Joseph Kahn and the Stewardship of The New York Times

Joseph F. Kahn (b. 1964) edits The New York Times. He holds the position of executive editor, the highest rank in the newsroom, and has held it since June 2022. He directs more than 1,700 journalists and sets the editorial direction of the most influential newspaper in the United States. He won the Pulitzer Prize twice as a reporter before he rose through the editing ranks. His career tracks the transformation of American journalism from the age of foreign bureaus and print circulation to the age of digital subscriptions, global publishing hubs, and continuous news cycles.

Kahn was born in Boston, Massachusetts, into a family that joined intellectual ambition to commercial success. His father, Leo Kahn (1916-2011), co-founded the Purity Supreme supermarket chain in New England and later helped launch Staples, which grew into a giant of office supply retail. The son chose journalism over business, but he grew up watching a man build and run large organizations. That education in institutions stayed with him. Colleagues who later watched him manage the Times newsroom saw a leader at home with budgets, structures, and long-range planning, skills more common in the executive suite than in the press corps.

His path into journalism began at Middlesex School in Concord, Massachusetts, where he edited the school newspaper and graduated in 1983. He went on to Harvard University, where he served as president of The Harvard Crimson and earned a bachelor’s degree in history in 1987. He later added a master’s degree in East Asian studies, a credential that shaped the rest of his reporting life. Friends from those years recall a reporter who cared more about gathering facts than about cultivating a persona. The description followed him for decades. In a profession that rewards self-promotion, Kahn built a career on institutional competence and a low public profile.

He started at The Dallas Morning News in 1987. The paper gave him room for ambitious projects with an international reach. In 1994 the Morning News won the Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting for a series documenting violence against women around the world, and Kahn shared in the award as part of the reporting team. The prize carried a double significance. The series treated violence against women as a global human rights story at a time when much of the press ignored it, and a regional paper beat the national giants on their own ground. The project marked Kahn as a reporter who could combine field work with structural analysis of politics and society.

He moved to The Wall Street Journal, where he deepened his command of international economics, labor conditions, and human rights, and where he served as a China correspondent. China was then emerging as the central economic and geopolitical story of the era, and Kahn’s reporting from the country drew the attention of editors at The New York Times, which hired him in 1998.

At the Times he became a leading foreign correspondent and later Beijing bureau chief. He covered China’s transformation from a developing economy into a global power, and he looked beneath the growth figures at the strains the boom produced: corruption, land seizures, labor unrest, manipulated courts, and the struggles of ordinary citizens inside an authoritarian system. In 2006 he and Jim Yardley (b. 1964) shared the Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting for a series on China’s legal system. The stories showed how local officials exploited weak institutions, bent courts to their purposes, and used eminent domain to strip rural residents of their land. The series exposed the gap between the government’s public commitment to legal modernization and the lives of the citizens who faced its courts.

His China years also taught him the personal risks of journalism under authoritarian rule. In 2004 Chinese authorities arrested Zhao Yan, a Chinese researcher working for the Times, on state secrets allegations, and held him for nearly three years. The case became an international cause, and Kahn had to deal with Chinese security and political authorities while advocating for a colleague trapped inside an opaque legal system. The episode sharpened his understanding of the triangle of journalism, state power, and individual vulnerability, an understanding few American editors acquire firsthand.

When his reporting career ended, he climbed the editing ladder: deputy foreign editor, foreign editor, international editor, then managing editor from 2016. In these roles he became a principal architect of the paper’s global news operation. Public attention fixed on star columnists and on executive editors, while Kahn built a reputation inside the building as an effective institutional operator. During his years running the International desk, the Times won six Pulitzer Prizes for international reporting. As manager he oversaw the expansion of foreign coverage, the integration of digital publishing into newsroom routines, and the construction of a continuous global reporting cycle.

The clearest expression of that work was the “Follow the Sun” strategy. Digital subscribers expected fresh coverage at every hour, so the paper built major editorial hubs in London and Seoul to keep high-level editing and reporting capacity running around the clock. Kahn played a central role in the buildout, which converted a historically American newspaper into a global digital news organization.

In April 2022 the publisher, A. G. Sulzberger (b. 1980), named Kahn to succeed Dean Baquet (b. 1956) as executive editor, and Kahn assumed the role that June. Observers read the appointment as a choice for continuity over disruption. Kahn had spent years running the paper’s daily operations, and the publisher trusted him as a steward of editorial standards and strategic direction rather than as an agent of dramatic change.

He inherited a newspaper in stronger financial condition than most of its competitors but facing complex pressures. The Times had built a large digital subscription business, yet it competed with social media platforms, independent creators, newsletters, podcasts, and emerging artificial intelligence technologies. The newsroom operated amid intense political polarization and declining public trust in institutions.

Kahn’s leadership rests on a defense of traditional reporting standards joined to an adaptation to technological change. He argues that journalists must report fairly on people, movements, and ideas they oppose. He resists the redefinition of journalism as activism, and he insists that the paper’s credibility depends on rigorous reporting rather than ideological alignment. Early in his tenure he named his priorities: editorial independence in an age of polarization, an ambitious path for the institution, and a diverse workforce.

His tenure has brought controversy from several directions. Debates over race, gender identity, free speech, political extremism, and the Israel-Hamas war have drawn criticism from activists, readers, politicians, and at times the paper’s own employees. Kahn has defended the editorial process and held that difficult subjects require coverage regardless of the intensity of the reaction. He has also faced labor conflict. In late 2022 members of The New York Times Guild staged a twenty-four-hour strike, the first major newsroom walkout at the paper in decades. The dispute exposed tensions between management and staff during a period of industry-wide upheaval, and Kahn stayed close to the negotiations while the paper continued to publish.

Under his leadership the Times has continued its expansion beyond the newspaper model. The company now operates as a diversified digital information business with audio journalism, video production, newsletters, games, cooking products, and a range of subscription services. Kahn argues that these ventures exist to fund the core mission of reporting and investigative journalism.

He belongs to the lineage of executive editors that runs through A. M. Rosenthal (1922-2006), Max Frankel (1930-2025), Joseph Lelyveld (1937-2024), Bill Keller (b. 1949), Jill Abramson (b. 1954), and Baquet, leaders who shaped the national conversation through institutional stewardship rather than personal celebrity. His influence derives less from public commentary than from decisions about what thousands of journalists investigate, publish, and prioritize.

His career illustrates the transformation of the profession he leads. He entered journalism when success depended on foreign bureaus, long-form reporting, and print circulation. He now runs an organization defined by digital subscriptions, global audiences, continuous publishing, and technological disruption. Through those changes he has held to the traditional journalistic conviction that careful reporting and verified information remain indispensable to public life. Whether one views him as a defender of institutional journalism or as the manager of a powerful media corporation, Joseph Kahn stands among the defining newspaper editors of his generation.

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The Institutionalist: Dean Baquet and the Remaking of American Journalism

Dean P. Baquet (b. 1956) stands among the most consequential newspaper editors of the past half century. As executive editor of The New York Times from 2014 to 2022, he becomes the first Black journalist to run the newsroom of the most influential paper in the United States, and he presides over its transformation from a print institution in financial peril to a digital subscription business with global reach. His career spans the collapse of the metropolitan newspaper, the rise of the internet, and the political and cultural convulsions that remake American journalism in the first decades of the twenty-first century. At every stage he finds himself at the center of the profession’s defining fights: over corporate cost-cutting, over technology, over objectivity, and over what a newsroom owes its readers, its staff, and the public.

Baquet is born on September 21, 1956, in New Orleans, Louisiana, and grows up in the Tremé neighborhood, the historic heart of the city’s Black Creole community. His father, Edward Baquet, runs a successful restaurant, and the family business gives the boy an early education in work, management, and the web of relationships that hold a community together. He attends St. Augustine High School, a Black Catholic school with a reputation across the South for academic rigor and discipline, and then enrolls at Columbia University. The classroom cannot compete with the newsroom. After an internship at the New Orleans States-Item, he leaves Columbia without a degree and takes up reporting full time.

His apprenticeship unfolds in New Orleans through the 1970s and early 1980s, first at the States-Item and then at The Times-Picayune. There he forms the habits that mark the rest of his career: aggressive sourcing, skepticism toward official accounts, and an appetite for the information that institutions work to keep hidden. New Orleans, a city of byzantine politics and entrenched corruption, gives him ample material. The work draws notice, and in 1984 he moves to the Chicago Tribune, where he rises to the front rank of the paper’s investigative staff. In 1988 he shares the Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting as part of a team that exposes corruption and abuse in Chicago’s city council. The prize confirms him as an investigative reporter of national stature, still in his early thirties.

In 1990 Baquet joins The New York Times as an investigative reporter. He arrives at a moment when investigative journalism turns its attention toward complex financial, governmental, and transnational institutions, and he reports on money laundering, corruption, and public accountability before moving into management. By the mid-1990s he serves as national editor, directing coverage across the United States and shaping the paper’s domestic report. The trajectory from reporter to senior editor takes less than a decade.

The next turn comes in 2000, when he leaves New York for the Los Angeles Times to serve as managing editor under John S. Carroll (1942-2015). The partnership ranks among the most productive editorial collaborations in modern American newspapers. Together they expand the paper’s investigative ambitions, strengthen its national and foreign coverage, and gather Pulitzer Prizes at a pace few papers have matched. When Carroll departs in 2005, Baquet succeeds him as editor and becomes the first Black editor of a major metropolitan daily in the United States.

His Los Angeles tenure ends in conflict, and the conflict makes his name as much as the prizes do. As the economics of the newspaper business deteriorate, the paper’s corporate owner, the Tribune Company, demands successive rounds of newsroom cuts. Baquet resists. He argues that each reduction weakens the paper’s reporting capacity and degrades the product readers pay for, and he says so in public, an act of defiance almost unheard of among sitting editors. The company dismisses him in 2006. For a generation of journalists, his stand becomes a defining symbol of the fight between newsroom values and corporate cost-cutting during the collapse of the traditional newspaper model. Years before he runs The New York Times, he carries a reputation as a defender of reporting resources against the spreadsheet.

He returns to the Times in 2007 as Washington bureau chief and later becomes managing editor. From those posts he helps direct coverage of the Iraq War, the financial crisis of 2008, and the paper’s halting early steps from print toward digital publishing. The problem facing the great newspapers by the early 2010s extends beyond journalism. The papers must build a business that can survive in an online environment where readers expect news without charge, and no one has yet shown how.

In May 2014 publisher Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr. (b. 1951) elevates Baquet to executive editor after the abrupt dismissal of Jill Abramson (b. 1954). The handover occurs amid unusual institutional anxiety. At nearly the same moment, the Innovation Report, an internal study of the paper’s digital failings, circulates through the building and then leaks. The report warns that the Times remains bound to the rhythms of print while digital-native competitors capture audiences online. Baquet inherits the newsroom and, with it, the burden of steering a venerable institution through a technological transition that has already destroyed much of its industry.

Over the next eight years he becomes the central editorial figure in that transition. Under his leadership the paper accelerates its shift toward digital publishing, audience development, multimedia storytelling, and subscription growth. Digital subscriptions rise from roughly one million to more than nine million paying customers. The achievement demonstrates that readers will pay for quality journalism if asked, and it stands as a business success few in the industry thought possible. Other news organizations study the Times model and attempt to copy it.

The journalism keeps pace with the business. During his tenure, Times reporters expose the pattern of sexual abuse and institutional protection surrounding the Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein (b. 1952), work that helps ignite the MeToo movement. The paper publishes major investigations of Donald Trump’s (b. 1946) finances and tax records, some of the most consequential political reporting of the era. The newsroom also extends itself into new forms, above all The Daily, a podcast that reaches millions of listeners and proves the paper can command attention beyond the printed and pixelated page.

His tenure coincides with the most turbulent stretch of American politics in decades. The rise of Trump, the COVID-19 pandemic, the protests after the killing of George Floyd (1973-2020), and deepening polarization place enormous pressure on the major news organizations. Baquet navigates competing demands from readers, reporters, activists, and political critics. Conservatives accuse the Times of ideological bias. Progressive critics argue the paper clings to outdated notions of neutrality. He absorbs fire from both directions and treats the crossfire as evidence the paper holds its ground.

Against the current of his profession, Baquet defends traditional reporting values. He argues that reporters should gather verifiable facts rather than function as political activists, and he says this at a moment when many younger journalists regard the distinction as a dodge. He becomes the most prominent editor in American journalism to criticize the influence of Twitter on newsroom culture. The platform, he warns, leads journalists to mistake the opinions of a small, intense online community for public sentiment, and it narrows rather than widens the journalistic field of vision. He eventually restricts how Times journalists may use the platform, a policy other newsrooms adopt.

The internal conflicts of his later years register the transformation of the profession. In 2020 the opinion section publishes an essay by Senator Tom Cotton (b. 1977) calling for military intervention during urban unrest. The staff revolts. Hundreds of employees declare the essay puts Black colleagues in danger, and the uproar contributes to the resignation of editorial page editor James Bennet (b. 1966). Baquet does not oversee the opinion section, but the episode exposes deep divisions inside the institution over free expression, journalistic responsibility, and the boundaries of acceptable public argument. It becomes the most discussed newsroom controversy of the era.

A year later he confronts the case of Donald G. McNeil Jr. (b. 1954), a veteran science reporter whose coverage of the pandemic had made him a public figure. Revelations that McNeil used a racial slur during a student trip years earlier produce mounting internal pressure, and McNeil leaves the paper. Critics inside and outside the building fault the handling of the case from opposite directions. The affair illustrates the position of the modern newsroom leader, who must balance institutional standards, staff expectations, public scrutiny, and shifting cultural norms, and who satisfies no constituency in full.

His years atop the masthead also include the 1619 Project, the most ambitious and contested work of historical journalism the paper has undertaken. Led by Nikole Hannah-Jones (b. 1976), the project places slavery at the center of the American story. Supporters hail it as a necessary reexamination. Critics, including prominent historians, challenge its interpretations and its political implications. The argument over the project shows how far the major news organizations have moved into the center of the nation’s cultural and historical disputes, whether they wish to stand there or not.

Baquet steps down as executive editor in 2022, at the customary retirement age for the position, and Joseph Kahn (b. 1964) succeeds him. He leaves a newsroom larger, richer, more digital, and more global than the one he inherited. He also leaves it facing the conditions that defined his tenure: the pressures of social media, internal ideological conflict, declining public trust, and the difficulty of holding broad legitimacy in a polarized country. The institution thrives. The environment around it does not.

After leaving the masthead, Baquet turns toward the wreckage of local journalism. He leads a Times fellowship program that supports investigative reporting at regional and local news organizations, an effort that answers concerns running through his whole career. He fought newsroom cuts in Los Angeles and watched local papers across the country collapse. The fellowship work attempts to preserve the reporting capacity of institutions that long served as the foundation of American civic life, and it returns him, near the end of his career, to the kind of accountability reporting where he began.

Baquet occupies a distinctive place in the history of modern journalism. He never becomes a celebrity columnist, an ideological crusher, or a media entrepreneur. He works instead as a newsroom institutionalist who believes rigorous reporting, investigative ambition, and editorial independence remain essential public goods. His career links the metropolitan newspaper culture of the late twentieth century to the subscription-driven digital news organizations of the twenty-first. He rises from a Creole restaurant family in Tremé to the top of American journalism without a college degree, on reporting talent and institutional judgment. Few editors exercise greater influence over the profession’s passage into the digital age, and fewer still do so while the political, technological, and cultural ground shifts beneath the building.

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The Publisher Always Wins – A Jill Abramson Biography

Jill Ellen Abramson (b. 1954) stands at the center of the most consequential transition in modern American journalism, the passage from print dominance to digital survival. She becomes the first woman to run the newsroom of The New York Times, holds the job for less than three years, and leaves in a firing that turns into a national argument about gender, power, and the limits of editorial authority. Her career runs through nearly every major crisis of the American press in her era: the Clarence Thomas confirmation, the Iraq weapons coverage, the Jayson Blair scandal, the collapse of the newspaper business model, and the rise of paid digital subscriptions. Few figures touch so many of these episodes from the inside.

