold us accountable for that.
That has nothing to do with us.
We're just doing our job.
If my work was being used to take health care away from a group of people, regardless
of my intent, I would stop and go, hmm, maybe I should try a different approach because
my work is being used to take health care away from people.
Yeah.
I remember talking to like an old school journalist and I like referenced my idea of like journalism
being intimidating because it's a lot of power to wield.
And they're like, oh, I don't think a journalist is having power.
I just clearly had like never thought about it and I was like, weird.
First of all, I can see why you would need to think that because it's a weird thing to
do every day.
There's a reason I don't do it the same way other people do.
But B, it's like, I think that viewpoint, at least the way this person described it to
me and the way I feel like other people see it is that like, oh, you're just like a messenger
of the capital T truth and you go to the like, to the river of truth and you like get some
water and you like, you know, put it in your saddlebags and ride into town.
And it's like, no, you're not a bearer of truth.
You're a subjective witness who is like doing their best to understand not just what you've
seen, but like to understand it as it exists and like the context of the culture that's
taught you how to see it for your whole life and like, yeah, I mean, this comes back to
the whole concept of journalistic objectivity, which I think most journalists will at least
claim to admit they know is impossible to get to 100%.
But like, I don't know, I think I'm really fascinated by jobs.
This is a journalism thing.
This is also a lawyer thing and a judge thing where like kind of psychologically to do the
job you have to do, you either have to like live your whole life and humility and uncertainty
and anxiety and eat a lot of Tums or just be like, I'm great.
I'm just, I figured it out.
I can tell who's guilty.
I can tell what the truth is.
I'm doing it.
Yeah.
It's so interesting the ways that different journalists approach this concept of like
individual objectivity.
And I really appreciated someone on Twitter.
I don't know who pointing out that this isn't actually how it's handled in other fields.
Like they wrote this tweet that I wrote down because I thought it was really useful.
They said, in qualitative research, it is expected that the researcher understands that
their beliefs and experiences will color their analysis.
This is covered by stating their positionality, not trying to hide behind being objective.
And so other fields have been like, wow, we really are all people.
Let's compensate for that by admitting that we're people.
And journalism is like, no, in order to be good, it means that you have to be completely
detached.
You can't have a dog in the fight.
You can't have a role in the story.
But what that just means is that they're defining objectivity and neutrality by having your
views in the spheres of consensus.
So if you're questioning the status quo, that's no longer objective.
If you're going along with the status quo, that is objective because when you have the
power to create the rules, you get to decide what neutral is.
The thing that really gets me about that besides all of the obvious things is that getting
to know a topic shapes your view on that topic.
And so there are stories of Vietnam war reporters who went over there, maybe objective and neutral.
And then they witnessed the Vietnam war and was like, we have to stop this war.
This is so deeply fucked.
Even for me, I did protest reporting in 2020.
The first few days and weeks of protest reporting, I was trying to come across as more objective
because of jobs, right? Jobs want you to seem objective.
But then there is one group of people, aka the police, who are spending every night yelling
at me, throwing me to the ground, teargassing me, shooting shit at me.
And then there's another group of people who are the protesters, who are physically hauling
me out of unsafe situations, offering me aid, flushing my eyes when I'm getting teargassed
by the police, warning me when something's going to go down.
And I can't just pretend that that's not happening.
And journalistic training would be like, don't accept the help.
But it's like, I actually can't not accept the help of being physically dragged out of
someone attacking me.
That was a really helpful thing that someone specifically did that I couldn't be like, no,
just leave me to get beat up.
And so if we accept that knowing an issue gives you opinions on the issue and also accept
that getting to know people on your beat gives you like empathy for people in that beat,
then what we're saying about you have to be perfectly objective, smooth brain, detached
is that the best reporters are people who don't know anything or anyone related to what they're
talking about, which is like such a wild argument that is so clearly used to keep marginalized
people away from journalism.
Right.
And I feel like it's a cliche journalism that like, oh, it was better for me to go into
the story not understanding the like subculture of the world of it and you're just like, but
how would you know because you didn't and fundamentally don't know anything about it?
So how would how would you know if it was better for you?
Yeah, I hate that I constantly think about the phrase unknown unknowns because it is
like a Donald Rumsfeld quote.
And I hate to think of anything that Donald Rumsfeld has ever said, but it really is so
useful when I'm talking about the ways that cisgender reporters who have never really
covered trans issues go into trans stories a lot, where they think they're telling a
good story because they're actually missing the entire historical context of what they're
talking about.
And it's like, sure, to like a fresh baby, this seems like a good story.
And in fact, I wouldn't expect a random person to know any of this context, but I would expect
someone who's writing front page stories for the New York Times to know this because there
are people in the world who know it.
They're not going to get as good of coverage and like also when people aren't tied to community,
there's also no accountability to that community and people will argue that journalists shouldn't
be accountable because somehow that threatens their independence if they're accountable
to their sources.
I find that knowing who I'm accountable to makes me a better journalist.
It prevents me from doing extractive journalism where I just get what I need and leave.
It like gives me compassion towards the people I'm writing about.
It prevents me from objectifying the people that I'm writing about.
And also it just gains trust because if you're a random person outside of community parachuting
in, people don't have a reason to trust you.
I host a podcast gender reveal where it's trans people talking to trans people and our
conversations are so different than when one of us is talking to like a cisgender interviewer
because we just trust each other to like have good intentions to like understand the background
of what we're talking about to see each other as people.
And when you're having random cis people parachute in and have no accountability and no context,
and they're like, well, I actually can't say whether I think you're a person or not because
that wouldn't be objective.
And that's the story that is implicitly always being covered.
Like any sort of publication or outlet that serves a marginalized community, that's always
kind of the responsive mainstream media or mainstream culture to be like, well, you know,
they're biased because it's by that group and for that group.
