Baffled with David DesRoches

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Do you ever wonder why journalists do the things they do? Why do they focus on one thing and ignore another? Should journalists be champions of democracy or does that impede their objectivity? Why do they pretend to be unbiased? And why do they care so much about awards? Baffled with David DesRoches just might have some answers. You might not agree with him, and that's the point -- to start a dialogue about this important industry. Hosted by an award-winning journalist (see that?), this podcast explores those moments when we consume media and say to ourselves, “Huh?” The goal is to offer thoughts on improving journalism and the media industry, and to also help non-journalists better understand the reporting process. In an era when distrust is as common as a cold, the need for podcasts like this cannot be overstated. So go and start one yourself!  This podcast is a production of the Quinnipiac University Podcast Studio.

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    • Sep 8, 2022 LATEST EPISODE
    • infrequent NEW EPISODES
    • 34m AVG DURATION
    • 14 EPISODES


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    Latest episodes from Baffled with David DesRoches

    The Harsh Reality of Forecasting Abuse Using Predictive Analytics

    Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2022 34:45


    Current statistics paint a bleak picture for American children: about one in four kids will experience some form of abuse or neglect at some point in their lifetimes. But, what if we could predict the likelihood of abuse before it happens? What about at birth?  Social scientists and computer programmers are hoping to do just that.  New predictive risk models that promise to be able to determine the likelihood of abuse or neglect are being deployed in public child protective service agencies around the country. However, poorly implemented algorithms have real-world impacts on real people. When used in child welfare cases, algorithms consider things like interactions with police or the welfare system. However, many of these data are proxies for race or poverty. For example, people are more likely to call police on a Black family and give a white family the benefit of the doubt. That interaction with police then becomes data an algorithm considers when determining risk. Again, the data are biased because it comes from biased people, and sometimes the data are even racist. A computer doesn't know the difference between a racist complaint and a real one. They are both data, and in a computer's eyes, equally as useful. This episode is a production of the Department of Motion Pictures and Stories of Change, a partnership of the Sundance Institute and the Skoll Foundation, with support from IFP and Quinnipiac University. Our editor is John Dankosky. Our mixers are Ben Kruse and Henry Bellingham. Our producers are Elizabeth Lodge Stepp and Michael Gottwald. Executive Produced by Josh Penn. Research by Kate Osborn. Fact checking by Jacqueline Rabe Thomas. Additional reporting by Colleen Shaddox. Special Thanks to Emily Jampel. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    Aborting Abortion: How to Report Better on One of the Most Heated Topics of Our Time

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2022 33:50


    Covering abortion as journalist is a huge challenge, but we often create more problems by using language that inflames tension and deepens distrust. In this episode, we talk about four things that journalists can do to cover the abortion debate more fairly, and avoid the partisanship trap. This podcast is a production of the Quinnipiac University Podcast Studio. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    Eight Suggestions for Journalists and the Public to Consider as Russia Continues Its Invasion of Ukraine

    Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2022 47:02


    All information that emerges during wartime, no matter where it comes from, is tainted. It's tainted because of the nature of war. War splits us. It unites one side against the other. It completely eliminates nuance. It over-simplifies everything. It consolidates everything into a neat little package: in this case, Russia versus the world.  And frankly, while Russia is obviously the aggressor here, we should be concerned about how unbalanced the coverage of this war has been. Most journalists are taking a clear side, which might be the right thing to do from a moral perspective, but is it right from a journalism perspective? So how can we – as journalists and as news consumers – make sense of it all? Is it even possible to know the truth about a war when virtually all information is coming with strings attached, and journalists themselves are aligning with one side? Baffled with David DesRoches is a production of the Quinnipiac University Podcast Studio. Our social media coordinator is Jillian Catalano and our video guy is Jake McCarthy. Follow David on Twitter @SavingEJ and follow the studio on Instagram and Twitter @QUPodcasts Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    The Baffled Student Production Team Talks Journalism, PR, and Some Stuff in Between

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2021 35:14


    In this episode, host David DesRoches interviews the Baffled production team: Grace McGuire, Jillian Catalano, and Jake McCarthy. Grace is a second-year student are Quinnipiac University, majoring in Journalism with a double-minor in Spanish and Sociology. Jillian is also a second-year student; a Public Relations major minoring in management. Jake is a first-year journalism major and psychology minor. This podcast is a production of the Quinnipiac University Podcast studio. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    The Biggest Threat to Democracy Isn't Donald Trump, It's Nationalism Hidden in American Journalism

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2021 30:05


    It's not so much what American journalists write that threatens democracy. No, it's more about what they don't write -- context. This lack of context is what perpetuates American propaganda. Journalists might not be waving American flags and talking about freedom and democracy openly, but they are certainly doing that subversively, by omitting the context and withholding the whole truth. And when we don't tell the whole truth, journalists end up as unwitting regime propagandists. Who suffers as a result? Everyone. Democracy also suffers because the people remain uninformed and unable to empathize with their foreign brothers and sisters. The missing context creates holes which are filled in with beliefs. And in that ignorance the public remains, ripe for manipulation by the partisan press and of course, demagogues. That's why American journalism's hidden nationalism is the biggest threat to democracy – it oversimplifies and leaves the people ignorant. And ignorant people simply gravitate toward what they believe, which deepens polarization. And because most American journalism exists within a for-profit business structure, the journalism itself becomes more partisan, because that's what brings in the views, the clicks, the bucks. This podcast is a production of the Quinnipiac University Podcast Studio. Our producer is Grace McGuire, our social media coordinator is Jillian Catalano, and our videographer is Jake McCarthy. The music was composed and performed by host David DesRoches. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    Quinnipiac's J School Chair Talks Journalism, Democracy and Keeping it Local

    Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2021 37:01


    Host David DesRoches interviews Quinnipiac professor and journalism chair, Molly Yanity about the importance of journalism within democracy, what it means to defend a fragile democracy, and how to address the cross roads journalists are facing today. The podcast is a production of the Quinnipiac University Podcast Studio, hosted by David DesRoches, director of community programming and longtime journalist, and produced by Quinnipiac student Grace McGuire. Jillian Catalano is the social media coordinator and Jake McCarthy is the videographer. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    The Good, Bad & Ugly of Modern Polling with Quinnipiac Poll's Doug Schwartz

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2021 45:08


    Polls are a lot like news stories. They can tell us about what's going on, they inform the public about a moment in time, and they also drive us crazy. Host David interviewed Associate Vice President of the Quinnipiac Poll, Doug Schwartz in 2019 to discuss the good, the bad, and the ugly of modern polling. The podcast is a production of the Quinnipiac University Podcast Studio, hosted by David DesRoches, director of community programming and longtime journalist, and produced by Quinnipiac student Grace McGuire. Jillian Catalano is the social media coordinator and Jake McCarthy is the videographer. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    Should Journalists Be Required to Have a License to Practice Journalism?

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2021 40:27


    Some countries, such as Portugal, require their journalists to be licensed and yet those countries rate higher on the Press Freedom Index than the United States. Is licensing journalists the way to regain the public's trust? Host David DesRoches talks with Indiana lawyer, Steve Key, who is the executive director and general counsel for the Hoosier State Press Association, about this concept. The podcast is a production of the Quinnipiac University Podcast Studio, hosted by David DesRoches, director of community programming and longtime journalist, and produced by Quinnipiac student Grace McGuire. Jillian Catalano is the social media coordinator and Jake McCarthy is the videographer. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    A Journalism Professor Talks Diversity and Ethics in the Modern J World

    Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2021 33:21


    Host David Desroches interviews Quinnipiac University Assistant Teaching Professor Wasim Ahmad about the value of diversity in newsrooms, the different types of diversity that actually exist, and about photojournalism in the modern age and its ethics. The podcast is a production of the Quinnipiac University Podcast Studio, hosted by David DesRoches, director of community programming and longtime journalist, and produced by Quinnipiac student Grace McGuire. Jillian Catalano is the social media coordinator and Jake McCarthy is the videographer. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    Journalist Hacker? A Missouri Governor Goes Head-to-Head With a Newspaper Over Reality

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2021 31:28


     This episode looks into a story in which a journalist discovered that a Missouri state website had included the social security numbers of tens of thousands of public school teachers in the HTML code. The governor had responded by calling him a hacker. The episode looks at how this specific story is more complicated than it might seem, and how this story is a classic example of the never ending narrative battle. The podcast is a production of the Quinnipiac University Podcast Studio, hosted by David DesRoches, director of community programming and longtime journalist, and produced by Quinnipiac student Grace McGuire. Jillian Catalano is the social media coordinator and Jake McCarthy is the videographer. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    We Should Redefine Journalism as the Pursuit of Equitable Justice

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2021 26:50


    Many journalists are drawn to their work by a very strong sense of right and wrong. They're driven by their sense of justice. This is how it is currently, yet our partisanship arises from our very different definitions of justice. And it's these different definitions that deepen our distrust of the other. But maybe, just maybe, if we shared a definition of justice, maybe that could change, and maybe we could regain the public's trust. The podcast is a production of the Quinnipiac University Podcast Studio, hosted by David DesRoches, director of community programming and longtime journalist, and produced by Quinnipiac student Grace McGuire. Jillian Catalano is the social media coordinator and Jake McCarthy is the videographer. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    The Six Headline Tactics That Should Drive You Bananas

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2021 31:50


    Journalistic practices have changed. In some good ways, arguably, but many changes have not been for the best. And the things that really need to change, mostly remain unchanged. This episode is about bad changes. Specifically, headline writing. These are the six headline tactics journalists use today that should drive us bananas. The podcast is a production of the Quinnipiac University Podcast Studio, hosted by David DesRoches, director of community programming and longtime journalist and produced by Quinnipiac journalism student, Grace McGuire. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    Four Reasons Why Journalists Should Not Defend Democracy

    Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2021 30:22


    Can journalists defend democracy and pursue truth at the same time? Can those two things coexist? Maybe? Maybe not? Maybe it depends? That's what we're going to talk about today, because, while there are many things wrong with this idea, there might be a way we can do it, but that path is going to be a challenge.  The podcast is a production of the Quinnipiac University Podcast Studio, hosted by David DesRoches, director of community programming and longtime journalist and produced by Quinnipiac journalism student, Grace McGuire. The music is by Maarten Schellek from the song Salt Lake Swerve Chillout Remix. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    The Seven Lies Journalists Want You to Believe

    Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2021 24:49


    Modern journalism has done some truly incredible work over the years. But we are not infallible. We are prone to mistakes. Most of the time they are unintentional, but often they are a result of institutional values that have gone unchecked for decades, if not centuries. This episode will explore some of those problematic values that have become embedded in the practice of journalism, specifically in the United States of America. The podcast is a production of the Quinnipiac University Podcast Studio, hosted and produced by David DesRoches, director of community programming and longtime journalist. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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