Abramson is born on March 19, 1954, in New York City and grows up in Manhattan in a Jewish family. Her father works in the textile business. She attends Harvard, graduating in 1976 with a degree in history and literature, and works at Time magazine while still a student. Her formation matters for everything that follows. She comes up as a reporter, not as a manager. Her professional identity rests on the gathering of facts, the cultivation of sources, and the long investigative project. When she later runs newsrooms, she runs them as a reporter who acquired authority, and the difference shows.

After Harvard she joins The American Lawyer, the legal publication that trains a generation of journalists to treat law firms, courts, and judges as institutions subject to scrutiny rather than deference. Her beats include courts, lawyers, political influence, and institutional accountability. In 1986 she becomes editor of Legal Times in Washington, a position that gives her early lessons in newsroom management and a deep education in how legal and political systems operate away from public view. The legal press of the 1980s rewards a particular skill, the ability to read documents that others find tedious and to see the story buried in procedure. Abramson masters it.

In 1988 she joins The Wall Street Journal as an investigative reporter. Over the next decade she builds a national reputation for deeply sourced work on campaign finance, lobbying, and the federal government. The period favors her. Investigative journalism grows in importance to national political reporting, and the Journal gives its investigative staff time and space that few outlets can match.

Her reputation expands through her books. In 1994 she and Jane Mayer (b. 1955) publish Strange Justice: The Selling of Clarence Thomas, a study of the confirmation battle over Clarence Thomas (b. 1948). The book goes far beyond the Senate hearings. Abramson and Mayer revisit witness testimony, locate overlooked sources, and trace how the White House, Senate Republicans, and the confirmation machinery handled the allegations of Anita Hill (b. 1956). The authors argue that corroborating evidence existed and that the Senate Judiciary Committee left investigative leads unpursued. The book becomes a finalist for major literary awards and places Abramson among the country’s leading investigative journalists. It also marks her as a journalist willing to challenge a sitting Supreme Court justice, a choice with permanent consequences for how political Washington views her.

In 1997 Abramson joins The New York Times as an investigative reporter. She rises fast, becoming Washington editor in 1999 and Washington bureau chief in 2000. Her bureau years span the disputed 2000 election, the September 11 attacks, the launch of the War on Terror, and the run-up to the Iraq War. The bureau chief of the Times during such a period holds an office of national consequence, and Abramson holds it during the most contested stretch of coverage in the paper’s modern history.

The defining episode of her Washington years concerns Iraqi weapons of mass destruction. Reporter Judith Miller (b. 1948) produces a series of influential articles that rest on sources connected to the exile leader Ahmed Chalabi (1944-2015). Miller enjoys unusual access to executive editor Howell Raines (b. 1943) and sometimes bypasses ordinary editorial channels. Abramson and other Washington editors raise concerns about the reporting and its sourcing. When no weapons stockpiles appear, the episode becomes a deep wound in the paper’s reputation and feeds a broader debate about newsroom oversight and editorial accountability.

The Miller affair sits inside a larger struggle between Abramson and Raines. Raines governs through what newsroom critics call a star system. He elevates favored reporters and bypasses traditional editing structures. Abramson represents the conventional model of newspaper management, with bureau authority, collaborative editing, and institutional process. The disagreement runs deeper than personality. Two visions of how a great newsroom should operate collide, and the collision determines careers.

The dispute reaches its climax in 2003 with the scandal of Jayson Blair (b. 1976), who fabricates and plagiarizes material across dozens of stories despite warnings from editors and colleagues. Blair receives repeated support from senior leadership. The newsroom revolt that follows forces Raines from office. Abramson emerges with her reputation strengthened. She had stood for the procedural model that Raines dismantled, and the Blair scandal vindicates that model in the most public way possible.

Executive editor Bill Keller (b. 1949) names Abramson managing editor in 2003, the first woman to hold the position. Over eight years she helps supervise coverage of the Iraq War, Afghanistan, Hurricane Katrina, the 2008 financial crisis, and a string of presidential elections. She earns a reputation for intellectual rigor, exhaustive preparation, and demanding standards. Admirers call her relentless. Critics call her difficult and confrontational. Both judgments follow her for the rest of her career, and the question of whether male editors with identical traits draw identical judgments becomes part of her story.

Less visible during these years is her work on the digital problem. As newspaper economics deteriorate, Abramson studies digital operations and pushes the institution to rethink its approach to technology, audience development, and social distribution. She helps create the conditions that produce the Innovation Report of 2014, the internal study that exposes the weakness of the paper’s digital strategy and becomes a touchstone document across the industry. The report shapes newsroom conversations far beyond West 43rd Street.

In June 2011 publisher Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr. (b. 1951) appoints Abramson executive editor, the first woman to hold the paper’s highest editorial position. The appointment carries enormous symbolic weight in a profession where senior leadership remains overwhelmingly male. Abramson now sits atop the most prestigious newsroom in the country at the moment of its greatest economic peril.

As executive editor she attempts to balance two imperatives. She works to preserve the paper’s traditional strengths in reporting and editing while accelerating its adaptation to digital life. Digital subscriptions grow during her tenure. The paper expands its online presence, multimedia work, and mobile strategy. The journalism remains strong. The internal politics do not.

Her tenure carries persistent tension. Some staff members praise her vision and question her management style. Others argue that the newsroom holds her to standards it never applied to male editors, that brusqueness in a man reads as command and in a woman reads as abrasion. The debate becomes a national media story and centers on gender, leadership, and newsroom culture as much as on Abramson herself.

The crisis arrives in May 2014. Abramson learns that her compensation and retirement benefits differ from those of Keller, her predecessor, and she consults legal counsel about the discrepancy. At the same time she attempts to recruit Janine Gibson from The Guardian for a senior digital leadership role. The move generates friction with managing editor Dean Baquet (b. 1956), who feels excluded from the discussions. Sulzberger concludes that Abramson’s management approach damages organizational cohesion and dismisses her on May 14, 2014.

The firing becomes a controversial leadership change in modern media history, and observers split on its causes. Some see a management dispute. Others see a conflict over gender, authority, compensation, and institutional politics. The episode exposes the constitutional reality of the Times. However powerful an executive editor appears, final authority rests with the publisher. Abramson tests that arrangement and loses.

After the Times she enters a new phase as author, teacher, and commentator. She joins the Harvard faculty and stays active in debates about the future of journalism. In 2019 she publishes Merchants of Truth: The Business of News and the Fight for Facts, a comparative study of The New York Times, The Washington Post, BuzzFeed, and Vice. The book extends her long interest in how journalistic institutions adapt to technological and economic change. Shortly after publication, critics identify passages with inadequate attribution or close paraphrasing of previously published work. Abramson acknowledges the attribution errors, and later editions carry corrections. The controversy damages her because it touches the standards of sourcing and attribution she spent decades enforcing in others. The editor who policed the line stands accused of crossing it, and the irony writes itself into every account of her career.

Abramson occupies a distinctive place in American journalism. She is an investigative reporter who became an institutional leader without losing her skepticism toward institutions. She helped expose the failures of the powerful and then fought power struggles inside her own organization, losing the last one. Her career spans the collapse of the traditional newspaper business model, the rise of digital journalism, the Iraq reporting crisis, the Blair scandal, the emergence of paid digital subscriptions, and the long argument over women in authority.

She stands in history as both a pioneer and a transitional figure. She belongs to the generation that inherits the prestige of twentieth-century newspaper journalism and then faces the task of reinventing it for the twenty-first. Her rise shows what the old institution could still reward. Her fall shows what it could not yet tolerate, or what it tolerated only in men, depending on which account one believes. Either way, her achievements, conflicts, and controversies illuminate the transformation of American journalism, and no honest history of the period writes itself without her.

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Howard Zinn – The Historian Who Took Sides

Howard Zinn (1922-2010) writes the most widely read radical history in American life and spends fifty years arguing that the historian’s job includes taking sides. He grows up poor, fights in a world war, drops napalm on a French town, and turns the memory of that mission into a career-long indictment of organized violence. His book A People’s History of the United States sells millions of copies, enters thousands of classrooms, and makes him a symbol in the nation’s fight over its own story. Professional historians attack his methods. Readers keep buying the book. The gap between those two facts defines his place in American letters.

Zinn is born on August 24, 1922, in Brooklyn to Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe. His father waits tables, works in factories, and pushes a fruit cart. His mother sews. The family moves from tenement to tenement through the Great Depression, sometimes a step ahead of the landlord. There are no books in the home until his parents clip coupons from the New York Post and assemble, volume by volume, the collected works of Charles Dickens. The boy reads all of them. Dickens gives him his first picture of class as a moral fact, of poverty as something done to people rather than something they deserve.

His political education starts on the street. As a teenager he attends a Communist-organized rally in Times Square. Mounted police charge the crowd. An officer clubs him unconscious. He wakes on the pavement with a new conviction that the state does not stand neutral between the powerful and the powerless. He never joins the romance of Soviet communism for long, but the lesson of the nightstick stays with him for the rest of his life.

From 1940 to 1943 he works as an apprentice shipfitter at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, one of the largest industrial plants in wartime America. The established unions exclude the young apprentices, so Zinn and three friends organize the Apprentice Association to win them a voice. He learns labor politics from the inside, with cold hands and a rivet gun, years before he reads about it in graduate school. At the Navy Yard he also meets Roslyn Shechter (1922-2008), whom he marries in 1944. The marriage lasts until her death.

In 1943 he enlists in the Army Air Forces and trains as a bombardier on B-17s. He volunteers; he believes in the war against fascism and wants to fight it. He flies combat missions over Europe and earns an Air Medal. Then, in April 1945, with the German army collapsing and the war in Europe weeks from its end, his squadron bombs Royan, a French coastal town where a small German garrison sits cut off and strategically spent. The raid uses napalm, then a new weapon. Hundreds of French civilians die alongside the German troops. From thirty thousand feet Zinn sees only flashes in the landscape. He thinks little of it at the time.

The mission works on him slowly. In 1966 he travels back to Royan, reads the local archives, and interviews survivors. His essay The Bomb argues that large military bureaucracies acquire momentum of their own, that the machinery of destruction keeps running after its purpose has expired, and that the men inside the machine, himself included, stop asking why. Royan becomes the moral foundation of everything he later writes about war. When he opposes Vietnam, he opposes it as a man who has dropped the bombs himself.

After the war he studies at New York University on the GI Bill while loading trucks at night, then completes a doctorate at Columbia University under Richard Hofstadter (1916-1970). His dissertation on Fiorello LaGuardia’s congressional career wins recognition from the American Historical Association and becomes his first book, LaGuardia in Congress. Hofstadter prizes irony and detachment. Zinn concludes the opposite: that detachment in scholarship serves whoever holds power, and that the historian who claims neutrality has chosen a side without admitting it. The disagreement between teacher and student previews the fight that follows Zinn for the rest of his career.

In 1956 he takes the chairmanship of the history department at Spelman College, a school for Black women in Atlanta. He arrives as the civil rights movement gathers force, and his students walk into the middle of it. They sit in at lunch counters, march, and register voters. Among them are Alice Walker (b. 1944) and Marian Wright Edelman (b. 1939). Zinn does more than approve from his office. He drives students to demonstrations, serves as an adviser to the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, and documents the movement in his 1964 book SNCC: The New Abolitionists. He also pushes his students to challenge the paternal rules of Spelman, and the administration decides he has pushed enough. President Albert Manley fires him in 1963, tenure notwithstanding. Spelman grants him an honorary degree in 2005, an apology four decades late.

The Spelman years fix his central historical conviction. He watches sharecroppers’ daughters and student organizers move a nation that presidents and courts had declined to move. He concludes that political change rises from below, from ordinary people acting together at risk to themselves, and that the official story crediting enlightened leaders gets the causation backward. Abolitionists, suffragists, strikers, and protesters occupy the center of every narrative he writes afterward.

In 1964 he joins the political science department at Boston University and stays for the rest of his teaching life. He becomes one of the country’s most visible academic opponents of the Vietnam War. His 1967 book Vietnam: The Logic of Withdrawal makes the case, then heterodox, for leaving at once rather than negotiating a slow exit. In 1968 he flies to Hanoi with the Jesuit priest Daniel Berrigan (1921-2016) to receive three American prisoners of war released by North Vietnam. The trip makes international news. Later he testifies at the trial of Daniel Ellsberg (1931-2023) and helps hide and edit the Pentagon Papers before their publication.

His defense of lawbreaking gets its fullest statement in Disobedience and Democracy: Nine Fallacies on Law and Order, published in 1968 as an answer to Justice Abe Fortas (1010-1982). Fortas argues that citizens must obey even unjust laws while working through legal channels for reform. Zinn answers that law and justice are different things, that legal institutions tend to protect entrenched power, and that citizens hold a right and sometimes a duty to break unjust laws. Courts, he writes, cannot serve as the final judges of morality. The argument scandalizes legal scholars and becomes a handbook for a generation of protesters.

At Boston University he wages a twenty-year war with president John Silber (1926-2012), a combative conservative who regards Zinn as a fraud and says so in public. Zinn leads faculty union organizing, helps direct the strike of 1979, and keeps his job because tenure protects him. Silber freezes his salary and blocks his raises. The feud becomes the most famous in American academic life, two stubborn men sharing one campus and despising each other across it. Zinn retires in 1988, teaching his last class half an hour short so he can join a picket line.

A People’s History of the United States appears in 1980 with a first printing of a few thousand copies. The book retells American history from the deck of Columbus’s ship as the Arawaks see it, from the slave quarters, the textile mills, the reservations, the tenements, and the picket lines. Conquest, slavery, class war, and empire move to the center of the story. The familiar heroes shrink. The book finds readers no academic monograph reaches: union halls, high schools, prisons, rock musicians, and eventually a scene in the film Good Will Hunting where Matt Damon (b. 1970) tells his therapist to read it. Sales pass two million copies in Zinn’s lifetime and three million after. No work of American history written by a professional historian in the late twentieth century reaches so many people or angers so many colleagues.

The criticism comes from the left as well as the right, and the strongest of it comes from historians who share many of Zinn’s politics. Michael Kazin (b. 1948) argues that Zinn reduces ordinary Americans to victims and rebels and cannot explain why so many workers vote for conservatives, attend church, and love the country he describes as a machine of oppression. A history of the people that cannot account for what the people believe, Kazin argues, fails on its own terms. Michael Kammen (1936-2013) calls the book a mirror image of the elite histories it attacks, a new cast of heroes and villains inside the same selective frame. Sam Wineburg (b. 1958) studies the book’s use in classrooms and argues that it hands students conclusions instead of teaching them to weigh evidence, replacing one catechism with another. Zinn’s defenders answer that every survey selects, that the standard textbooks had selected in favor of power for a century, and that Zinn merely made his selection visible.

Zinn concedes the premise of the attack and denies that it is an attack. He rejects the ideal of neutrality as a pretense. All history, he argues in his 1970 collection The Politics of History, makes choices about emphasis and significance, and the historian who hides his choices behind a rhetoric of objectivity has smuggled in a politics of the status quo. Better, he says, to declare your commitments and let the reader judge. His memoir title states the creed: You Can’t Be Neutral on a Moving Train.

He writes plays as well as history. Emma dramatizes the life of Emma Goldman (1869-1940). Marx in Soho brings Karl Marx (1818-1883) back from the dead to defend his ideas against the capitalists who dismiss him and the dictators who claimed him. The plays run in small theaters for decades and show the same instinct that drives the history: the past as argument, staged for the present.

He dies of a heart attack on January 27, 2010, in Santa Monica, swimming on a trip to California, eighty-seven years old and still lecturing. The fights over his work grow after his death. In 2013, released emails show that Mitch Daniels (b. 1949), as governor of Indiana, had sought to purge A People’s History from the state’s teacher training programs, calling the book a fraud; historians across the spectrum condemn the move as censorship even while many of them dislike the book. In 2021 the 1776 Commission names Zinn a chief source of what it regards as a distorted and corrosive account of the American past. A historian dead a decade remains a live combatant in the curriculum wars, which might have pleased him.