And it's like, that's such an ingrained thing.
And then you're just like, how did we get away with like promoting that as a truth?
Even to this day, like black people, queer people, trans people, women are all told
like we can't report on stories about our communities because they're biased.
The Washington Post famously said that a reporter who had been sexually assaulted couldn't
write about sexual assault.
Lots of papers have prevented black reporters from covering police violence.
I have a friend who used to be a teacher and is now a journalist who was discouraged from
covering education because somehow the fact that she used to be a teacher was bias instead
of informing her position as an education reporter.
For some reason, we've decided the objectivity means never stating your political opinions
out loud as if simply not speaking them publicly means that you don't have political opinions
or biases.
And you know, Lewis Raven Wallace in his book tells a story about a white journalist telling
him very proudly that when she was in college, she used to do anti-apartheid organizing.
And her mentors were like, you have to choose between journalism and anti-apartheid organizing.
And she was like, okay, I'll do journalism and it's like you as a white person are proud
of this.
This is a good thing that you're talking about.
Yeah.
Well, you know, it's as a white person.
We just love to sacrifice something that helps no one, but makes you feel noble because
you didn't like doing it.
Right.
And like one more thing I want to say about like this concept of an objective person is
that it extends to this ban on political speech, including in social media, but it's
really unclear what counts as that.
And so it's unclear whether employees of, you know, the New York Times or any other
major publication with like an ethics code around this can get in trouble for supporting
Black Lives Matter, supporting gay marriage, supporting trans people, because these are
all politicized topics.
And also like I alluded to earlier, every outlet has its own code.
And if you're a freelancer, you're also expected to have followed the code sort of before and
after.
And so every time I tweet, I could be thinking, oh, I should follow the New York Times ethic
code because what if the New York Times wants to hire me?
Obviously they're not going to hire me.
I'm on this podcast.
But you know, think of me like five years ago, it's like, oh, I better run every tweet
through the New York Times, Washington Post, CNN, ABC and NBC's ethics codes, like just
in case.
And those are also like enforced so unevenly because when people in power want to appear
unbiased, they'll just fire off someone without power to be like, no, look, we're not biased.
We fired that one trans reporter or we fired that one Black reporter who dared to have
an opinion.
And if we were biased, would we have fired this person for bias?
And in fact, the first examples in history of firing a journalist for not being objective
was firing union organizers in 1935, where they were like, oh, these people are in.
They can't be objective.
They're in.
I don't know.
I feel like sometimes people, they listen to the show and they're like, I thought you'd
be smarter.
And I'm like, no, my whole appeal is that I take forever to catch on to anything.
And then I notice really obvious stuff.
And if you haven't noticed it either, then you don't feel embarrassed.
But like the thing that I'm just like putting together is that like all the stuff we're
talking about, it's like, again, I'm like, this is so simple.
Bias in all these cases is about caring too much about a group that is trying to win civil
rights from the oppressors who on some level are represented by most forms of media because
most forms of media are owned and therefore controlled by corporate interests.
And yeah, there are New York time staffers that have been quoted recently as saying
that the way the mass had talks about activists, you would think that the activists only exist
on the left because there's not really discussion of like, oh, you're being a right wing activist.
It's really only exactly what you're saying, which is like, you're standing up for civil
rights.
That's activism.
And like hidden within that is the belief that civil rights are a dangerous concept
that like you want to be very careful about fucking with.
And really, you're just like, what if every civil right wish came true?
I think things would could not possibly be anything but great, you know, and and that
I don't know.
It just really shows its hand.
It's just like, oh, like what is the news?
Like the news fundamentally what we know of as news as we've been explaining this whole
time is a defense of things the way they are and power the way it is.
Absolutely.
And to that end, I would love to take a little bit of time to just give examples of the way
that the framing of these stories are inherently anti trans.
I don't want to litigate like specific articles and specific phrasings and specific by lines
too much.
There's no point in just nitpicking, but I do want to give some examples so people know
what we're talking about here when we're talking about balance and weighing sort of inherently
unequal sources equally.
We will see stories in general where they're saying like, should trans kids be able to
access care?
And the sources on the side of yes will be the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American
Psychological Association, the American Psychiatric Association, the American Medical Association,
the Endocrine Society, the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, other
resources experts, trans adults with lived experiences.
On the other side, it'll be like a Republican politician and a mom that they found on an
anti trans web forum.
And they'll be like, so who can say?
I keep referencing like the opposing viewpoint is someone on a website.
And it's partially because in this 2019 article about chest binders, the New York Times famously
extensively quoted a spokesperson for Fourth Wave Now, which is a blog that literally exists
to deny the existence or legitimacy of trans youth.
And they use them as like a credible source.
And like that's pretty common when people are looking for balance, they will take someone
who is a spokesperson for a group that hates trans people.
And they aren't always, they aren't always disclosing that that's where the source comes
from, which is also something that has been called out is if you are going to get your
sources from anti trans hate groups, at least admit that that's where they're from, because
not disclosing that information is simply not best journalistic practice, but the other
issue which we talked about already is just this huge volume of coverage about trans youth
and health care that really implies that there is this urgency and prevalence and novelty
around trans health care.
And so Tom Skoka writes some really good stuff about this where he points out that the Times
wrote more than 6,000 words on puberty blockers, raising the specter, he says, that despite
doctors widespread agreement that the treatment makes life better for trans adolescents, the
drugs carry the risk of reducing bone density.
And then he says bone density loss is also one of the main side effects of Accutane,
which has been used to alleviate severe acne in millions of teenagers over the decades,
even though it comes with a list of potential harms up to and including its ability to cause
severe birth defects.
Right.
The New York Times obviously isn't publishing 6,000 words on the front page about whether
teens are endangering themselves by taking Accutane.
And if you pitch that story, my guess is they would look at you and be like, that's not
news.
What are you talking about?
Yeah, of course, and they'd be like, nobody's going to read that, you know, they will read.
And also it's like, I don't know, it's so rich for them for any news outlet to be like,
we're so worried about the teens and it's like, you don't give a fuck about teens.
Nobody does.
Nobody in America cares about the teens and their health.
And if they did, I know that there are people who care a lot about this, but none of them
appear to be making laws.
If we did care, then we would like try and help them get shot less often among other
things.
And it's like, none of this is coming from a care for trans youth.
What it's coming from is what if these youth turn out to be not really trans?
That is a largely fictitious population.
Like they're just saying, what if theoretically some of these kids turn out to be not trans?
Generally speaking, these stories cannot even find children who regret transitioning a lot
of times when they're quoting so-called detransitioners.
They will quote people who transitioned as adults and then say, well, I regret transitioning
as an adult.
So can you even imagine doing it to a child?
Which is like me taking skating classes and being like, wow, I can't imagine doing this
as a child.
And it's like, yeah, it's actually a lot harder when you're 35 because children are
gummy and they have very low centers of gravity, which I think would be more terrifying to
them.
Right.
It's like, oh, these children are so gummy and we're making them all trans.
I mean, again, they're so focused on this regret and I hate to throw statistics because
no one cares.
But I just think it's really important.
I care.
I was going through peer-reviewed journals.
This is not like Pop Crave.
This is like actual science about one in five people regret their total knee replacements.
One in five people regret their gastric band surgery.
In fact, the average regret rate across all surgeries, if you just average the concept
of surgery, the regret rate is about 14%, one in seven.
The regret rate for gender-affirming surgeries is depending on the study between 1% and 0.1%.
And so what are you doing to write all of these stories about this population that mostly
doesn't exist?
I mean, even not just surgeries, almost 10% of people say they regret having kids.
The majority of people say they regret their student loans.
We got to do more headlines about that kids thing.
Well, yeah.
It's just like one in 10 people versus 0.1% of, and then not just trans people, trans
people who have had surgery.
So it's like one third of 1% and then 1% of that.
Why are we running from page stories on this?
But it implies this urgency and this prevalence.
There's also even the New York Times' own coverage.
They were trying to talk about teens who get top surgery, right?
And they could only find numbers in the low three digits of teens who have had top surgery
because it's actually not very common in teens.
If you think about cis girls, they're getting breast reductions at the rate of almost 5,000
a year and implants at the rate of more than 3,000 a year, but we're not putting that on
the cover.
We're talking about the teens who got top surgery.
We're not talking about the 30,000 kids a year that are getting rhinoplasty, like nose
jobs.
They're getting the top surgery.
It's just this fixation and I think it is truly because cis people cannot imagine what
it would be like to be trans.
And so their thought is, well, if I was trans, I would detransition because I'm not trans.
So if I was trans, I would want to undo being trans.
Thus, trans people must want to undo being trans.
And thus, we should talk about this, but you're actually just making up a guy to get mad
at, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
This is the Quentin Crisp, I think, quote in the cellulite closet, I don't eat peas
and I'm glad I don't eat peas because if I ate them, I would like them and I hate them.
Top surgery, for example, you could argue that there are problems with top surgery, but
the problem is that it's not supported and the care isn't good enough and that it's
a struggle to get and to have someone do it well.
And that's a problem not with the thing existing, but with the resources for it.
I mean, is that reasonable to say?
Sure.
I mean, that's all surgery.
Yeah.
The regret rates are really low.
Even people I know who had some form of revision that they needed with their top surgery, I
literally don't know anyone.
I know so many people who have gotten top surgery, just truly astronomical numbers of people
in my specific life because of my field who have gotten top surgery.
I don't know anyone who has regretted it.
Even people who have had to like, yeah, have some sort of revision with some sort of complication.
It's never been deeply serious and I'm not saying that it has never happened, but I do
know people that haven't regretted other surgeries, I know people who have complications
from other surgeries because that's what it is to be alive.
I think that like just the statistical presence of comparing it to the rates of regret for
other surgeries, it's just like, why aren't we seeing more of that?
It's a very simple thing that explains itself.
And I just really want to stress because I think people actually don't know this, that
the medical resources that trans people access to transition are actually identical to the
way that non-trans people's sex and gender are routinely medicalized to quote Jules Gil
Peterson.
So what that is to say is that cis and trans people are accessing the same hormones, hormone
blockers, birth control, hair removal, mastectomies, breast augmentation, orchiectomies, hysterectomies,
vaginal plastic, BBLs, Botox fillers, all of it is the same.
In fact, all of it was developed for cis people and then trans people are like, we would like
to use that also.
And so when you're seeing articles of any kind that are saying trans people should not
be able to access this care, it is care that cis people are accessing and the only difference
is that a trans person wants to access it.
And when trans people want to access that care, we are required to submit psychiatric
evaluations to corroborate our need for medical care, which cis people don't need.
And so if, for example, a trans woman wants to have an orchiectomy, she needs to pay psychologists
and psychiatrists to write a letter that says, yes, this person is really trans and
yes, she is mentally stable and yes, she is really a woman and yes, she can have an orchiectomy.
But if a guy goes in and says, I'm having a lot of testicular pain and I would like you
to take my balls off, they're like, wow, that sounds serious.
Yeah, totally.
And that's it.
That's all that you need.
Puberty blockers, which New York Times has covered, have been now legally banned by anti-trans
laws in certain states only for trans people.
But cis kids can access puberty blockers for such reasons as things that make sense, like
they started puberty at seven and now they're menstruating at seven and that seems troubling.