The professional verdict on Zinn stays divided. Most academic historians fault his evidence, his selection, and his refusal of complexity. Few deny his effect. He moves labor history, Indian history, Black history, and women’s history from the margins of public consciousness toward its center. He proves that a work of history can carry a radical argument to a mass audience. He forces a question that American education had long declined to ask: whose experience defines the national story? His critics answer the question differently than he does. That they now must answer it at all is his doing.

Zinn cares less about how power operates than about how people resist it. That choice gives his work its energy and its blind spots. He writes history as moral intervention, scholarship as a weapon handed to the living. Whether that makes him the great democratizer of the American past or an activist who dissolved the line between history and advocacy, the verdict depends on what the reader thinks history is for. Zinn thought he knew, and he never wavered, and millions of readers took his answer as their own.

Watergate and Cultural Trauma

Yale sociologist Jeffrey Alexander (b. 1947) argues that events do not traumatize collectivities. Representations do. Trauma is a socially mediated attribution, a claim made by carrier groups who possess the discursive talent to convince a wider audience that some injury has struck at the core of collective identity. Slavery, he writes, did not produce national trauma by its nature. Traumatic status had to be achieved through meaning work. Read through this frame, Howard Zinn stops looking like a historian in the conventional sense and starts looking like the most successful trauma entrepreneur in modern American letters. A People’s History of the United States is a machine for the social production of cultural trauma, and Zinn’s whole career enacts the process Alexander theorizes.
Start with Royan, because Royan shows the theory working on Zinn himself before Zinn works it on the nation. In April 1945 he drops napalm on a French town and feels nothing. For twenty years the event sits inert in his memory, a mission among missions. Alexander’s naturalistic fallacy holds that traumatizing power emerges from events themselves; Royan refutes the fallacy in one biography. The bombing does not traumatize the bombardier. Only in 1966, when Zinn returns to the town, reads the archives, interviews survivors, and writes the essay, does Royan acquire its wound. He performs on his own past what Alexander calls the trauma process: he bridges the gap between event and representation, names the pain, identifies the victims, and assigns responsibility to the bureaucratic momentum of military institutions. The attribution comes twenty-one years late, which on Alexander’s account is no anomaly. Attribution can come in real time, as adumbration, or as post hoc reconstruction. Royan is reconstruction. Zinn learns there that an event tells nothing until someone tells it, and he spends the rest of his life telling.
Alexander borrows the term carrier group from Weber (1864-1920). Carrier groups hold ideal and material interests, occupy positions in the social structure, and command the rhetorical skill to project trauma claims into the public sphere. They can be elites or pariahs. Zinn fits the specification with eerie exactness. He comes from the margins, the Brooklyn tenements and the Navy Yard, and rises into the academy, which gives him institutional position without making him an insider. His material interests ride on the claims: books, lectures, a public. His ideal interests are everything he marched for. And his discursive talent is the rarest kind, the ability to compress an archive into narrative that ordinary readers feel. The trauma process, Alexander says, resembles a speech act: speaker, audience, situation. Zinn is the speaker. The situation is post-sixties America, a society whose movements had cracked the official story without yet replacing it. The audience begins as Zinn’s own collectivity, the activist left, and Alexander notes that illocutionary success must come first at home. It does. The book becomes scripture in movement circles. Then the audience broadens, through classrooms, through paperback editions, through a Hollywood scene, to publics that never attended a demonstration. That broadening, from originating collectivity to society at large, is the exact trajectory Alexander maps for successful trauma claims.
Alexander specifies four representational questions a new master narrative must answer, and A People’s History answers all four on every page. The nature of the pain: conquest, slavery, and exploitation were fundamental injuries, horrors at the foundation, the profanation of sacred values, never incidents or growing pains. Where revisionist historians had described slavery as a profitable labor system, Zinn insists on the lash and the auction block, which in Alexander’s scheme is a fight over whether trauma occurred at all. The nature of the victim: the people, a category Zinn constructs to bind Arawaks, slaves, millworkers, and Vietnamese peasants into a single suffering subject. The relation of victim to audience: here Zinn does his subtlest work, because he must persuade readers who descend from the perpetrators, or from bystanders, to identify with the victims. He does it by presenting the victims as bearers of the qualities Americans already hold sacred, courage, dignity, the love of freedom, so that the reader can make the tragic past his own. Alexander writes that audiences participate in distant suffering only when victims appear clothed in the audience’s own valued qualities. Zinn dresses every striker and runaway in the costume of the founding ideals. And the attribution of responsibility: the establishment, the governing class, the alliance of government and capital. Zinn keeps the perpetrator abstract enough to survive across four centuries of narrative, which gives his trauma drama a single continuous antagonist.
The Watergate essay deepens the reading. Alexander analyzes Watergate through Durkheim (1858-1917): a profane burglary becomes a sacred crisis only through generalization, the upward shift of public attention from goals to norms to values. In June 1972 the break-in is just politics. By 1974 it threatens the civil religion, and the threat gets processed through ritual, hearings as liminal events, pollution spreading toward the center, Richard Nixon (1913-1994) expelled as liquid impurity. The crucial point: the facts barely change. The telling changes. Zinn’s method is permanent, willed generalization. He refuses to let any episode of American history rest at the profane level of interest and policy. The Ludlow massacre is never a labor dispute, the Mexican War never a boundary quarrel, Hiroshima never a strategic decision. Each gets lifted to the level of sacred values violated, which is the move Alexander says converts routine politics into crisis. Where Watergate generalized once, over two years, under unrepeatable conditions, Zinn writes four hundred years of American history as if the generalization had already occurred everywhere, for every event, and the reader need only see it.
His relation to the binary code of American civil discourse follows the same pattern. Alexander’s Watergate tables sort persons and institutions into pure and polluted columns beneath stable sacred codes: democracy, law, honesty against communism, crime, corruption. The Watergate process moved Nixon and his staff from the pure column to the polluted one while leaving the codes untouched. Zinn performs the identical operation at the scale of the whole national past. He never attacks the codes. Liberty, equality, and democracy remain sacred in his text; he wields them. What he relocates are the occupants of the columns. The great presidents migrate toward pollution, Columbus first of all, then Jackson, Lincoln qualified, Roosevelt qualified, Kennedy diminished. The dissidents, deserters, and strikers migrate toward purity. The senators at the Ervin hearings purified themselves by association with the Constitution and polluted the conspirators by association with sectarian self-interest; Zinn runs the same purification ritual for Eugene Debs and the same pollution ritual for Woodrow Wilson. His book sells because it speaks the civil religion fluently while reassigning its saints and demons. A reader can absorb the whole inversion without surrendering one sacred value, which lowers the cost of conversion to almost nothing.
Yet the Watergate essay also measures what Zinn never achieves. Alexander lists five conditions for a full societal ritual: consensus, perceived threat to the center, institutional social control, struggle by autonomous elites forming countercenters, and symbolic interpretation through ritual purification. Watergate met all five, and Alexander stresses how rare the alignment is. Zinn’s trauma claims meet perhaps two. He builds a countercenter, a durable one, in the classrooms and movements that carry his narrative. He supplies symbolic interpretation in industrial quantities. But consensus never forms. The polarization that blocked Watergate’s generalization for two years blocks Zinn’s for fifty. Institutional social control never engages; no court, commission, or congress takes up his indictment of the national past as Watergate’s courts took up the indictment of Nixon. America never convenes the truth commission his book implies, no national hearing on conquest and slavery with the legal and dramaturgical force Alexander attributes to the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission. A People’s History functions instead like the unofficial Tokyo tribunal on the comfort women, a proceeding of moral authority without state sanction, persuasive to its audience, binding on no one. Zinn’s trauma process stalls at the stage Alexander finds in Japan and at Nanking: claims made, carriers active, persuasion partial, the perpetrator collective never compelled to take the suffering on board.
The backlash confirms the analysis. Alexander writes that groups can refuse to participate in trauma creation, and that refusal restricts solidarity and projects responsibility back onto the victims. Mitch Daniels moving to purge the book from Indiana classrooms, and the 1776 Commission naming Zinn the chief vandal of national memory, enact refusal through the state bureaucratic arena Alexander describes, the blue ribbon commission that channels the spiral of signification and narrows the factual basis for civic repair. The 1776 Commission is a counter-carrier group running the trauma process in reverse, constructing a trauma narrative whose injury is the teaching of Zinn. In Alexander’s terms the country now hosts two competing master narratives of suffering, each with its carriers, arenas, and audiences, fighting over which pain defines the collective identity. Zinn built one of the two. Dead, he serves as a pollution symbol within the other, his name doing the work Nixon’s name once did, contact with it believed to corrupt.
One last turn. Alexander brackets ontology and morality; his concern is epistemology, how claims get made and with what results, never whether the suffering was real or the cause just. Zinn refuses the bracket. He writes as a lay trauma theorist of the Enlightenment type Alexander criticizes: the events themselves wound, the rational response is outrage, the outcome is progress. He believes slavery carries its trauma within it, needing only honest narration. His own career disproves him. Slavery sat in the American record for two centuries, documented, known, and untraumatic to the White majority, until carrier groups did the meaning work, and Zinn ranks among the most effective of those carriers. The wound he thought he was uncovering, he was helping to make. Alexander might say this takes nothing from him. The construction of trauma, on this theory, is how societies expand the circle of the we, take responsibility for the suffering of others, and build solidarity wider than the tribe. By that measure Zinn’s meaning work enlarged the American we more than any official commission ever attempted. He just misdescribed his own achievement. He believed he was reporting a trauma. He was creating one.

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Linton Besser: A Reporter and the Paper Trail

Linton Besser (b. 1976) is an Australian investigative journalist, foreign correspondent, and media critic. He reports on corruption, regulatory failure, corporate misconduct, and the conduct of public institutions. Across newspapers, television, radio, and documentary film he has built a body of work that joins documentary research to reporting in the field. His investigations have fed anti-corruption inquiries, a royal commission, regulatory reform, and criminal prosecution. In 2025 he became host of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s Media Watch, the country’s chief forum for criticism of the press. He took the chair from Paul Barry and presented his first program on 3 February 2025.

He was born in Sydney into a Jewish family. His grandparents survived imprisonment at Auschwitz during the Second World War, and that history placed questions of political power and public accountability before him early. He attended Moriah College, a school at the center of Sydney’s Jewish community, and then read English literature and history at the University of Sydney. He took a Bachelor of Arts and turned to journalism.

Besser entered the trade through television. In 2003 he joined the Nine Network‘s Today program as a producer. He wanted reporting experience, so he moved to regional newspapers. He worked first at the Daily Liberal in Dubbo and then at the Illawarra Mercury in Wollongong. At the Mercury he built a name through hard local reporting, above all his coverage of corruption inside Wollongong City Council. That work drew the eye of metropolitan editors. The Sydney Morning Herald recruited him in 2007.

At the Herald he covered transport, planning, and state politics before he joined the investigations unit. His reporting on Defence Department spending won the 2010 Walkley Award for Investigative Journalism. He became known across the country through a series of investigations he conducted with Kate McClymont into the business dealings and political reach of the New South Wales Labor powerbroker Eddie Obeid. Their reporting laid bare conflicts of interest across mining leases, property development, and government decisions. The work helped set in motion the Independent Commission Against Corruption‘s Operation Jasper, which led to convictions and prison terms for Obeid and others. The affair stands among the large corruption scandals of modern Australian politics, and it showed again that investigative reporting can move the levers of public accountability.

The Obeid investigations also mark the signature of his method. He turns away from personality and political rhetoric. He works from documents, contracts, planning approvals, financial records, and the paper trail of administrative decisions. His reporting asks how power runs through institutions and bureaucratic process rather than through public statements alone.

In 2013 Besser joined the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. The move from print to television widened both his audience and the reach of his investigations. From 2014 he reported for Four Corners, the country’s premier investigative documentary program. Over the following years he produced major reports on organized crime, government regulation, financial misconduct, environmental policy, and corruption abroad.

His 2017 Four Corners episode “Pumped” examined water management and alleged corruption in the Murray-Darling Basin. The report set off national argument, fed a royal commission, and sharpened scrutiny of water allocation in rural communities. It showed his gift for turning a technical regulatory question into reporting the public could grasp and act on.

His work also helped expose misconduct in Australia’s casino industry. Investigations into Crown Resorts and Star Entertainment Group examined money laundering, regulatory failure, the reach of organized crime, and weak oversight. These reports formed part of a wider wave of journalism that led to state inquiries and heavy penalties.

A widely reported episode came in 2016, while he covered the global 1MDB scandal in Malaysia. He and ABC cameraman Louie Eroglu tried to question Prime Minister Najib Razak at a public event. Malaysian authorities arrested and detained them. Neither man faced charges, yet the incident drew international notice and marked the hazard that investigative reporters meet in politically sensitive ground. The weight of the moment grew clearer in later years, as 1MDB swelled into one of the largest corruption cases of the century and helped bring Najib down and on to conviction.

From 2018 to 2021 Besser served as the ABC’s Europe correspondent. He worked from London and reported on Brexit, the rise of populist movements, the COVID-19 pandemic, and the larger shifts across the continent. The posting carried him past Australian politics and put him before the arguments over sovereignty, democratic legitimacy, migration, and public trust that were reshaping politics across the West.

He returned home and took up investigative reporting again for Four Corners, 7.30, and AM. In 2024 he and reporter Tom Richardson produced a Four Corners investigation, “The Strata Trap,” into Australia’s strata management industry. The report uncovered hidden commissions, conflicts of interest, and regulatory gaps that touch millions of apartment owners. It drew wide public debate and earned a Walkley Award, and it confirmed his reach as a reporter who finds systemic failure inside the ordinary institutions of daily life.

Across his career Besser has won four Walkley Awards, two Kennedy Awards, and the George Munster Award for Independent Journalism. His reporting returns again and again to institutions that hold great power and draw little scrutiny. Corruption in state politics, failure in environmental regulation, weakness in corporate governance, lapses in the ethics of journalism itself: in each case he leans on documents, on accountability, and on the demand that institutions answer for what they do.

His appointment to Media Watch in 2025 follows from these concerns. He succeeds Paul Barry, who held the chair for eleven years, and he moves from the scrutiny of governments, corporations, and regulators to the scrutiny of journalists and the organizations that employ them. The role sets him at the center of the running arguments over trust, accuracy, bias, and accountability in Australian journalism. The program he inherits has long played both parts at once, taking part in the nation’s media culture and judging it.

Seen against the larger history, Besser belongs to a generation of Australian journalists who crossed between print and broadcast while the economic and technological order of the news business broke apart in the early twenty-first century. Many of his contemporaries drifted into commentary and opinion. He remained a reporter. His career rests on a conviction that the highest task of journalism lies not in advocacy or persuasion but in the examination of institutions, records, incentives, and public power through documentary evidence and patient work. In that, he stands inside the tradition that Four Corners and Media Watch built: a tradition that aims not only to inform the public but to hold powerful institutions to account.

The Voice

His prose voice is the reporter’s voice, not the essayist’s. He writes to be understood by a reader who knows none of the background and trusts none of the players. Short declarative sentences carry the load. He front-loads the verifiable fact and lets it sit. When he reaches for effect, he reaches through nouns: leases, commissions, approvals, records. The drama lives in the documents, and he trusts the documents to supply it. He keeps adjectives lean and skips the editorial flourish that a columnist would add. You can read a Besser passage and not know what he feels about the man he describes. You know only what the man did.
That habit shapes his rhetoric. He argues by accumulation. He stacks one verified detail on the next until the pattern stands on its own, then stops. He does not tell you the conclusion in a thundering line. He lays the trail and lets you walk it. The method suits a court of public opinion that has grown tired of opinion. He sounds less like an advocate than like a man reading a brief into the record. The persuasion hides inside the sequence.
His broadcast voice carries the same temperament into a harder format. Media Watch puts the host alone at a desk, reading to camera for fifteen minutes while quotes flash up as graphics. The show runs on a fixed move: state the claim a newsroom made, show the evidence, deliver the verdict dry. Besser fits that move. His delivery is flat in the good sense, controlled, unhurried, free of the anchor’s false warmth and the satirist’s smirk. He lands the cutting line without raising his voice for it. The understatement does the cutting. Where his predecessor Paul Barry leaned at times toward theatrical scorn, Besser holds a cooler register. He reports the failing more than he performs outrage at it.
His diction stays plain and concrete on air as on the page. He prefers the short Anglo-Saxon word to the Latinate one. He defines a technical matter, water allocation, a strata commission, a money-laundering control, in language a viewer can follow on first hearing, then builds the charge from there. He came up explaining regulatory tangles to ordinary readers, and the habit shows. He does not hide behind jargon, and he does not let the institutions he covers hide behind it either.
The Australian register matters too. He speaks in the laconic mode the national press prizes: understated, slightly dry, suspicious of grandstanding, quick to puncture a pretense. He can turn pointed, and his social media voice runs hotter than his broadcast voice, sharper, more willing to name a shabby affair as shabby. On the desk he keeps that edge sheathed. The contrast tells you the control on Media Watch is a choice, not a limit.