And then it's like, wow, we're saying that people don't get equal access to healthcare.
That's a thought.
Right.
I mean, it just comes back to the fact that I guess I should clarify because I'm saying
just kind of as a funny bit, should trans kids allowed to be trans, but trans people
are trans whether or not they can access healthcare.
So by like denying healthcare or transition or even social transition to trans kids, you're
not actually making them not trans.
They're just trans kids who are suffering, but they're still trans and they'll still
grow up to be trans adults.
They'll just like have a harder time because all of the weird shit that you did to them.
But anyway, all of these debates that are saying like, should trans kids be allowed to,
in their minds, be trans, it's because they think being trans is a negative outcome.
So all you have to do is think of, oh, what if it was okay that kids were trans?
What if there's actually nothing wrong with having kids be trans?
And all of a sudden, all of the big problems that are being put on the front page go away.
However, the problems being buried are not covered about how those kids are being attempted
to be legislated out of existence by denying their access to healthcare and even denying
their ability to socially transition or talk in schools in the case of like, don't say
gay bills or book bans.
Those don't go away when you accept that being trans is like actually good.
And so it's just like, oh, if we could get the New York Times to just see transness as
a neutral quality, the coverage would completely shift.
Well, I do feel like we need to talk about the developments of the New York Times in
the last couple of months.
And before we do that, I think we have to talk briefly about their history of talking
about queer and trans people because there are some really fun headlines.
One of my favorites is from 1952 when they were talking about gay people getting kicked
out of the military.
And the headline is 126 perverts discharged.
That's a big load, I don't know where they discharged it.
Actually, I think one of my actual favorites is they have one that the headline is homosexuals
proud of deviancy medical academy studies finds.
And then that article goes on to say, of course, homosexuality is a disease.
It's an emotional disturbance.
We have to prevent it through sex ed.
If we can't prevent it, we have to treat it.
This was New York Times coverage of gay people in the 1960s.
Amazingly in the 1970s, a reporter was allowed to write this really fun-seeming article about
a gay cruise in the travel section.
They're like, they're doing BDSN.
They're wearing G-strings.
They're listening to music.
It was so fun.
And the publisher at the time, his mother was like, this is appalling, do not ever
have this happen again.
So the publisher actually banned both the concept of gay life and the word gay from the New
York Times.
And they put in the style guide that you can't use gay as a synonym for homosexual unless
it appears in a formal, capitalized name of an organization or in a quote.
And that rule lasted until 1987.
So there were 12 years in which you could not say gay.
There was a literal don't say gay law at the New York Times.
And even when they started using gay, instead of saying the phrase openly gay, they said
admitted homosexuals well into the 1990s.
This was like, I was reading, oh yeah, Kitty Kelly's Nancy Reagan book.
She described someone as an avowed lesbian.
Yes, exactly.
Yeah.
Again, they were really slow to talk about AIDS.
They spent basically two years not talking about AIDS at all.
They avoided saying the word AIDS and obituaries in the 1980s, which is like partially their
fault, partially stigma.
They did publish a William F. Buckley op-ed in 1986 that called for all people with HIV
to be forcibly tattooed on their arms and their butts.
So that was a cool chill thing that they did.
This is really different.
I don't mean to compare these two things, but recently last November, a like ostensibly
liberal op-ed writer at the New York Times published an op-ed about the mass shooting
at Club Q in which queer and trans people were murdered, and that op-ed, which condemns
the mass shooting in which queer and trans people were murdered, contains the line, there
are, I believe, legitimate debates over questions like when puberty blockers should be prescribed
or gender-confirming surgeries performed on minors in the op-ed about trans people being
murdered in a hate crime.
Yeah.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
And both of these things feel really relevant to what's happening today because in the last
few years, queer and trans New York Times reporters have been increasingly bringing
up issues at the New York Times, like everything we've discussed, but also just like little
style guide issues.
So like most of the time when they're talking about trans people, they will have to say like
Kola Skola, who identifies as non-binary and uses the gender-neutral pronouns, they
and them, and then they'll turn to the next comedian on the list, Matt Rogers.
And it won't be like, who uses the pronouns he and him and identifies as a man.
It's very special language that we only use for trans people because we have to say identifies
as trans or identifies as a woman, which really, I would argue, makes it sound like who can
say?
A person identifies as a woman, but who knows if they are a woman.
But it's really none of her business.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And the reason that they use that special language, which if you're going to name someone's
age, you name everyone's age, if you're going to name someone's race, you name everyone's
race, but this special treatment is only for trans people.
And it's because the New York style guide specifically tells them to do that.
Like there are many cases in which they've just refused to use a trans person's pronouns
by just not using any pronouns for them, the entire piece.
There are more, many more cases where they're just going like really, really clunky explanations
in the middle of a sentence.
I have so many of these in PowerPoints that I use to teach that are just like really shocking
by like how clunky they are.
But we're not here to talk about that because who cares about sentence structure except
for me.
I mean, I also, it's so, I've read the things where they're saying no pronouns and it is
like, it feels like you're reading a press release for like a new startup product or
it's like Kylie started playing guitar at 11, Kylie is from Prince Edward Island, Kylie.
You're like, wow, the Kylie is going to change everything.
There was also a case in which the New York Times wrote a long profile of my friend, Maya
Kobabe, who wrote the book Gender Queer, which has been banned a lot.
And so this story deals with like the banning of trans and queer people and stories.
But Maya uses EM air pronouns, which are fairly uncommon.
So I actually would understand if the New York Times chose to explain the pronouns.
But what they didn't do was ever use the pronouns either even one time.
They just did the thing that you're saying where it's like, Kobabe said this, Kobabe
said that, Kobabe said this, Kobabe said that in a full profile of Maya, it just gets to
the point where it's like, you're not treating them like you're treating any other person.
You're treating them differently because you're scared of their pronouns.
And I understand this is new and scary for you, but like you can't write a full profile
of someone and then refuse to refer to them the way that they're asking you to be referred
to.
Right.
They also suggest that people avoid using the word queer.
So I have a friend who used to be a reporter on queer culture for the New York Times.
But then if they wanted to write the headline, something, something queer bar, they were
told they couldn't say queer bar in the headline.
They had to say LGBTQ bar with the periods between each letter.
And that's just simply not what we call our bars wrong.
That person specifically, Julia Carmel, who's talked about this on the citations needed
podcast.
So I feel like, okay, sharing it here because they've said it as well.
They were told, as were others, that if you had an issue with the style guide to take it
up with the standards desk, and so then they would, and people wouldn't do anything.
And so, you know, Julia has a story of like, I put a suggestion in the standards desk slack
and then I was told that was the wrong place to put my suggestion.
So then it was bounced around a while and then finally a meeting was scheduled and then
the meeting was canceled and then nothing changed.
Meanwhile, trans people who have changed their name have been told by the New York Times that
their name cannot be updated on past bylines.
So if you wrote for the New York Times and then after some articles were published, you
were like, actually, I have a new name and it is, you're picking.
It's your name.
Ooh.
Oh my God.
So much pressure.
Wendy.
Yeah.
You're like, Wendy is my gender affirming name now.
They're like, okay, totally.
You can use Wendy moving forward maybe if you legally change it.
I don't know what their standards are, but we will not change past stories to Wendy to
make your byline consistent, which is actually just out of practice with the way that other
outlets treat this.
I have not heard of other major outlets who will not update your byline retroactively
if you change your name, particularly for being trans.
But the New York Times will not do that even when the New York Times union got involved.
They're still just refusing to do it.
You'll be shocked.
They're just going to a bad feeling for trans reporters at the New York Times.
Multiple former New York Times reporters have reported not feeling comfortable using them
pronouns at work or getting misgendered by people that they've known for many months.
And I just find that to be troubling personally.
I don't know why.
I just think that trans journalists can be journalists.
The New York Times employed Barry Weiss, you know, and it's just like, you know, to work
at the New York Times, you do not necessarily have to have a thought in your head, but you
apparently can't be trans or non binary.
Right.
And like even in the op ed section, Jennifer Finley Boylan had an op ed column in the New
York Times for 15 years.
And what I have read in certain places was that her contract was not renewed and I couldn't
find that independently to verify it.
But regardless, like she does not have a column there anymore.
And instead of replacing her with another trans columnist, I can't say they replaced
her one to one with this person, but they did then hire David French, who's an attorney
for the Alliance Defending Freedom, which is an anti LGBTQ legal organization that the
Southern Poverty Law Center designates as a hate group.
And who has written, French specifically has written many times in the past about how he
doesn't believe that trans people are real.
And so it's like, well, we lost a trans columnist, but we gained someone who hates trans people
as a columnist.
So that's fine.
But then I guess if he doesn't think trans people are real, then the trans columnist
was never even there.
So you don't have to be sad about it.
Absolutely.
I don't know.
This feels like something that happens and sort of like attempting to be mainstream liberalism
in this idea in America of like, politics are more divisive than ever, everything's political.
There's no bipartisanship.
So like, it's up to Democrats to reach across the aisle by agreeing to commit a little genocide.
Not as much as conservatives are asking for, but just like, pick one group and let them
die, right?
Yeah.
No, absolutely.
I think you're totally right.
I don't know if they hate trans people or if this is just some wild ignorance.
And you know, if I want to give them the benefit of the doubt and say they don't hate trans
people somehow, they're just, they keep tripping and accidentally doing transphobia, you know,
it doesn't matter because the result is that they're putting trans people in danger.
And so like, I don't really want to litigate whether they hate trans people or whether
they don't care about trans people or whatever, whether they secretly love trans people and
hug them and give them money, they're putting trans people in danger.
It's the whole like, impact outweighs intent thing is like, I don't care what you think
you're doing.
I don't care that you think you're doing objective and bias journalism.
If you're putting trans people in danger.
So that brings us to everything that has happened since I pitched you this story and I want
to say like early February and now, which is early April when things are still developing.
And the most important thing is on February 15th when organizers at the National Writers
Union, nope, the National Writers Union's Freelance Solidarity Project published a
letter that was addressed to Philip Corbett, the associate managing editor for standards
at the New York Times, who is the person that you would theoretically go to if you were
a New York Times contributor who were like, I have a problem with this coverage.
That is the proper channel for filing a grievance.
So these different organizers who have all contributed to the New York Times in some
capacity is my understanding, writes this letter that had this really professional tone
as if they were addressing like a senior colleague, very respectful, very much like on the New
York Times's terms, they're like no-tone policing us here, you know, just asking that
maybe the New York Times reconsider the way that they're approaching its trans coverage.
So I want to read part of it just to give people an idea, but people can also read
the whole article or the whole letter at nytletter.com and there's a bunch of updates on that page
too.
So they say, the newspaper's editorial guidelines demand that reporters, quote, preserve a professional
detachment free of any whiff of bias, unquote, when cultivating their sources, remaining
sensitive that personal relationships with news sources can erode into favoritism, fact
or appearance, yet the Times has in recent years treated gender diversity with an eerily
familiar mix of pseudoscience and euphemistic charged language while publishing reporting
on trans children that omits relevant information about its sources.
For example, Emily Bazalon's article, the battle over gender therapy, uncritically used
the term patient zero to refer to a trans child seeking gender affirming care, a phrase
that vilifies transness as a disease to be feared.
Bazalon quoted multiple expert sources who have since expressed regret over their work's
misrepresentation.