The Set

The social set is the elite of Australian public-interest journalism, the investigative reporters and current-affairs people clustered around the ABC and the quality newspapers, and behind them the Walkley circuit that confers their honors. This is the world Besser comes from and now sits at the head of.

Start with the people. His own lineage runs through Kate McClymont at The Sydney Morning Herald, his partner on the Obeid investigations and the closest thing the Australian press has to a household name in the form. Around them stand the Four Corners reporters past and present: Chris Masters, Marian Wilkinson, Sarah Ferguson, Quentin McDermott, Caro Meldrum-Hanna, Louise Milligan, and the program’s editors such as Sally Neighbour. At The Age and in Melbourne the investigative pair Nick McKenzie and Richard Baker hold the same rank, with McKenzie carrying much of the casino and war-crimes reporting. Besser’s own bylines tie him to a working crew, the cameraman Louie Eroglu, the producer Jaya Balendra, the researcher Elise Worthington, the reporters Janine Cohen and Daniel Oakes, and now the Media Watch> executive producer Mario Christodoulou. The fronting faces of ABC current affairs, Leigh Sales and Laura Tingle among them, share the same milieu. And the chair he holds carries its own dead and living line: Stuart Littlemore, Richard Ackland, David Marr, Liz Jackson, Monica Attard, Jonathan Holmes, and Paul Barry. The union, the Media Entertainment and Arts Alliance, and the Walkley Foundation sit underneath all of it as the bodies that hand out membership and rank.

What they value is the watchdog idea of the press. They hold that power must answer for itself, that the public has a right to know what is done in its name, and that the reporter’s task is scrutiny rather than stenography. They prize independence from the proprietor and from the politician. They prize the document over the quote, the record over the spin. They treat journalism as a public trust and not a trade in attention. Besser states the creed plainly: the highest task lies not in advocacy or persuasion but in the examination of institutions, records, and incentives. The set agrees with him, or says it does.

The hero in this world is the reporter who brings down a powerful man through patient work and pays a price for it. Heroism means the scoop that triggers a royal commission, the story that ends in a conviction, the investigation that survives the defamation writ. It means standing in front of the camera and naming the wrongdoer when the lawyers and the powerful want silence. Martyrdom counts double. When the Australian Federal Police raided the ABC in 2019 and later referred Daniel Oakes for prosecution over reporting on alleged unlawful killings by Australian soldiers, the set closed ranks and treated the threat as proof of the work’s worth. Besser’s own arrest in Malaysia while chasing Najib Razak reads inside this world as a badge. The reporter who risks the cell or the writ and keeps reporting is the saint of the order.

The status games run on peer honor, not ratings. The Walkley is the coin of the realm, and the count matters: Besser’s four mark him as senior, McClymont and McKenzie sit at the top of the table with theirs. The phrase that confers rank is the one attached to a story, prompted a royal commission, led to criminal charges, forced a resignation. A scoop in the right masthead outranks a large audience for a weak one. Four Corners stands as the apex program, the place the best work goes. Inside the set the investigative reporter outranks the columnist, and Besser carries that hierarchy in his bones; he notes with quiet contempt that many of his contemporaries drifted into commentary while he stayed a reporter. To be the one the powerful fear, the one cited in the inquiry’s findings, that is the high seat. Media Watch adds a sharper game on top, because the host judges the rest of the guild. The chair lets Besser rank his peers in public, and that power is itself a kind of status the others must defer to.

Their normative claims, the oughts they treat as beyond argument, run as follows. Power ought to be accountable. The public ought to know. Conflicts of interest ought to be disclosed. Regulators ought not be captured. The press ought to be free of commercial and political interference, and interference is corruption. Transparency is good and secrecy is suspect until shown otherwise. These shoulds carry the force of self-evident truth in the set, and a member who questions one of them marks himself as an outsider or a sellout.

Their essentialist claims concern what a journalist is. The set believes in the real reporter as a type, a man or woman of a certain character and vocation, set against the hack, the publicist, the churnalist, and the courtier who flatters power for access. It treats the press as a thing with an essence, an accountability function written into its nature, so that opinion-mongering and advocacy count as betrayals of what journalism truly is rather than as other valid forms of it. It treats truth as singular and findable, waiting in the document for the diligent reporter to surface it, and it treats the wrongdoer’s record as a window onto his real self. Besser’s whole method rests on this last article of faith: the paper trail does not lie, and a man is what the records show he did.

The moral grammar follows from the essence. The high words are accountability, integrity, the public interest, independence, courage, the right to know. The reporter speaks truth to power and shines a light. The sins have names too: the cover-up, the conflict of interest, the captured regulator, the puff piece, the advertorial dressed as news, the proprietor’s hand on the copy, the chilling effect of the writ and the raid. Virtue is doggedness and fidelity to the document and nerve under legal threat. Vice is the soft interview, the unexamined press release, the favor traded for access. On Media Watch the grammar narrows to the guild’s own faults, bias, error, plagiarism, undisclosed payment, the failure to correct, and Besser now reads the charges and the verdicts.

Now the part the set finds harder to hear. The world claims independence and lives on a state broadcaster’s payroll; the ABC signs the checks for most of the people named above, and the watchdog depends on the public purse it sometimes must bite. It claims to speak for the public, yet its honors come from inside, conferred by peers at a dinner, often indifferent to whether the public watched. It is a professional class with its own schooling and its own clubbiness, drawn from the universities and the city press of Sydney and Melbourne, and its politics lean to the center-left in a settled way the members rarely notice because everyone around them shares it. That sameness lets the set treat its own outlook as the neutral view, the view from nowhere, when conservatives charge that the accountability runs in one direction and the choice of targets reveals a side. The essentialism about the real reporter doubles as a gate, a way to rank the in-group above the commentators, the regional press, the commercial networks, and the new online upstarts, and to keep the prestige inside the house. The set rarely examines itself with the rigor it brings to everyone else, which is the reason a program like Media Watch exists and the reason its host carries an awkward double role: he polices a guild he belongs to, judged by the same peers he judges, honored by the same body that honors them.

That is the world Besser moves in and now presides over. It believes in the document, the public, and the fearless reporter, and it confers its crowns on the man who brings the powerful low and bleeds a little for it. Its virtues are real and its blind spot is the mirror.

Essentialism

Stephen Turner’s quarrel with essentialism is a quarrel with a single move: taking a category and treating it as a real shared substance that all its members carry and that explains what they do. He says these essences are projections we lay over a scatter of individual cases, not things we find in the world. The sameness gets assumed at the start instead of earned by evidence. Apply that to this set and the guild’s self-portrait comes apart at four seams.
First, the real reporter. The set believes in the journalist as a type, a shared character or vocation that the true ones possess and the hacks and publicists lack. Turner denies the shared thing. What exists is a population of individuals, each trained along his own path. McClymont learned her trade one way, Masters another, Besser a third, in different newsrooms under different editors with different habits stamped into them. No common essence passes into all of them. The set looks at a rough family resemblance among their performances and names it the essence of the real reporter, then talks as though the name were the cause. The category explains nothing. It only honors a similarity the group has decided to prize. So when the set rules that a man is a real journalist or is not, it presents a boundary decision as a discovery about someone’s nature.
Second, the essence of journalism. The set holds that scrutiny and accountability are written into the nature of the press, so that opinion and advocacy betray what journalism truly is. Besser carries this article when he says the highest task lies in the examination of records and not in persuasion, and ranks the reporters above the commentators who fell away. Turner would strike the premise. There is no object called Journalism with a fixed nature to honor or betray. There are many activities people call journalism, each shaped by its own history and habits. The claim that the watchdog version is the essence and the rest a falling-off is the set raising its own preferred practice into a timeless standard and calling the elevation a fact about the trade. The essence is the flag the guild plants to outrank its rivals.
Third, the truth in the document. The set holds that the record does not lie and that diligent work surfaces the one true account, the same account any trained reader would reach. This treats interpretation as a shared competence sitting whole in every real reporter, as if one method lived in all their heads. Turner refuses the common object. Reading a contract or a planning file is a skill each reporter built along his own road, and what Besser sees in the paper and what another sees come from different trainings that happen to converge. The single truth is that convergence of overlapping individual performances, dressed up afterward as a property resting in the documents. The set mistakes the agreement of practiced readers for a fact lying inert in the file.
Fourth, the real self behind the record. The set believes a man is what the records show he did, that the paper trail strips away the public face and lays bare an essential self. Turner reads this as essentialism about persons. The records show acts, decisions, traces. The unified self they supposedly expose is an inference the reporter imposes, a single essence read into a spread of behavior across years. Besser’s confidence that the file reveals the man is the move the guild makes about itself turned on a single subject. The essence is supplied by the reader, not surrendered by the documents.
Under all four sits the larger target Turner has hunted across his career, the collective object treated as real. The set speaks of the profession, the craft, the public interest, the tradition of Four Corners and Media Watch, as though each were a thing with substance and force, shared and handed down. Turner says these are conveniences of speech that we mistake for entities. No tradition sits in the heads of the program’s reporters and steers their hands. Individuals watched their predecessors, copied scraps of what they saw, absorbed praise and blame from peers, and now turn out work that resembles the old work well enough to carry the name. The shared tradition is the label we paste on that resemblance, not a force that produces it. When the ABC announces that Besser inherits a tradition and must continue it, Turner hears a metaphor cashed as an heirloom. There is no estate. There are people imitating people.
This puts Media Watch in a hard light. The program institutionalizes the policing of an essence the set assumes is there. Week to week it judges whether a piece of work meets the standard of real journalism, of accuracy, of fairness, and presents the verdict as the recognition of a nature the work either has or lacks. Turner would say the host enforces a boundary and calls it a reading of an essence. Besser does not measure each performance against a shared substance that all true journalism contains, because no such substance exists to measure against. He applies the guild’s current preferences and pronounces the result a finding about what journalism is. The chair gives that pronouncement the weight of a verdict from nature.
The corrective Turner offers is clear. Drop the essences. Stop saying the profession does this or the tradition demands that. Ask instead how each reporter in the set came to work the way he works, who trained him, what he copied, what got rewarded, and treat the likeness among them as a convergence to be explained rather than a substance to be invoked. The set’s similarity is real. Its essence is not. The first is a fact about a lot of separate careers. The second is a story the guild tells to make those careers look like one thing, and to settle, in the language of nature, a question that is really a choice about whom to honor.

Explaining the Normative

Turner’s attack on the normative is narrow and lethal. He grants that people have habits, expectations, feelings of obligation, and a thick apparatus of praise and blame. What he refuses is the extra item social theory keeps smuggling in: the claim that on top of all this sits real validity, real bindingness, a genuine ought with authority of its own. That extra item never shows up in anything you can observe. You see the behavior, the expectation, the sanction, the felt pull of duty. The validity is a gloss laid over those facts, and the gloss does no causal work. To explain conduct by saying a norm binds is to redescribe the conduct in flattering words and call the redescription an explanation. Run that razor over this set and the moral order it lives by turns into something plainer.
Take the creed. Power ought to answer for itself. The public has a right to know. The set holds these as binding truths with authority over every journalist, not as preferences a professional class happens to share. Turner asks where the bindingness lives. What you can point to is that these people want accountability, train their juniors to pursue it, praise the reporter who delivers it, and shame the one who serves power instead. You can point to the felt obligation in Besser when he says the highest task lies in examining records and holding institutions answerable. All of that is causal and psychological: desire, training, expectation, sanction, the pull of duty in the chest. The further claim, that accountability is valid and the duty real apart from the feeling of it, names nothing you can find. The right to know gets invoked as a fact in the world that grounds the obligation. It is the set’s settled expectation promoted to the rank of an authority.
The ethics of the trade work the same way. The set speaks of disclosure, accuracy, and independence as a code with standing, so that a journalist who hides a conflict has done something invalid and not merely something the guild punishes. Strip the gloss and you have a trained profession with shared expectations and a heavy machinery of approval and disgrace. The union code, the Walkley criteria, the newsroom rule on corrections, these are written records of expectation and sanction. They tell you what the set wants and what it will do to a member who departs. The claim that the breach is wrong in some further sense, beyond being expected against and punished, is the fifth wheel. When the set says a reporter ought to have declared the payment, the lifting is done by the training, the expectation, and the public shaming. The ought adds prestige and no force.
The public interest is the master term, and it is the purest case. The set grounds the whole enterprise in it and treats it as a standard with authority that decides which journalism is legitimate. Turner’s razor cuts deepest here, because the public interest floats free of anything that could fix its content. It cannot tell you on its own whether the strata investigation or the casino investigation serves it. The reporters’ trained intuitions do that, the sense built into them over years about which story matters and which is captured or trivial, and then they credit the result to the standard. What is real is the shared intuition and the sanction against the man who chases the wrong story. The public interest as an authority standing above those intuitions is a hypostatized ought, invoked to license a judgment it never actually performs.
Press freedom runs the same circuit. The set treats it as a right with genuine authority, breached by the federal raids on the ABC and by the Malaysian police who held Besser. The political force of the protest is real and the set closes ranks behind it. The move Turner flags is the leap from “we expect to report without arrest, and we will sanction the state that arrests us” to “press freedom is a binding right.” The raids are felt as wrong; the guild protests and names the wrong. The added claim, that the freedom is valid and authoritative over governments, is the projection. The experience of outrage is a fact. The validity behind it is the gloss.
Under all of this sits the hidden we. The set says we in the press hold that power must answer, and the bindingness is supposed to flow from membership in that we, a community bound by shared norms. Turner denies the collective subject. There is no normative we, only a crowd of individual journalists with overlapping trained expectations who speak in chorus and mistake the chorus for the voice of a law. The authority of the norm is the echo of many habituated voices taken for a single binding command. When the set treats its oughts as the moral order itself rather than as the moral order of a particular trained class in Sydney and Melbourne, that mistake is the whole error in miniature: a regularity heard as a verdict from above.
Media Watch is where the error becomes an institution. The program runs on the normative grammar in its plainest form. Each week it issues judgments built as oughts: this outlet should have checked the claim, should have disclosed the tie, should have corrected the error, and failed. It presents each verdict as a finding about what correct journalism requires, the application of valid standards to a lapse. Turner reads it otherwise. The host applies the guild’s trained expectations and the engine of public shame, then casts the application as a reading of validity. The force of the verdict is real, because careers and reputations feel it, but the force comes from the sanction and the audience watching, not from a normative fact the program has detected. The chair lets Besser deliver the guild’s praise and blame in the language of ought, and the language turns a sanction into what looks like a judgment of correctness. He is not measuring the work against a binding standard that exists. He is enforcing what his trade expects and calling the enforcement a finding.
The repair Turner offers is dull. Stop saying they follow the norm of accountability and say instead they were trained to expect it, they punish its absence, they feel its claim on them. Stop explaining the set’s conduct by the validity of its norms, because that validity explains nothing it has not already assumed. The oughts are solid as facts about what these people want, expect, and enforce on each other and on the powerful. As authorities standing over the world and binding the outsider, they are the projection Turner has tracked through every corner of social thought, a regularity wearing the costume of a law. The set mistakes its own trained voice for the voice of duty. The mistake is sincere, and it is the source of the guild’s certainty that when it judges, it does not choose but obeys.