Another source was identified as an individual person speaking about a personal choice to
detransition rather than the president of GCCAN, an activist organization that pushes
junk science and partners with explicitly anti-trans hate groups.
So this article goes on to go through much of the New York Times history that I shared
about how gay topics and gay people have been treated in the past.
It also gives more examples of trans journalism that they felt were lacking and cited why
similar to the examples that I gave.
There are not specific demands or calls to action.
They're simply saying like, we've noticed this pattern in your coverage.
Here are some things we have issues with.
Here's sort of the precedent for that.
We would like you to reconsider the way that you're doing trans coverage at the New York
Times.
This letter was signed by initially about 180 past and present contributors and staff
members of the New York Times.
It later, that number bumped up to 1200.
And so 1200 New York Times contributors and New York Times staff signed this letter as
well as 34,000 supporters.
It was delivered to the New York Times via this website on the same day that GLAAD, the
advocacy organization, sent its own letter.
The GLAAD letter was similar but had a different tone and had specific demands and the demands
included like stop printing biased anti-trans stories and invest in hiring trans writers
and editors.
And that letter was signed by more than 100 LGBTQ organizations and then celebrities like
Judd Apatow, Margaret Cho and a bunch of like trans famous trans people.
So we have these two letters.
One of them is signed by a bazillion people at the New York Times.
Another one is created by GLAAD.
This is important because the Times spokesperson Charlie Stotlander releases a statement that
day that says in part, quote, we receive the open letter delivered by GLAAD and welcome
their feedback.
We understand how GLAAD and the co-signers of the letter see our coverage, but at the
same time, we recognize that GLAAD's advocacy mission and the Times journalistic mission
are different.
The very news stories criticized in their letter reported deeply and empathetically on issues
of care and well-being for trans teens and adults.
It does not acknowledge the journalistic contributors letter at all.
We'll call it the contributors letter for ease.
And when asked, Charlie says, Oh, well, we got the contributor letter through GLAAD, which
is not true.
GLAAD has put out a statement sense that says we did not deliver that letter.
We submitted our own letter.
So they're just refusing to acknowledge the contributors letter at all.
Interestingly totally unrelated, but I feel like you'll appreciate this.
Charlie Stotlander was at the New York Times for about a year before that he was the head
of public affairs at the NSA.
And before that was at the U.S. Army Cyber Command has a long history of working with
like the military and military contractors.
And I just like, it's like, wow, it's so wild that this NSA man like would not take seriously
issues of transphobia.
It's really bad PR implicitly to hire someone who has that on his CV because it's like,
what are the size of the New York Times is problem?
Are they like torturing people abroad that we don't know about?
Like hire someone who used to work at Pampers or something.
It really is so troubling, I got to say.
So that happens.
The contributors letter doesn't get acknowledged the next day.
The executive editor and the opinion editor at the New York Times sent out a message internally
to staff, which immediately gets leaked.
And there's so much going on in here.
But it also only mentions the glad letter.
It claims that New York Times journalists signed the glad letter, which is false.
It claims that the letter included direct attacks on several of our colleagues, singling
them out by name.
It also says that participation in such a campaign is against the letter and spirit
of our ethics policy because they prohibit journalists quote from aligning themselves
with advocacy groups, which again, they didn't.
They didn't sign the advocacy letter they signed the journalist contributors letter.
They also say that their ethics policy prohibits journalists quote from attacking one another's
journalism publicly or signaling support for such attacks.
So they're using the word attack over and over and over and over again.
It also says that these these articles that are criticized have been important, deeply
reported and sensitively written, but that the writers have quote nonetheless endured
months of attacks again, harassment and threats.
And most importantly, they say the following, even when we don't agree, constructive criticism
from colleagues who care delivered respectfully and through the right channels strengthens
our report.
We do not welcome and will not tolerate participation by times journalists in protests organized
by advocacy groups again, did not happen or attacks on colleagues on social media and
other public forums.
So again, this is going out to the staff of the New York Times, it is an internal message
that's basically saying, we saw you sign a letter, we're actually going to pretend
that you signed a different letter written by an advocacy organization.
And we're also going to call this an attack on your poor defenseless colleagues that have
been experiencing harassment and threats.
And as it has been pointed out elsewhere, particularly by Adam Johnson at citations
needed this behavior of like pretending that it's coming from this glad organization instead
of literally contributors to the New York Times is a classic union busting tactic known
as third partying.
It's just like PR crisis management, like 101 stuff where you're like, oh, you don't
want to join a union, a union will, you know, tell you what to do except for it's the advocacy
organization glad.
And also they're not actually involved.
And it feels like they're doing that classic like we're a great big family.
And also everyone has got to work Christmas.
You can't criticize your coworker Emily Bazalon because it will hurt her feelings when the
criticism is like, this is directly hurting the lives of trans youth.
And it's like, sure, sure, live schmives.
This feels like such a pattern and abuse on the individual and on the cultural scale
where you have a group that's saying like, you abused me and you hurt me in all these
ways you have, you know, like you're hurting me, you have hurt me and you are continuing
to hurt me.
And then the person or entity who you communicate that to is like, you have hurt me more by
telling me that I hurt you.
And it's like, okay, is it possible that you really think these things are comfortable?
Like, yeah, maybe who can say, I think like at least some individuals do.
And then you're just like, and as you've been saying, it's like, it kind of doesn't matter
because whether you believe it or not, the outcome is the same and the sort of pretzels
that you bend your argument into to like make your victim, therefore your victimizer because
it makes you feel something when they tell you what you've done to them, it just allows
you to do to keep doing whatever you want.
And just another layer onto this is that the same day, one day after this letter first
comes out, an op ed from Pamela Paul is published and it's called in defense of JK Rowling.