Explaining the Normative

Turner’s case against the normative is the case against the binding ought. Social theory and philosophy keep invoking a special realm, norms, standards, obligations, a normativity that floats above men and binds them, that explains why they do what they do by saying they ought to. Turner the naturalist denies the realm. What there is, he says, is empirical and causal: habits, training, expectations, the sanctions men lay on each other. The ought adds nothing to these but a claim of authority the facts cannot supply. We watch men behave in a pattern, reconstruct the rule from the pattern, then say the rule made them do it, and the rule turns out to be the pattern wearing a robe. Hold that against Wood and his guild and you stop hearing duties. You start hearing enforcement.
Wood’s set lives by a code. A historian ought to master the sources before he speaks. He ought to understand the past on its own terms. He ought not judge the dead by the morals of the living. He ought to explain and not condemn. These are not offered as preferences. They are offered as the standards of the craft, the duties of the historian, binding on anyone who would claim the name. The guild treats the code as a real order, a thing a man can honor or betray. Turner asks where the order is. There is no craft floating over the historians and issuing obligations. There are men who work a certain way, who were trained to work that way, who expect it of each other and punish its absence in reviews and hiring and prizes. The duty is the habit plus the sanction. Call it a duty and you have added a halo, not a fact.
The circle is the one he always finds. The guild looks at how its best men work, Wood and Bailyn and Morgan, lifts a standard off the practice, and then judges outsiders by the standard. The standard is a self-portrait raised to an obligation. When Wood says present-mindedness betrays the historian’s duty, he is not reporting a normative truth that hangs in the air. He is saying I and my kind do not do this, and we will sanction those who do, in the grammar of the binding ought. The ought is the sound the sanction makes.
This is why the normative talk runs hottest where the status runs highest, and the clearest case is the letter of 2019. When the five historians wrote to the Times against the 1619 Project, they did not say we dislike this. They said this violates the standards of the discipline, a journalist has trespassed on ground that belongs to trained historians, a fact has been gotten wrong. Read as Turner reads it, the appeal to the standards is the move, not the ground of the move. The standards are the device by which the guild claims jurisdiction over the founding and bars an outsider from it. The binding duty to the record is the form the enforcement takes when a professional defends his turf. The letter is real. The authority it claims to apply is the thing in question.
The other army talks the same way, and Turner cuts it the same. The historian has a duty to give voice to the silenced. Complicity is a moral failure. To study the framers’ prose and step around the auction block betrays the calling. These too present themselves as binding obligations of the craft, and these too are habits and expectations and sanctions, the enforcement regime of a different set of men and women calling its preferences duties. Turner does not hand the field to Wood and he does not hand it to his enemies. He flattens the normative claims of both. Two regimes of enforcement, each naming its own way the standard and the other’s way a betrayal, each dressing what it punishes in the language of what one must not do.
Wood’s historicism takes the deepest cut, because it is a norm about norms. His rule says we ought to judge the dead by their own standards and not project ours onto them. Turner notes the trick. Wood tells everyone that moral standards are bound to their time and must not travel across the centuries, and in the same breath he treats his own professional standard, the duty of historicism, as timeless and binding on all historians everywhere. The man who preaches that oughts are local exempts his own ought from the sermon. He cannot ground the exemption. He can only assert the duty and punish the present-minded, which is the work he did in his last decade of essays, performing the binding he claimed to describe.
Now the limit. Turner does not show that Wood is wrong to want source-mastery or to distrust anachronism. The preferences can be good preferences, and a man can have strong reasons to read the archive before he generalizes. What Turner takes away is the grounding the guild claims, that these are duties binding in the nature of the craft and not the working habits of a particular set with the power to enforce them. The difference is everything to how the guild sees itself. It believes it guards a sacred standard. Turner says it guards a livelihood and a way of working, and gives the guarding a moral name.
What survives is the sociology. The training that makes a historian. The reviews that reward and ruin. The prizes that canonize. The hiring that admits and shuts out. The taboo on anachronism that real men enforce on real careers. Turner keeps every bit of that. He is at home with habits and sanctions and the men who wield them. He refuses one step, the lift from we enforce this to this is binding, from the historian does this to the historian must. Wood and his set made that lift the center of their honor. Turner says the honor is the enforcement, seen from the inside and given a finer word.

Anti-Status

David Pinsof writes: “Anti-status. The status you get from looking like you don’t care about status. We avoid looking vain, insecure, or self-absorbed—and accuse each other of being these things—to gain status, or rather anti-status.”
Besser gets status from looking like he doesn’t care about status. That is the engine of Besser’s whole persona, and once you see it you cannot unsee it.
Start with the signature move, the document over the man. Besser points at the contracts, the leases, the planning files, and away from himself. The drama lives in the records, he says, and the reporter recedes behind them. Pointing away from yourself toward the evidence is the purest anti-status posture there is. I take no credit, the paper speaks. And it banks enormous credit. The reader trusts the man who seems to want nothing for himself, and trust is the coin the whole trade runs on.
Then the career choice he keeps advertising. He stayed a reporter while his contemporaries drifted into commentary, and he says so with quiet contempt. The commentators chase visible status: the audience, the byline brand, the hot take, the fee. Besser’s refusal of that road is itself a status claim, and a shrewd one, because inside the guild the reporter outranks the columnist for exactly this reason. He looks like the one not playing for attention. He wins the trade’s highest honors, four Walkleys and the Media Watch chair, by appearing to care only for the work. The honors come to the man who looks like he is not seeking them.
His broadcast manner is anti-status set to camera. The flat, controlled delivery, the cut landed without raising the voice, the refusal of the anchor’s warmth and the satirist’s smirk, all of it says I am not performing, I am only reporting the failing. The understatement reads as indifference to effect, and the indifference is the effect. It is more devastating than theatrical scorn and it confers more standing, because the man who seems above the performance seems above the vanity, and the audience rewards that with the very regard he appears to disdain.
The verbal tics confirm it. He accepts the chair as thrilled and sobered, gravity stacked on top of the pleasure, the weight of duty foregrounded over the thrill of the prize. He promises to fix media distrust in his own small way. In my own small way is a textbook anti-status line. The modesty is the bid. The smaller he makes the claim sound, the larger the credit he draws for making it.
Why this beats the rivals for him. Sacred value and dark idealism are powerful, but they fit the entire press box equally, the crusading idealist and the self-righteous campaigner alike. They tell you about the guild’s blind spot, not about Besser’s particular way of winning. Anti-status picks out his style and nothing else: the understatement, the document fixation, the disdain for showmanship, the small-way humility. It explains the specific shape of his prestige rather than the generic shape of the trade’s.
It also has predictive bite, which is the real test of a lens. Anti-status is recursive and runs underground. The more Besser disclaims the wanting of status, the more status he stores, and the posture works best when he cannot see it in himself, because a visible bid for anti-status reads as the vanity it was meant to escape. So the lens tells you where the strain will show. Watch what happens when a critic names the move, when someone says the unassuming reporter is in fact playing for the highest stakes in the room. The guild will not hear a fair point about status. It will hear an attack on truth, and the sacred value will rush in to keep the game from collapsing. That hand-off, from anti-status under pressure to sacred value as the shield, is the thing to watch on Media Watch, where the host now polices the trade in the most anti-status register available: the dry, sourced, understated verdict that says I am not attacking anyone, I am only reporting what the record shows.
One limit. The anti-status reading explains the standing Besser earns from the posture. It says nothing about whether the reporting is sound, and the reporting is sound. The Obeid work was real, the water work was real, the convictions and the royal commission were real. A man can run the anti-status game to perfection and still do the best investigative journalism in the country.

The Mismatch

Media Watch asks a reporter to become a critic, and Besser’s authority rests on being a reporter who renders no opinions, only findings. The job sits crosswise to the source of his credibility.
For twenty years his power came from self-erasure. He pointed at the documents and stepped back. He told you what a man did, not what he thought of the man. The reader trusted him because he seemed to want nothing and to argue nothing. He was a window, not a voice. Media Watch hands a voice to a man who built his name on not having one. Fifteen minutes a week, alone at a desk, he now passes verdicts on his own trade. Should this outlet have checked the claim. Should that presenter have declared the tie. The form demands an opinion every time, and opinion is the one currency he spent his career refusing to trade in.
That mismatch predicts the strain, and the prediction is the yield. Two roads run out of it. He keeps the reporter’s restraint, stays dry and sourced and careful, and the show loses the bite the audience wants from it. Or he grows the critic’s voice, sharpens the line, plays for the laugh and the gotcha, and becomes the kind of opinion-man he spent twenty years looking down on. He cannot stay still on the fence. The chair forces the choice his whole method was built to avoid, and which way he leans will tell you more about him than any award did.
Three truths sit underneath.
The first is that the chair is a step down in craft even as it lifts his profile. Toppling Eddie Obeid, triggering a royal commission over the Murray-Darling, forcing convictions, that is the top of the trade, the work that moves the country. Media Watch mostly comments on other people’s journalism, much of it small, a tabloid’s bad headline, a radio host’s undisclosed freebie. He has traded the field for the desk and the scoop for the review. A man does not make that trade at the peak of his powers without a reason, and the honest reason is unglamorous. Field investigation grinds you down. The defamation writs and the legal exposure never stop. The industry funds less of it every year. For a star reporter in his late forties, the chair is the dignified landing spot, the place a great reporter goes when the road runs short. That is not a knock. It is the arc of the job.
The second is the dependence hidden inside the independence. Besser’s reputation is adversarial, the lone man against power. In fact the one institution in Australia that can still afford his kind of work is the public broadcaster, taxpayer-funded, with a salary and a legal team behind him. The independence is real in spirit and institutional in fact. Take away the ABC and the model that produced him mostly disappears, because the commercial outlets stopped paying for slow documentary work long ago. He is a survivor of a shrinking ecology, and part of his standing comes from scarcity. Fewer and fewer people are left who can do what he does, because fewer and fewer employers will pay for it.
The third sharpens the second. He now polices the press from inside the most politically exposed media body in the country. The ABC draws constant fire over funding and bias, and in 2019 the federal police raided its Sydney office. So the watchdog of the watchdogs sits in the kennel most often kicked. When he scolds commercial media for its compromises, his critics need only point at his own house and its dependence on government money and goodwill. The seat that gives him the platform also hands his enemies their reply.
Besser is a master of a vanishing craft who has accepted the prestige post that asks him to stop practicing it and start judging it, inside the one institution that both sustains his independence and undercuts the claim to it. The interesting question is not whether he is a good reporter. He is. The question is what a great reporter becomes when you take away the reporting and give him a verdict to read each week. Watch the first time he is unfair to someone he dislikes. That is the moment the reporter ends and the critic begins, and the chair has been pulling him toward it since the day he sat down.

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Gerald Stone and the Making of Australian Current Affairs

Gerald Louis Stone (1933-2020) reshapes Australian broadcast journalism across the final quarter of the twentieth century. As founding executive producer of the Australian edition of 60 Minutes, he builds a model of television current affairs that joins investigative reporting, international coverage, strong on-screen personalities, cinematic storytelling, and mass appeal. Few figures hold greater sway over Australian television in this period.

Stone is born on 18 August 1933 in Columbus, Ohio, to Julius and Minnie Stone. His father runs a clothing store, and the family lives in a working-class home. At Columbus North High School he writes for the school paper and runs track. These years build a competitive temper and a taste for storytelling. He goes on to Cornell University, where he studies political science and widens his interest in public affairs, politics, and journalism.

After university Stone enters journalism in New York. He works at The New York Times and later with the Associated Press. His move to Australia in the early 1960s comes by chance. He takes a leave to travel, arrives in Sydney with little money, and finds work at Sydney’s Daily Mirror under editor King Watson. The rough, competitive air of Australian tabloid journalism suits him. Many foreign correspondents stay detached observers of Australian life. Stone does the opposite. He sinks into the country’s media culture and starts a career that makes him a defining figure within it.

His early newspaper work covers politics, social conflict, and international affairs. He reports on the Vietnam War and on the social changes sweeping Australia through the 1960s. The work teaches him a lesson he keeps for life. Audiences respond to stories grounded in human experience, not to official statements and institutional narratives.

Stone moves into television in 1967 when he joins the ABC current affairs program This Day Tonight. The program marks a turn in Australian television journalism toward immediacy and confrontation. Stone stands out through field reporting and his readiness to put himself close to events. Covering anti-Vietnam protests and other demonstrations, he learns that television draws its power from emotion, conflict, movement, and character rather than from newspaper copy. These lessons sit at the center of his later editorial thinking.

Stone treats television as a storytelling medium. He holds that audiences come to serious journalism when stories carry compelling characters, vivid images, and clear narrative. He distrusts bureaucratic language, abstract analysis, and the detached style of much television news. Reporters under him recall his demand that a story set its human stakes at once and drop academic or institutional jargon.

His rise is fast. Through the 1970s he joins the Nine Network and becomes a trusted news executive for Kerry Packer (1937-2005). The relationship runs hot. Both men carry strong personalities and high standards. Packer trusts Stone’s editorial instinct. Stone gains from Packer’s readiness to spend on journalism as television news grows more commercial.

The defining moment comes in 1979. Packer hands Stone the task of launching an Australian 60 Minutes. Many in the industry doubt it can work. The format costs a great deal, leans on overseas reporting, and sits in a Sunday evening slot that many think wrong for serious journalism. Stone builds the program on an ambitious plan. He assembles a reporting team of George Negus (b. 1942), Ray Martin (b. 1944), Ian Leslie, and later Jana Wendt (b. 1956). The program blends foreign correspondence, investigation, celebrity interviews, and polished features.

60 Minutes changes Australian television. Under Stone the program shows that large audiences will watch sophisticated journalism presented with energy, personality, and drama. His standards are exacting. He rewrites, re-edits, and restructures stories until they reach the pace and clarity he wants. He pours attention into narrative flow, visual sequence, and the emotional arc of a report. The style he builds spreads across Australian current affairs.

His reach runs past single programs. He becomes a gifted talent scout, finding journalists who pair reporting skill with on-screen presence. Many of the country’s best-known reporters and presenters grow under him. Colleagues describe him as combative, demanding, loyal, and fixed on quality. He can intimidate in the editing room. He also commits himself to building talent and raising standards.

Born and schooled in the United States, Stone comes to identify with Australia. He takes citizenship in 1978 and holds a rare place as both insider and outsider in the country’s media. His American years expose him to larger, harder television markets. His long residence gives him a close read of local audiences. The pairing lets him import foreign ideas and fit them to Australian conditions.

After Nine, Stone holds a run of senior posts in television and print. He works in the United States as head of current affairs for the Fox Network, then returns to oversee current affairs at Channel Seven. There he argues that serious journalism and international reporting stay essential to television even as commercial pressure pushes toward celebrity and consumer fare.

In 1995 Stone becomes editor-in-chief of The Bulletin, a major political and literary magazine. The appointment marks his standing as a journalist at home in both broadcast and print. At The Bulletin he works to keep ambitious reporting and long-form journalism alive as traditional print faces falling circulation and rising commercial strain.

Stone also serves on the board of the Special Broadcasting Service, where he rises to deputy chairman. Through these years he stays a prominent voice in debates over journalism, television, and media standards.

As an author Stone writes several books on media, politics, and power. His best-known, Compulsive Viewing, gives a close account of the Nine Network and Packer’s media empire. The book stands among the sharpest portraits of Australian television management in print. Stone pairs admiration for Packer’s instincts with frank notes on his volatility and ambition. He later publishes Who Killed Channel 9?, a study of the network’s decline after Packer.

One conviction runs through his career. Journalism and storytelling cannot be parted. Stone rejects the idea that audiences must choose between information and engagement. The best journalism informs the public because it holds attention through narrative, character, and drama. The view reshapes Australian television journalism and marks generations of reporters, producers, and editors.

Stone marries Suzanne Stone in 1963, and they have two children, Kym and Michael. In his later years he keeps working as a writer, commentator, and mentor. Younger journalists seek his advice on reporting, editing, and storytelling. He stays close to questions about the future of his craft.

In 2015 Stone receives appointment as a Member of the Order of Australia for service to print and broadcast media. He dies in Sydney on 6 November 2020. By then he ranks as an architect of modern Australian television journalism. His legacy lives through the continued success of 60 Minutes and through a wider shift in how television journalists approach their work. More than any Australian television executive of his generation, Stone shows that serious journalism can win mass audiences when it carries imagination, urgency, and narrative skill.

Gerald Stone and the Appetite for Drama

David Pinsof names an appetite he calls toxic learning. People crave knowledge, but the craving runs toward gossip, conflict, outrage, and spectacle, and it cools at accuracy, nuance, and plain utility. We lean in for the fight and the scandal. We drift off during the statistics. Read Gerald Stone through this one lens and his whole career snaps into focus.
Toxic learning is the highest-yield frame on Stone. His editorial doctrine is applied toxic-learning theory. He learns early that audiences turn from official statements and statistics and lean toward emotion, conflict, movement, and character. He demands that a story set its human stakes at once and drop the jargon. Put plainly, he finds that people find accuracy and nuance boring and crave drama, then builds the dominant current affairs format around that discovery. His career is the monetizing of toxic learning, done at the highest level of craft.
The lesson reaches him in the newsroom before television. Covering politics, social conflict, and the Vietnam War, he sees which stories move readers. The ones grounded in a human face beat the ones built on an official communiqué. The appetite shows itself in the numbers. Stone trusts the numbers.
Television sharpens the lesson. At This Day Tonight he carries a camera close to anti-Vietnam protests and street demonstrations, and he watches what the medium does best. It does not summarize policy. It delivers a clenched jaw, a shove, a chant, a frightened face. Stone draws the conclusion that guides the rest of his work. Television feeds the appetite for conflict and character, and it starves on abstraction.
So he engineers for the appetite. He builds 60 Minutes as a delivery system for drama dressed as journalism. The format gathers the objects toxic learning craves and arranges them for maximum pull. Foreign correspondence becomes danger and distance. Investigation becomes a hunt with a villain. The celebrity interview becomes intimacy with a famous stranger. Each segment opens on a hook and rides an emotional arc to a close. The audience does not learn a brief. It feels a story.
His exacting standards serve the same end. Stone rewrites, re-edits, and restructures a report until the pace holds and the feeling lands. Reporters dread the editing room because he strips anything that slows the pull. The institutional jargon goes. The cautious qualifier goes. The careful nuance that bores a Sunday audience goes. What survives is the part the appetite wants. He calls this discipline, and it is, but the discipline aims at engagement, not completeness.
His eye for talent runs along the same line. Stone scouts reporters who carry the screen, faces and voices an audience wants to watch for an hour. Presence beats credentials, because presence feeds the appetite and credentials do not. The team he assembles for 60 Minutes wins audiences less through the rigor of the reporting than through the charisma of the reporting. Charisma holds the viewer through the dry stretch.
Even his books name the appetite. He calls his account of Packer’s network Compulsive Viewing. The phrase is a confession and a thesis. Television holds us the way a compulsion holds us, against our better sense, past the point of utility. The book itself is gossip about a media baron, toxic learning about the machine that manufactures toxic learning. He later writes Who Killed Channel 9?, a backstage drama about decline and blame, the same appetite turned on the industry that fed it.
Stone’s defense of serious journalism fits the frame rather than escaping it. He argues that information and engagement need not part ways, that the public can be informed because it is gripped. Inside the toxic-learning frame this is the producer’s answer to the appetite problem. Stone does not abolish the appetite for spectacle. He uses it. The reporting that might inform rides inside the drama that holds the viewer. Sometimes that reporting is solid. The packaging never stops.
Here the lens reaches its limit, and honesty requires the limit. Toxic learning explains the demand Stone serves and the format he builds to serve it. It does not explain the difference between a Stone segment and a tabloid stunt. Both feed the appetite. Only one carries reporting that holds up. The frame finds the craving under the craft. It cannot, on its own, weigh the craft. Stone reads the appetite for drama better than any Australian television executive of his generation, and he serves it at the top of the trade. Whether what he serves amounts to journalism is a question the appetite cannot answer.

The Voice

The first thing everyone reaches for is the accent. He landed in Sydney in 1962 and stayed the rest of his life, and the Ohio never wore off. When he died, Nine’s own people remembered his raw American accent that never left him, set beside his warmth and charm. So hold that picture. An American tabloid man’s cadence laid over five decades of Australian newsrooms. He sounded like an outsider who had earned his seat at the table, and he used the difference. The Yank who out-Aussied the Aussies on their own story.
The temperament carried in the voice. Colleagues call him feisty, a man who gave as good as he got, and who fought his proprietor over programming and lived to tell it. That is the speaking manner. Warm and disarming in the room, then hard and quick when the work was on the line.
His diction runs from one conviction. Feeling first. The title he chose for his memoir is the whole credo, Say It With Feeling. He distrusted jargon, the bureaucratic register, the abstract lead. He wanted the human stakes in the first breath. A line follows him for young reporters, that they should be accurate but not worthy, hold the facts and skip the piety. Treat that one as secondhand, since it survives mostly in summaries rather than a solid source, but it fits everything else he said and did. When Packer handed him 60 Minutes he got a curse and a standard in one sentence, the order to just do it and get it right. Stone built his manner around the second half and let the first half show in how he ran a room.
The prose tells you the rest, because he writes the way he talks and edits. Read Compulsive Viewing and you hear the broadcaster on the page. It opens with the on-air warning that what follows may disturb some viewers, a tease lifted straight from television and pointed at a book. He builds it as a run of “action replays,” scene by scene, ego clash by ego clash, the language hot and fast. His memoir gives the method in miniature, a wharf-side Australian sizing up the newcomer, the boot coming down, “Stamp. Stamp. Stamp.” Dialogue, sound, a face, then the point. No throat-clearing. He shows the moment and trusts it to carry the meaning.
So the line holds straight from speech to prose. Plain words. Short beats mixed with longer runs. Conflict early, character close, abstraction last or never. He talks and writes for the ear and the gut, with the fact sitting underneath where it belongs.

The Set

Picture the room first.

At the center sits Kerry Packer, the proprietor, the patriarch whose money and mood set the weather over everyone else. His father, Sir Frank Packer (1906-1974), hires Stone in 1974 and then dies, and the son inherits the network and the man in one stroke. Beside Packer stands his hard man, Sam Chisholm (1939-2018), who runs Nine and guards the throne. Stone holds the news side. He draws his talent up out of the ABC, where a new current-affairs trade was born on This Day Tonight, and that show seeds the whole generation: George Negus (1942-2024), Mike Willesee (1942-2019), Bill Peach (1935-2014), and Mike Carlton (b. 1946). For 60 Minutes Stone assembles his own crew. Ray Martin (b. 1944), Negus, and Ian Leslie front the launch in 1979, Jana Wendt (b. 1956) arrives the next year, and Richard Carleton (1943-2006) and Jeff McMullen (b. 1945) follow. Off to one flank, in the larger Sydney set where media meets money and grog, sits the adman John Singleton (b. 1941), Stone’s mate and later his subject. Brian Henderson (1931-2021) reads the bulletin. Across the water, Rupert Murdoch (b. 1931) waits to pull Stone to Fox. That is the set.

What they value sits in one word. The story. Not the brief, not the policy, the story, told through a face and a fight, fast enough that no one reaches for the dial. They prize the scoop, the ratings win in the Sunday slot, the report that makes a viewer lean in and feel something before he can think. They prize craft inside that, the cut, the pace, the open that hooks. And they prize winning. The jacket of Stone’s own book names the engine, a network driven by the Packer family to win at any cost. That phrase is not marketing to them. It is the house creed.

Their hero is the reporter as adventurer. The man who flies into the war and the famine and stands close enough to die. Leslie has a guerrilla put a revolver to his head and pull the trigger on an empty chamber, and the set tells that story as scripture. Stone himself is in Dili when the Balibo Five and his cameraman Brian Peters are shot, and Packer’s voice carries on the tape shouting for them to come back. Negus stares down Margaret Thatcher and gets the ear-bashing on film. Carleton dies of a heart attack at the Beaconsfield mine while chasing the story, and the set folds that death into the legend rather than against it. The hero goes, the hero feels, the hero makes the country feel with him. Above the reporters stands a second kind of hero, the builder, Stone and Packer, the men who make a juggernaut from nothing and put serious journalism at the top of the ratings.

The status games run on visibility and on proximity to the throne. The reporter who fronts the camera outranks the one who cuts the tape, and the program is built so the reporter becomes almost as much the story as his subject. A household name is the prize, the magazine cover, the Walkley, the Logie. Martin wins Reporter of the Year, Leslie collects his medals, and the rank is public and counted. Beneath that runs the quieter game, who has Packer’s ear, who survives Chisholm, who gets the budget for the expensive overseas shoot. Stone’s power is his standing with Packer and his eye for the next star, and he spends both to hold his place.

Their normative claims are sharp and few. A real journalist tells it through people and never through jargon. He gets the human stakes up in the first breath. He goes where it is dangerous and does not flinch. He gets it right, the order Packer hands Stone with the rest of the brief, to do whatever it takes and get it right. And he does not bore. Stone’s working rule, carried secondhand but true to the rest, runs be accurate but not worthy. Worthy is the cardinal failing, the dry and pious register of the old broadcasters they replaced. The crusade against the powerful belongs here too. The set holds that the strongest segment exposes a company or a government that has harmed the public, and that this exposure justifies the whole noisy enterprise.

The essentialist claims hold the talent system together. They believe in the born storyteller and the nose for news, in presence as a thing a man either has or lacks. Stone the scout trusts that he can walk into a room and spot it. The reporters who become household names are treated as carriers of an innate gift rather than products of a format that lit them up. Larrikin authenticity runs as its own essence, the down-to-earth Australian who levels with the audience, set against the affected and the worthy. And Stone himself wears the essential outsider’s badge, the Yank whose accent never leaves him, whose American drive is read as a trait of where he comes from, the man who sees the country fresh because he was not raised in it.

The moral grammar comes down to loyalty, courage, and never boring the room. Loyalty to your mates and to Packer is the first virtue, and the set prizes the friendships that last for life, the reporters Stone made into stars and kept as friends. Courage is the second, measured in the danger you walk into for a story. Generosity is allowed and admired, the senior man who weeps with joy at a younger one’s award. The sins answer the virtues. To betray a mate is the worst. To be a coward who will not go is next. To be worthy, dull, soft, to lose the timeslot, these damn a man in this world as surely as a lie damns him in a stricter one. Redemption comes through the scoop, the ratings, the award, the story that the whole country watches.

The set tells itself that drama serves the public, that the feeling delivers the fact, that winning the audience and serving the truth run as one thing. Often they do. Martin’s Chelmsford reporting is real public service done with real skill. But the same grammar rewards spectacle whether or not the truth needs it, and it has no clean way to tell the two apart from the inside, because both light up the room and both win the slot. Carleton chasing a mine disaster to his death is the set’s proof of courage and also a glimpse of the hunger that uses men up for content. The crusader’s banner and the showman’s hook fly from the same pole. These people believe their courage and their craft, and they should. The thing their moral grammar cannot do is weigh, from within, when the feeling is carrying the fact and when the fact is along for the ride.

Gerald Stone Through Alliance Theory

Pinsof, Sears, and Haselton argue that belief systems are not philosophies built from values but patchworks of justification that serve alliances. The test they propose is plain. Do not ask what a man believes. Ask whom he treats as ally and whom as rival. The beliefs follow the alliance. Run that test on Gerald Stone and his creed about journalism stops looking like a theory of the craft and starts looking like the banner of a coalition.
His stated beliefs are familiar by now. Tell it through people. Never bore. Be accurate but not worthy. Afflict the powerful in the public interest. Get it right. Hold the set up as a philosophy and it leaks. He preaches journalism that exposes the powerful while serving Kerry Packer, among the most powerful men in the country, under an order to win at any cost. He preaches accuracy while building a form tuned for feeling, which runs ahead of accuracy when it has to. He champions the ordinary viewer against the elite broadcasters, then becomes an elite himself, mints celebrity reporters, and collects an Order of Australia. A values lens reads these as contradictions. Alliance Theory reads no contradiction at all. Each principle serves a particular ally or strikes at a particular rival, and the seams show because his allies do not belong to one tribe.
Map the alliances and the creed falls into place.
The first alliance is with Packer, and it bridges high and low. The working-class American outsider ties himself to the tycoon. Each takes what he needs. Packer gets ratings and prestige and a newsman who delivers. Stone gets money, budget, and air cover for ambitious work. The order to do whatever it takes and get it right is the treaty between them.
The second alliance is with his reporters. Martin, Negus, Leslie, Wendt at the start, Carleton and McMullen after. He raises them to stardom, they return ratings and loyalty, and the friendships hold for life. The ruling value inside this alliance is loyalty, and Stone’s habit of weeping with joy at a younger man’s award is loyalty made visible.
The third alliance is with the mass audience. Stone sides with the ordinary viewer’s appetite for a story against the worthy who would feed him a brief. The viewer is the ally whose attention is the whole currency.
Against these stand the rivals. First, the worthy, the dry and pious old broadcasters and the institutional register he replaced. Be accurate but not worthy is not a note on style. It is a boundary marker, a flag planted against a rival camp. Second, the target of the exposé, the company or agency or evasive official who has harmed the public. The crusading morality exists to mobilize the audience against that rival.
Now the strange bedfellows. The creed yokes incompatible principles because the coalition yokes incompatible allies. Anti-elite populism for the audience sits beside service to a media baron. Truth first sits beside feeling first. Afflict the powerful sits beside win at any cost for the most powerful network on the dial. Pinsof and his coauthors predict this. The more varied your allies, the more varied and self-defeating your professed principles. Stone’s principles clash because his coalition runs from a tycoon down to a street reporter and out to ten million Sunday viewers.
The whom-not-what thesis lands hardest here. Set Stone’s journalism against the worthy ABC tradition he scorned and the difference is not, in the end, a deeper theory of truth or public duty. Both traditions claim truth and duty. The difference is whom each treats as ally and rival. Stone allies with the proprietor, the star, and the mass audience, and casts the institutionalist and the evasive official as rivals. The ABC worthy allies with the institution, the expert, and the careful record, and casts the showman as the rival. Each side’s philosophy of journalism is the story its coalition tells about itself. The philosophy follows the alliance.
Stone’s firmest belief reads, in this frame, as a loyalty signal rather than a finding. He holds that engagement and information never part, that the feeling delivers the fact. His allies’ livelihoods ride on the feeling. The reporters’ fame, Packer’s revenue, the program’s slot, all run on drama. To doubt that drama serves truth would break faith with the men who depend on drama. So the belief is sincere, and the sincerity is the point. A doubt voiced aloud would mark him as a defector.
The paper’s three shapes of alliance track his career. Early, Stone runs a revolutionary alliance, the commercial current-affairs upstarts storming the rank held by the entrenched ABC worthies and the staid press. Once 60 Minutes owns Sunday night, the same alliance turns conservative, built now to defend Nine’s rank against every challenger. The tie to Packer is the bridging alliance the whole way through, the high man and the low man each lifting the other.
His books are alliance propaganda in the technical sense. Compulsive Viewing admires Packer’s instincts and the enterprise he built, warm to the ally and frank without malice about the patron’s temper. Who Killed Channel 9? turns on the managers who let the juggernaut slide, cast as the rivals who wrecked what the old alliance made. The inside history is the coalition’s account of itself, with hero and villain assigned by alliance rather than by ledger.
One limit. Alliance Theory reads the structure under the creed and predicts the contradictions. It does not tell you whether the reporting was any good. A revolutionary alliance can still break a true story, and Martin’s Chelmsford work exposed real harm to real patients. The frame explains why Stone believed what he believed and why the beliefs will not cohere as philosophy. It cannot grade the journalism the alliance produced. Whom explains the belief. It leaves open the truth of any single story the belief was raised to defend.