And this op ed complains that quote, a number of powerful transgender rights activists and
LGBTQ lobbying groups have called JK Rowling transphobic, which Pamela says doesn't square
with her actual views.
It's worth noting a couple of things here.
And it's worth noting that JK Rowling doesn't need a defense because she's a billionaire
who has been using UK libel laws to go after her critics.
But it's also worth noting that this was not just published a day after a letter that says
maybe don't be so transphobic, but also a week after the murder of Brianna Gay, who is
a 16 year old British trans girl.
And so as has been pointed out other places such as the podcast death panel talking about
this, outlets hold stories all the time.
There is a famous phrase, stop the presses, where if you think that something needs to
be changed at the last minute, you can just change it.
If you have a computer, you really can.
You don't have to publish your defense of JK Rowling that day.
You could publish it in a week or two weeks or three weeks, you know, like it's just,
you're not even saying don't publish it, you're saying do it later.
Exactly.
It just seems, it seemed very pointed to a lot of people is what I'll say.
A lot of people are like, wow, you really don't care if you are going to do this.
So a bunch of stuff happened after that.
The New York News Guild, which is the New York Times Union, put out a statement in support
of the contributors letter.
They affirmed that journalists actually do have the right to criticize the paper in order
to address workplace conditions.
And then in response to that, dozens of other New York Times staffers wrote a counter letter
to the union letter that says, quote, your letter appears to suggest a fundamental misunderstanding
of our responsibilities as journalists.
Our duty is to be independent.
We pursue the facts wherever they may lead.
We are journalists, not activists.
That line should be clear.
And it's very like lalamao, lalamao, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
Another example of someone who signed that letter was Emily Basil on a person we've mentioned
several times already because she wrote this 11,000-word piece on gender-affirming care.
I only needed 10,000 words to defend Tanya Harding, so you know, I love that.
And she, in a series of not-deleted tweets, said that to her being a journalist meant
following the facts where they lead and it's not advocacy, so like very similar to what
this letter says.
But yet many trans experts have come forward and said that they were interviewed for Emily
Basil's piece and then were left out of the piece.
And in fact, Emily did a really weird thing where it's sort of like to boost her cred
in these tweets that are not deleted.
She was like, well, you don't have to take it from me.
Take it from, for example, Jules Gil Peterson, the author of The Histories of the Transgender
Child.
And Jules is like, well, I'm not cited in the article.
And in fact, many things that I said to you, you contradicted in the article, like I told
you the histories of the transgender child and then you just pretended that I didn't
tell you and like said something else instead.
And so that was the outcome that was felt by trans people who were dissuaded in this
story was that they were not listened to and that their words were twisted.
And yet this letter is again saying we are independent and we are journalists, not activists,
and we pursue the facts wherever they may lead.
And it just feels really dishonest and like not to quote Luconeal over and over again,
but he said something that makes me laugh a lot, which is you are performing advocacy
one way or the other, whether you are aware of it or not.
The difference now is that more of the audience is onto the con and can yell at you about
it on Twitter every day.
And I really feel like that's what they hate is they're like, I want to be able to do this
with no consequences, but it really feels in general, like the energy a lot of these
people are like, well, I want to have no consequences for my actions.
Because I don't want to be yelled at on Twitter.
Exactly.
And like, look, to be clear, I hate being yelled at more than anyone.
Like if I could structure my whole life to avoid getting yelled at, I would.
And yet even I can recognize that like there are worse things, you know, and if that's
like the thing that feels worst in your life, then like, well, it's pretty good.
And if I were going into such high stakes as the cover of the New York Times, I don't
know that I would feel the confidence to speak so authoritatively on something that I don't
know anything about.
You know what I mean?
Like I would, I don't want to get yelled at either.
So I'm not putting myself in the position where I'm pretending to be an authority on
a community that I don't know anything about.
Well, and you're also, I think you're being persuasive on in this episode because you
exist and you're talking to me and I'm not sitting here having a conversation with no
one.
Like it's a beautiful mind.
Wouldn't that be a fun twist if you get my tape back and it's empty and you were just
talking to a wall.
If you were a figment of my imagination, that would, I would be like, wow, good job
imagination.
Because I will say as far as I know, the people who signed that second letter, nothing happened
to them.
Whereas the end, the New York Times employees who signed that original contributors letter,
at least 20 of them were called into investigatory meetings and were given warning memos in which
they were like, look, we considered serious punitive measures.
You're not being suspended.
You're not being fired, but there will be consequences if this happens again.
Jesus Christ.
And comparing it to like union busting tactics, right, feels really important because like
we all will not all of us, but like it certainly is more like historically accepted.
Being a union buster or a scab is one of the worst things that you can possibly be.
And that this is the same.
Yeah.
Well, two weeks after that contributors letter and the glad letter were published, Corbett
finally replies Corbett's the person who the original letter was addressed to because
he's the standards guy.
And he says, we believe these discussions should be internal and not public.
And he also says that the specific news story cited in your letter were entirely in keeping
with our journalistic standards.
They reported deeply and empathetically on issues of care and wellbeing of trans people.
And then he gives that list that I mentioned earlier that's like, we don't just publish
stuff about whether kids should be trans.
We also in 2015 did 800 words on anti-trans violence and also we showed a short film on
a trans Mexican person and it's like, okay, cool.
Thank you, Phillip.
And then the next day, the publisher of the New York Times defended the paper's trans
coverage in his state of the times address.
Oh my God.
And that's why I really just will continue to stress that like it is actually so tempting
to go through and dispute specific facts, specific phrasing, specific sources.
But at the end of the day, like that's why I'm not focusing on that because then the
publisher will be like, oh, well, by focusing on a handful of individual stories and lines,
like you're missing the breadth of our coverage.
And it's like the breadth of your coverage is that it's harming trans people.