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Paul Barry: A Chronicler of Australian Power

Paul Barry (b. 1952) is an Australian journalist, author, and broadcaster who built a career on the investigation of wealth, power, and institutional accountability. Across more than four decades he became a leading practitioner of investigative reporting in Australia. His work ranges from corporate misconduct and offshore tax avoidance to the conduct of journalists and the news organizations they serve. Through his reporting, his books, and his long association with the Australian Broadcasting Corporation’s Media Watch, Barry helped shape an adversarial tradition in Australian journalism that treats political and media elites as subjects of examination rather than as protected sources.

Born in England on 24 February 1952, Barry grew up in Underriver, a village in Kent. He attended Solefield School and then Sevenoaks School before entering Exeter College, Oxford, where he studied Philosophy, Politics and Economics and captained the university golf team. He took First Class Honours in 1973. He began his career in London as an economics correspondent for the weekly magazine Investors Chronicle, and in 1978 he joined the BBC.

His BBC years gave him a grounding in financial journalism on programs such as The Money Programme, Newsnight, and Panorama. The timing helped. The global economy was moving through deregulation, and Barry learned to read corporate structures, financial markets, and accounting practice. Most investigative reporters arrive through political coverage. Barry arrived through money. That training shaped the work that followed.

He moved to Australia in 1986 and joined the ABC. From 1987 he reported for Four Corners, the network’s flagship investigative program. He landed at the close of the 1980s corporate boom, a decade of debt-fueled takeovers, speculation, and a celebrated class of entrepreneurs. Barry made his name with reports on the men who ran the era’s largest companies.

His 1993 Four Corners report “The Rich Man’s Refuge” exposed the use of the Cook Islands as a tax haven by wealthy Australians shielding assets from tax. The report helped trigger a Senate inquiry into offshore avoidance and showed his gift for turning technical finance into public-interest journalism. It also pointed to a theme he returned to across his career: the gap between formal regulation and the methods powerful men use to slip around it.

Barry reached a national audience through his work on the businessman Alan Bond and the collapse of Bond Corporation. Those reports became The Rise and Fall of Alan Bond (1991), a study of Australia’s corporate excess in the 1980s. Barry did not treat Bond as a colorful rogue. He examined the system that lifted him: loose lending, weak oversight, speculative finance, and a business culture that praised risk and discounted accountability.

He followed with The Rise and Rise of Kerry Packer (1993), an unauthorized life of the country’s dominant media proprietor. The book became a bestseller and the top-selling Australian biography of its decade. His Packer combined close reporting with a wider account of media ownership, political influence, and concentrated economic power. He extended the work later with books on James Packer and on the fortunes of the Packer and Murdoch heirs.

Taken together, Barry’s business biographies do more than profile individuals. They chronicle Australia’s passage from the informal, relationship-driven corporate world of the 1980s to the compliance-bound system that followed a run of collapses and reforms. His books track the decline of an order where entrepreneurs leaned on personal ties to bankers and politicians, and the rise of one governed by oversight, shareholder scrutiny, and regulation.

His reporting drew legal fire. Kerry Packer sued Barry and the ABC over a Four Corners investigation touching Packer’s dealings with the failed merchant bank Tasman Funding. The matter ended in settlement and underlined the legal exposure that comes with investigating men who can answer in court. Such fights recurred and reinforced his standing as a reporter willing to take on subjects with the resources to push back.

Barry sometimes left business and media for broader political ground. His 2006 book Spies, Lies and the War on Terror examined intelligence failures and political decision-making after the September 11 attacks and the Iraq War. The book departed from his usual Australian corporate beat, yet it carried a steady interest in how institutions justify choices, control information, and shape what the public comes to believe.

His career crossed the commercial networks as well as the ABC. He presented The Times and Witness on the Seven Network in the mid-1990s, reported for Nine’s 60 Minutes and A Current Affair, wrote for The Sydney Morning Herald, and contributed to independent outlets such as Crikey. The range exposed him to commercial and public-service journalism during a long decline in traditional media revenue. In 2001 he won a Walkley Award for exposing a tax scheme used by prominent Sydney barristers. He won four Walkley Awards across his career.

His longest public role came at Media Watch, the ABC’s weekly program of media criticism. Barry first took the chair in 2000. His first run ended after a clash over the program’s coverage of the ABC’s own management and government funding, and managing director Jonathan Shier declined to renew his contract. The episode set off a wide debate about editorial independence and political pressure inside the national broadcaster and turned Barry from a critic of media institutions into a figure in the fight over their autonomy. He returned as a temporary host in 2010 while Jonathan Holmes took leave.

In 2013 Barry came back to host Media Watch and held the chair until his final episode on 2 December 2024. The eleven-year run made him the longest-serving presenter in the program’s history. Across hundreds of episodes he examined errors, ethical lapses, sensationalism, conflicts of interest, plagiarism, misleading headlines, and failures of verification throughout Australian media. The ABC named the investigative reporter Linton Besser as his successor, and Besser took the chair in 2025.

Barry approached media criticism as a reporter, not as a theorist. He worked from verifiable examples, documents, editorial decisions, and questions of accuracy. Critics charged him with bias, in particular when his scrutiny fell more often on conservative outlets. Supporters held that examining powerful news organizations serves a democratic function. Whatever the verdict, he helped make media criticism a visible and consequential form of journalism in Australia.

As author and broadcaster, Barry holds a distinct place in Australian public life. He approaches institutions through accountability and asks how power works behind formal structure and public narrative. Corporate empires, government choices, offshore networks, journalistic practice: in each he tracks how influence is won, used, and protected. Few Australian journalists have crossed long-form biography, television investigation, business reporting, and media criticism with comparable range. One conviction runs through the work. Institutions entrusted with power must answer for it, and journalism’s first duty is to hold them to account.

Paul Barry and the Sacred Value

David Pinsof writes:

Sacred value. A cover story for status-seeking designed to prevent a status game from collapsing. We deny we’re seeking dominance or superiority and instead pretend that we’re seeking honor, wisdom, beauty, authenticity, self-actualization, equality, morality, or the betterment of humankind.

Sacred value is the sharpest tool on Barry. Media criticism looks like the defense of accuracy and accountability. Pinsof turns that around. The sacred value is the cover story that keeps a status game from collapsing. Journalists police other journalists, and the word accountability lets them compete for rank while they deny that they compete at all. Barry’s program runs on that cover. The truth-first essay starts here, because this is the cynical core the other concepts orbit.
Start with the shape of a sacred value. Pinsof’s claim runs like this. We deny that we seek dominance and dress the seeking as honor, wisdom, or the betterment of mankind. The denial is the load-bearing part. A status game survives only while the players hold the cover in place. Name the game out loud and it falls apart, because the players then see each other as vain and scramble for a fresh cover. Accountability is Barry’s cover. It holds because he believes it.
Look at the books. Barry exposes the rich. Accountability is the stated good, and the public-interest case for the work writes itself. The status return runs underneath. The bestseller, the award, the standing as the reporter who took on the men no one else would touch. The Rise and Fall of Alan Bond and The Rise and Rise of Kerry Packer sell because the public enjoys watching a journalist bring down a tycoon, and Barry rises in standing each time he pulls one down. The sacred value lets him bank the rank while he keeps his hands clean of the seeking. He does not lie. He believes the accountability, and the belief is what makes the cover work.
The Walkleys sit in the same place. The award counts points in a status game, and the profession calls the counting a tribute to public-interest journalism. Four Walkleys read as four points, and the trade dresses the tally as honor for service. The sacred value turns rank into virtue and hides the rank inside the virtue.
Media Watch is the purest case. A program ranks journalists every Monday under the banner of standards. Strip the banner and you have a man judging other men for position in a trade. The banner is the sacred value, accuracy and accountability and the public’s claim on a clean press, and the banner is what keeps the program from reading as one journalist’s bid for rank over his rivals. Pinsof predicts that the program must hold the banner aloft at any cost, because the moment the audience sees a status game the program collapses.
The Shier sacking shows the cover shift to a second value. When his first run ended, the value invoked in his defense moved to editorial independence. Independence works the same way. It dresses a fight over who controls the broadcaster as a fight over a public good. Barry left as a martyr to a sacred value, and the exit raised his standing rather than lowered it. The cover converted a sacking into a promotion in rank.
The bias charge is the attempt to collapse the game. His critics name his target selection as preference and read his scrutiny of the conservative press as a coalition’s work. To collapse a status game you make the players see the game as a game, and the bias charge is that move. Barry’s answer always returns to the sacred value. Accuracy. The public interest. The record. Pinsof predicts the return. The cover story comes out whenever someone threatens to name the game, because the cover is the thing under threat.
The frame does not need Barry to be a cynic. The opposite. A sacred value works best in the hands of a true believer, since the believer never has to fake the denial. His conviction is the engine of his authority and the reason the status game beneath it stays out of sight, including out of his own sight. The sharpest reading grants him every ounce of his sincerity and reads the sincerity as the perfect cover.
Barry built a four-decade career on a sacred value and never had to call it one.

The Voice

Barry keeps the English accent. Four decades in Australia and he still sounds like an Oxford man who wandered into the colonial press and decided to stay. That voice does work for him. It sits a half-step above the Australian newsroom he judges, unhurried and a little plummy, and it lends the verdicts an air of detachment, as if the man delivering them holds no stake in the local feuds.
The manner is the courtroom, not the pulpit. He sits alone at a desk and talks to the camera. No panel, no guests to manage. He opens with a steady “Good evening,” lays a charge, puts the evidence on screen, and reads the offending lines aloud while the yellow highlight does the pointing. The voice stays flat on purpose. He lets the quoted words convict the writer. The underplaying is the method. Where a louder host shouts, Barry reads, and the contempt lives in the timing and the pause rather than the volume.
He builds each segment as a small prosecution. The charge. The setup, often a charitable account of the target’s defense. Then the turn, the document or the figure that guts the defense, and a short dry summary that lands the verdict. He likes the rhetorical question and the hanging pause after it. He likes feigned puzzlement, the mock-innocent “now, you might think,” followed by the line that shows the thinking was wrong. His favorite move is the simplest. He quotes the subject at length and says almost nothing, because the words do the damage on their own.
Barry uses short Anglo-Saxon words, declarative sentences, active voice, built for the ear and the autocue. He names names and gives numbers. He drops jargon and ornament. The script reads like good wire copy with a blade in it. He talks to the viewer in the second person and keeps the sentences short and moving.
The humour runs dry. The raised eyebrow, the deflating aside, the pun buried in the script. He plays weary, the adjudicator who has seen every dodge before and is no longer surprised by any of them, only disappointed. The sarcasm stays low and exact. He seldom lets it tip into a sneer, and the restraint elsewhere makes it land harder when he does.
The persona is the patient schoolmaster grading a class that should know better. The steady gaze and the even tone say, I have read the thing you hoped no one would read closely. That posture is the source of his authority and the source of the complaints against him. The same flat certainty that reads as rigor to his admirers reads as smugness to the outlets on the receiving end. His critics hear a man who has decided the case before he sits down.
On the page he is a faster and warmer instrument. The book prose moves on narrative and documentary detail, clear and propulsive, made to carry a reader through a corporate collapse without a chart. The on-air voice is the compressed version of the same hand, the reporter who trusts the evidence and gets out of its way.
The through-line is restraint. Barry wins by underplaying. He hands the floor to his target’s own words and stands back with one eyebrow up. The accent supplies the distance, the documents supply the proof, and the dry summary supplies the verdict. That is the whole instrument, and he played it across his Media Watch years without changing the tune.

The Set

Barry belongs to the Australian accountability-press world, anchored at the ABC and reaching out to the quality mastheads. The set runs through Media Watch and Four Corners and 7.30 at the broadcaster and on into the broadsheet investigators. Media Watch is itself a lineage, and the lineage is the spine of the set. Stuart Littlemore began the program in 1989, and the chair passed through David Marr (b. 1947), Richard Ackland, Liz Jackson, Monica Attard, Jonathan Holmes, Barry, and now Linton Besser, with producers such as Tim Latham and Mario Christodoulou working behind the desk. Around them stand the ABC current-affairs names: Kerry O’Brien (b. 1945), Chris Masters, Sarah Ferguson, Leigh Sales, Laura Tingle, Quentin Dempster, and Marian Wilkinson, Sally Neighbour. Beyond the broadcaster sit the masthead investigators Kate McClymont and Adele Ferguson, Stephen Mayne and the Crikey crowd, Erik Jensen and Morry Schwartz at The Saturday Paper, Lenore Taylor at Guardian Australia, and Margaret Simons in the academy. The dead set the standard. The lecture named for Andrew Olle (1947-1995) gathers the living once a year.

They value accuracy and the documentary record. They value the public interest, editorial independence, and the ABC as a public trust. They keep a wall between reporting and comment and treat the wall as sacred. They distrust proprietors and commercial pressure, defend press freedom, and rank the craft above the ratings. The good journalist serves the reader, not the owner, and the set agrees on this without needing to say it twice.

Their hero is the fearless investigator who brings down the powerful at real cost and earns the hatred of the right people. The founding myth runs to Woodward and Bernstein abroad and to Chris Masters at home, whose “The Moonlight State” on Four Corners broke a state police force and triggered the Fitzgerald inquiry. The reporter wins a kind of permanence through the byline, the scoop that forces a royal commission, the book that outlives the news cycle. Martyrdom counts most. Barry’s first sacking from Media Watch became a credential rather than a wound. To be fired or sued by power is to be canonized by peers.

The status games follow from the hero. The Walkley and the Gold Walkley sit at the top, with the Andrew Olle lecture invitation close behind, then the masthead that carries weight, the scoop that ends in an inquiry or a resignation, the defamation suit survived. An attack in the Murdoch papers counts as a marker too, proof of the right enemies. Inside the set the order holds firm. Investigation outranks daily reporting. The long form outranks the tabloid. The ABC outranks commercial current affairs. Peer esteem beats audience size, and the set repeats this to itself often.

The norms are the trade’s commandments. Verify before you publish. Disclose your conflicts. Keep fact apart from comment. Correct your errors on the record. Resist the proprietor and the advertiser. Serve the public, not power. Fund and protect the broadcaster. Treat misinformation as a public harm and police it. Barry’s program is the enforcement arm of these rules, and the set built the program to do that work.

The essentialism shows in one line they draw and never doubt. There is real journalism, and there is something that only wears its clothes. The reporter and the propagandist differ in kind, not degree. The spin doctor, the shock jock, and the partisan entertainer practise a separate trade that borrows the name. Andrew Bolt (b. 1959) and Alan Jones (b. 1941) get filed as not-really-journalists, a different species housed in the same industry. The ABC carries an essential character as a public trust, something more than a state-owned channel. Truth, on this view, is the thing journalism exists for, by its nature, and a press that abandons truth stops being a press at all.

The moral grammar reduces to a clean set of oppositions: accountability against complicity, truth against spin, public interest against vested interest, independence against capture, courage against the chequebook. Money and proprietor pressure contaminate. Public funding and independence purify. Sin is the uncorrected error, the buried conflict, the cash for comment, the owner’s line run as news. Virtue is the correction, the disclosure, and the scoop that costs the reporter something. Redemption comes through the admission made out loud. The villains carry names. Rupert Murdoch (b. 1931) and Lachlan Murdoch (b. 1971) stand above the rest, with the Sky After Dark hosts, the talkback men, and the chequebook desks at the commercial networks below them. The saints are the martyred investigators, and their roll is read out to the living each year.

Barry sits at the center of this world as its chosen judge. The set hands him the gavel because he speaks its values back to it in the accent of certainty. His authority is borrowed. It rests on the set’s faith that the line between the journalist and the propagandist is real, fixed, and his to patrol.