Like when you zoom out, the sign just says harming trans people, so don't tell me to
zoom out.
It's not any better than when I zoom in, you know, but they did make one change, which
is that on March 17th, they finally edited, I believe Basil on story from June 2022.
So that's what I can't do math, nine months later, nine months later, they finally edited
the term patient zero out of the story where they referred to someone accessing trans care
as patient zero because they were like, oops, that was a phrase that we used to bully people
who had AIDS.
I'm like, maybe we can use it in this context.
And I guess, yeah, there's like several layers of like implied sinisterness there where you're
just, you know, and the number of people who had to read that and be like, yeah, you know,
it's like, it's a, it's a pretty big operation.
We're recording this on, on April 7th and April 6th yesterday, the people behind the
contributors letter, which I don't think I said at the top, but are like a really incredible
array of trans reporters that I think are absolute geniuses and, and other allies, they released
another letter going over a lot of what I just went over, but more concisely and articulately,
and they created a timeline of everything we just described that I used to make a lot
of the references in this episode.
And so people can find the whole thing at NYT letter.com and it is a really good resource.
If you're like, what did I just say, much better.
But I just can't get over the fact that like we're having this argument on the New York
Times's terms where everyone's trying to be like as polite and like fact-based and like
using the ethics code of the New York Times as possible and it's still being dismissed.
And it just reminded me of something that Ryan Ken said on gender veil a couple months
ago, which was that they said, some of the most frustrating parts around doing DEI work
is the inability to speak freely and all of the couching and calculation you have to do
to be like, excuse me, maybe if you have a moment, possibly if you could please get your
foot off my neck.
Yeah.
I do think it's legitimate to be upset about the fact that many people in this country and
beyond are calling for quote and end to transgenderism and that the national paper of record does
not seem to be particularly concerned about that.
I think it's actually okay to be upset, but in order to be taken seriously, I feel like,
oh my gosh, I'm so sorry, but could you maybe consider not treating me like both an alien
freak and a danger to democracy?
And I'm like, hmm, no.
Well, yeah, I'm just like, I don't know.
Isn't it completely factually supported that if you're, if the thing you can say out loud
is that you're like an end to transgenderism, the way you're saying is an end to trans people
and where do the people go?
Well, it was a big fight because people like the Rolling Stone, I believe, and some other
outlets quoted that and then said, like, oh, this person called for an end of trans people
and they were like, no, I didn't, I called to an end of transgenderism and transgenderism
is an ideology.
And so it's actually not calling for an extermination of those people, it's actually just the extermination
of an ideology.
And it's just like, I can't, again, like Marxism is an ideology, it's just like, I can't play
this game with you, like, there's no way to eradicate transgenderism without eradicating
trans people that doesn't make any sense.
And it sounds like a semantic game that a lot of sort of like, oh, we're just being objective
would play and I refuse to play it, you know, just refuse and it's just like when you have
to engage in hair splitting like that, then it's like, okay, why, you know, the Lady
Doth protest, right, like, it's like, no, it's, it's, it's not, it's not like genocide.
It's similar.
I can get why you're confused, but it's, it's, there's a small difference.
I just get really stuck on this, the unwillingness of the New York Times to admit that it is
in any way putting a thumb on the scale of this conversation.
Because I just think that when you are one uncritically repeating right-wing talking
points and phrasings, but also just reporting on trans youth in a complete vacuum where
you're not acknowledging the hundreds of trans bills going through almost every single state
legislature in this country and are fixating like not on the real category of trans kids,
but on the made up category of kids who are not trans but think they are.
And when you are refusing to see trans people as experts and in fact refusing to see them
as like fully worthy of respect and dignity, and then ignoring and threatening simultaneously
the reporters who critique this, it's just tangibly creating a negative impact for trans
people.
And so to have them say in every single statement, actually we're being deeply empathetic and
compassionate and objective, it's like, just say it with your chest.
Just say what you're doing.
Right.
And that's like, you know, that's an insult on top of everything else.
Yeah.
The unwillingness or inability to admit the truth of what's going on because it feels
like what you've described creates essentially like an unwinnable maze for the truth, for
truth to seep in, right?
Because if you can't challenge things internally, if you go through the allegedly correct route
but you can never do it right, you know, it creates this sort of like bureaucracy in
which actual truth or insight go to die.
And people can also claim that it's nobody's fault.
Right.
Absolutely.
It's very much the hot dog guy saying we're all trying to figure out the guy who did this.
So yeah, I mean, the good news about all of this, because obviously there's so much
bad news, but the good news about all of this is that as you asked at the beginning, like
this is a distinct pattern from other comparable news outlets.
And it is therefore not inevitable.
And we are very much within our rights to ask for better because it is being demonstrated
at other outlets that you can do better.
And I'm not saying other outlets are perfect, but they are doing better.
Yeah.
And that it's actually really powerful to like name the big pattern and then refuse to participate
in it.
And it's very satisfying to just be like, I can see, I can see what you're doing.
Yeah.
And they're just like, excuse me, we are so fancy, none of you can figure out all our
little tricks.
Yeah.
And it's like, yeah, no, they're not that great.
You're not that sneaky.
You wrote 126 perverts discharged.
Like it's like you're not that subtle.
And so it really is easy to contribute to a better world for trans people and it's simply
and I cannot say this enough being normal, just being normal about trans people.
And if the New York Times could just be normal about trans people and cover us the same way
that they cover literally any other topic with the same journalistic standards and framing
all of these problems would be solved.
And that was our show.
Thank you so much for listening.
Thank you so much to Tuck Woodstock.
Thank you so much to Carolyn as always for editing and producing and holding my hand.
You can listen to Tuck's podcast gender reveal.
It's great.
Thank you so much for being with us.
We'll see you soon.