Barry and the Essence of Journalism

Turner’s argument against essentialism runs against a single habit of mind. We have a word, so we assume the word names one real thing with a shared essence, and we treat every instance as a case of that essence present or absent. Turner denies the essence. General terms cover sprawls of overlapping cases that resemble each other in patches. The shared inner substance is a posit, not a finding, and the work the essence seems to do is done by the man who wields it. Barry’s whole practice runs on the habit Turner attacks.
The central term is journalism, or real journalism. Barry treats it as a kind with an essence: accuracy, independence, the public interest, the wall between fact and comment. He sorts practitioners by whether they hold the essence. The careful reporter has it. The shock jock and the partisan columnist lack it, so he files them as something else, men who wear the clothes of the trade without the substance. Turner’s reply is flat. There is no essence of journalism. The word covers wire copy and opinion and investigation and talkback and the rewriting of press releases, activities that resemble each other in patches and share no common core. Barry’s confidence that he can read off who holds the essence assumes the essence sits there to be read.
Watch where the essence comes from. Barry infers it from the cases he already approves, then turns it on the cases he rejects. The good reporting defines the essence, and the essence disqualifies the bad. The reasoning closes on itself. Turner names this the circle at the heart of essentialism. The kind term gets built from the favored instances and then gets presented as the standard that picked them out.
The species talk gives the essentialism its strong form. Barry files Bolt and Jones as a different species in the same building, a difference in kind rather than degree. This is the natural-kind claim carried into the social, the belief that journalist and propagandist mark a boundary fixed in the nature of things. Turner spent a career denying natural kinds in the social world. The boundary is Barry’s, drawn by Barry, useful to Barry, then described as found in nature.
The public interest works the same way in his hands. Barry treats it as a determinate thing a story serves or betrays, a standard out in the world against which he checks the work. Turner’s nominalism cuts here. The public interest names no single object. It is a label different parties pack with different content, and when Barry rules that a story fails it, he supplies the content and then points to the label as though the label decided.
The ABC gets the same treatment as an institution. Barry grants it an essential character, a public trust whose nature is independence and service, set apart from its accidental features such as the source of its money. Turner targets this. An institution is its people and outputs and habits, not an inner essence that survives every failure. Barry’s move lets the broadcaster keep its essence through any one lapse, because the lapse reads as a fall from a nature still intact rather than evidence about what the thing is.
Media Watch is the essence in operation. The program is a weekly engine for the sort. Barry takes a case, holds it against the supposed essence of good journalism, and rules it in or out. The format needs the essence to be real and knowable, since without it the rulings have nothing to measure. Turner’s point lands hardest here. The sort does not discover the essence. The sort manufactures it. Barry’s rulings create the boundary they claim to detect, week after week, and the repetition hardens the boundary into something that looks like a fact about the world.
The protection of the essence from counterevidence is the tell. When a Murdoch columnist does careful, accurate work, the work does not earn him the title, because he lacks the essence. When an ABC reporter botches a story, the botch does not cost the broadcaster its title, because the essence stays intact beneath the error. The essence floats free of the cases. Nothing a disfavored man does can win it, and nothing a favored institution does can lose it. Turner’s complaint arrives in full. The essentialist term does no descriptive work. It sorts, and the sorting follows what Barry already favors while wearing the face of discovery.
Strip the essence and Barry’s authority changes shape. He stops being the man who detects the real journalist and becomes the man who decides which work he will honor with the name. The judgments might be good ones. Turner’s point is narrower and harder. They are judgments, made by Barry, not readings of an essence that was ever there to read.

Barry and the Binding Standard

Turner’s work on the normative goes after a move social theory makes without noticing. We see people behave alike, we see them punish those who break the pattern, and we posit a norm, a rule, a standard that sits above the behavior and binds it. The norm becomes the thing that explains the regularity and licenses the punishment. Turner denies the norm its standing. What exists are trained expectations, individual habits, and sanctions. The norm gets read off the behavior and the punishment, then turned around and called their cause and their warrant. It explains nothing it was not built from, and the bindingness it claims is assumed rather than shown. Barry’s program is this move performed weekly, in public, with a straight face.
Media Watch issues its verdicts in the language of obligation. The story was inaccurate, so the reporter failed his duty to verify. The outlet ran the proprietor’s line, so it breached the standards of independence. The word breach does the heavy lifting. It says a binding rule sat there, the journalist was held to it, and he fell short. Barry speaks as a man applying the law of the trade, not as a man voicing a preference. Turner asks the plain question. Where is the rule. Point to it. What Barry can point to is a set of expectations held inside his own guild, his own trained sense of how the work should go, and the sanction he then delivers. The standard is the name he gives that bundle after the fact.
The laundering is the heart of it. Barry never says I would have run it otherwise, or my set dislikes this kind of work. He says this is what journalism requires. The appeal to a requirement turns a preference into an obligation and hands it an authority the preference never had. A guild expectation becomes a duty the offender owed. Turner’s point is that the conversion is the trick, not the finding. The bare facts grant Barry that journalists like him expect verification and punish its absence. They do not grant him that the offender was bound to verify whatever the offender thought he was doing.
Bindingness without acceptance is where the frame bites hardest. Bolt does not hold Barry’s standards. He calls himself a commentator and treats the verification rule as a constraint on a different job. Barry rules him in breach anyway. The whole authority of the program depends on the standard binding the man who never agreed to it, the way a law binds the citizen who voted against it. Barry needs the norm to be objective and binding apart from acceptance, or his judgments collapse into the annoyance of one set of journalists at another. Turner says that is what they are. The objectivity Barry claims for the standard is the thing he cannot establish. He helps himself to it.
The sanction is the reality and the norm is the gloss. On Turner’s account the real items are the expectation and the enforcement. Barry shames the offender, the quality press nods along, the offender stings or shrugs. The norm of accuracy is the label fixed to that sequence. Barry presents the shaming as the enforcement of a rule already in force. Turner reverses the order. The trained expectation and the punishment are what there is, and the rule is the after-the-fact dressing that lets the punishment wear the clothes of justice.
The circle closes the way it closed for essence. Ask Barry why the reporter should have done otherwise, and the answer is that the standards require it. Ask what the standards are, and they come read off the good practice he already honors. Ask why that practice counts as good, and the standards return. The requirement explains nothing it was not assembled from. Turner’s standing charge against normativity arrives intact. It redescribes the conduct it claims to govern.
Grant Barry the part Turner grants. The feeling is real. His certainty that the breach is a true breach, that the duty was owed and dodged, runs deep and reads on his face. Turner takes the feeling and refuses the inference. The sense that a standard binds does not put a binding standard in the world. Barry lives his verdicts as the recognition of objective wrong. The frame reads them as a strong trained expectation carried by a man with the conviction that training brings, and the power to make the expectation sting.
Take the binding standard away and the role shifts under him. He stops enforcing the law of journalism and becomes a man with firm habits and a microphone, punishing those who depart from his guild’s way of working and calling the punishment the vindication of a rule. The verdicts still land. Turner’s point is narrow and hard. They land because of the sanction and the audience behind it, not because Barry serves an order of norms that was ever binding on the men he judges.

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The Dean of Revolutionary Scholarship: Gordon S. Wood, 1933-2026

Gordon Stewart Wood (1933-2026) was a leading historian of America’s founding. For four decades at Brown University he argued that the American Revolution was a transformation in ideas, social relations, and conceptions of equality, not a quarrel over taxes or a clash of economic classes. He wrote for scholars and for the public both. Across a long career he became the most recognized interpreter of the Revolutionary generation in the United States.

He was born in Concord, Massachusetts, on November 27, 1933, and grew up in Waltham, a working-class suburb. His father worked factory and manual jobs. His mother held office positions. Wood did not come up through the inherited channels of American intellectual life. He graduated from Tufts in 1955, served in the Air Force, then entered graduate study at Harvard. There he found his teacher in Bernard Bailyn (1922-2020), whose attention to pamphlets, sermons, newspapers, and political tracts as windows into the eighteenth-century mind shaped Wood’s method for the rest of his life.

His first major book, The Creation of the American Republic, 1776–1787 (1969), established him as a leading authority on the founding and remade the study of the Constitution. Before it appeared, historians read the constitutional debates through one of two lenses. The Progressive school, descended from Charles A. Beard (1874-1948), stressed economic interest and class conflict. The postwar consensus school played down ideological disagreement among the founders. Wood refused both. Federalists and Anti-Federalists, he argued, shared an intellectual world built from republican assumptions about virtue, corruption, liberty, and power. He drew on a vast body of eighteenth-century sources and reconstructed the political thought of the Revolutionary generation on its own terms. The founders lived in a universe ordered by fears of corruption, by devotion to civic virtue, and by suspicion of concentrated authority. The book won the Bancroft Prize in 1970.

Wood rescued the Anti-Federalists as serious political thinkers. Earlier historians cast them as defenders of narrow interests or as men who stood in the way of national progress. Wood showed that they held a coherent vision of republican government, rooted in an old fear that large states grow corrupt and tyrannical. They named tensions in the constitutional order that ran through the whole of American history: federal power against state sovereignty, the problem of representation, the reach of the executive. They lost the ratification fight. Their instincts survived. Suspicion of central authority and a preference for local self-government became permanent features of American political life.

Wood also drew out a paradox at the center of the debate. The Federalists, many of them elitist in temper, reached for new ideas such as popular sovereignty to justify a stronger national government. The Anti-Federalists, who often spoke for democratic and local constituencies, leaned on older republican notions of representation and virtue. In Wood’s reading the quarrel was an argument over how a republic might survive in a large modern nation, not a fight between democracy and aristocracy.

His most influential book, The Radicalism of the American Revolution (1992), made a bolder claim. The Revolution did far more than cut the colonies loose from Britain. It broke inherited hierarchies, weakened aristocratic assumptions, remade the relation between ordinary citizens and their leaders, and bred a culture of social equality without precedent in the Western world. The Revolution, Wood argued, created a society more democratic and egalitarian than its own leaders intended. He cast the founders not as cautious conservatives but as men caught up in what he called “the most radical and far-reaching event in American history.” The book won the Pulitzer Prize in 1993 and drew wide debate.

A single question ran beneath Wood’s scholarship: what holds the United States together? His answer rested on the staying power of Revolutionary ideas. Popular sovereignty, constitutional government, individual liberty, and political equality held a large and quarrelsome nation together, in his account. Where other historians looked to economic structure or social conflict, Wood looked to the power of ideas to shape institutions and a common identity.

His work belonged to a wider revival of political and intellectual history led by Bailyn and others. Wood pressed further than most. He held that the fall of monarchy, deference, patronage, and hereditary privilege reached deep into ordinary life. The Revolution changed government. It also changed everyday assumptions about rank, authority, and equality.

The work drew admiration and attack in equal measure. Admirers praised his recovery of the eighteenth-century mind and his command of constitutional and political development. Edmund S. Morgan (1916-2013) and Pauline Maier (1938-2013) counted his work as transformative. Later historians faulted him for slighting slavery, race, Native Americans, and women, and for building his story around elites. They charged that his focus on ideas understated social conflict and exclusion.

Nancy Isenberg (b. 1958) pressed this case hardest. She argued that Wood leaned too far toward elite political talk and too little toward the lives of ordinary Americans, the enslaved, and Indigenous communities. Historians shaped by social history, women’s history, and critical race scholarship pushed the same charge: that Wood foregrounded the founders and treated slavery and exclusion as a lesser matter. The quarrel became part of a larger fight over the direction of the profession across the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries.

Wood answered with a defense of context. He held that the historian’s first task is to understand the past as its actors understood themselves, and he resisted the habit of judging eighteenth-century men by present moral standards. He granted the contradictions of the Revolutionary generation. He insisted that the Revolution laid the intellectual ground for abolition, for women’s rights, and for later democratic reform. In essays and reviews late in his career he criticized present-minded scholarship that condemns the past instead of explaining it.

His independence cost him on both flanks. When Newt Gingrich (b. 1943) listed The Radicalism of the American Revolution among essential works of history, Wood called the praise a kiss of death among his liberal peers, who read it as a conservative claim on his work.

Wood reached a public few academic historians command. He wrote for educated general readers and reviewed books for major publications. In 2011 he received the National Humanities Medal from President Barack Obama (b. 1961) for scholarship that illuminated the founding and the framing of the Constitution. He entered popular memory through Good Will Hunting, where his name stands as shorthand for real historical learning. Wood liked to say that more people knew him from the film than from his books. Late in his life he appeared in Ken Burns’s (b. 1953) PBS documentary on the American Revolution.

Though known as an intellectual historian, Wood cared all his life about the character of American democracy. He believed the Revolution made a society unlike any before it: open to mobility, hostile to hierarchy, confident in the common man. His writing returned again to the tension between liberty and authority, equality and leadership, popular rule and constitutional restraint.

He retired from Brown in 2008 and kept writing. Empire of Liberty (2009) and Power and Liberty: Constitutionalism in the American Revolution (2021) carried his old themes forward: liberty against authority, the origins of constitutional government, the unintended results of political action. He often said the central lesson of history is the gap between intention and outcome. Revolutions and constitutions rarely deliver what their makers expect. That insight ran through his reading of the founding and through his sense of historical change.

In November 2025, speaking at the American Enterprise Institute as the country approached its 250th year, Wood urged Americans to treat the anniversary as a time to consider what makes the nation distinct. To be an American, he said, is to believe in something rather than to be someone.

Wood died on June 7, 2026, struck by a vehicle in a supermarket parking lot in East Providence, Rhode Island. He was ninety-two. He left three children, among them Christopher. At his death he stood as the dean of Revolutionary scholarship. More than any historian of his time, he returned ideas to the center of early American history and showed that political thought can be a force in the world. He recast the founders, restored the Anti-Federalists to the constitutional debate, and made the case that the American Revolution was a social and intellectual upheaval, an event that changed how ordinary people understood power, equality, citizenship, and government. His books remain necessary reading for the founding generation and for the long argument over the meaning of the American experiment.

The Great Delusion

In his 2018 book, The Great Delusion: Liberal Dreams and International Realities, John J. Mearsheimer wrote:

My view is that we are profoundly social beings from the start to the finish of our lives and that individualism is of secondary importance… Liberalism downplays the social nature of human beings to the point of almost ignoring it, instead treating people largely as atomistic actors… Political liberalism… is an ideology that is individualistic at its core and assigns great importance to the concept of inalienable rights. This concern for rights is the basis of its universalism—everyone on the planet has the same inherent set of rights—and this is what motivates liberal states to pursue ambitious foreign policies. The public and scholarly discourse about liberalism since World War II has placed enormous emphasis on what are commonly called human rights. This is true all around the world, not just in the West. “Human rights,” Samuel Moyn notes, “have come to define the most elevated aspirations of both social movements and political entities—state and interstate. They evoke hope and provoke action.”
[Humans] do not operate as lone wolves but are born into social groups or societies that shape their identities well before they can assert their individualism. Moreover, individuals usually develop strong attachments to their group and are sometimes willing to make great sacrifices for their fellow members. Humans are often said to be tribal at their core. The main reason for our social nature is that the best way for a person to survive is to be embedded in a society and to cooperate with fellow members rather than act alone… Despite its elevated ranking, reason is the least important of the three ways we determine our preferences. It certainly is less important than socialization. The main reason socialization matters so much is that humans have a long childhood in which they are protected and nurtured by their families and the surrounding society, and meanwhile exposed to intense socialization. At the same time, they are only beginning to develop their critical faculties, so they are not equipped to think for themselves. By the time an individual reaches the point where his reasoning skills are well developed, his family and society have already imposed an enormous value infusion on him. Moreover, that individual is born with innate sentiments that also strongly influence how he thinks about the world around him. All of this means that people have limited choice in formulating a moral code, because so much of their thinking about right and wrong comes from inborn attitudes and socialization.

Take Mearsheimer (b. 1947) at his word and the later Wood is in trouble.
Wood’s large claim is that the Revolution dissolved hierarchy, deference, patronage, and hereditary rank, and left a society of mobile, equal individuals who trust the common man. The Radicalism of the American Revolution tells that story. Mearsheimer says the thing Wood claims the Revolution produced cannot be produced, because man is social before he is anything else, tribal at the core, shaped by his group before he can reason his way to a self. If Mearsheimer is right, the deference Wood watched fall did not clear the ground for free individuals. It made room for new attachments: party, region, sect, race, the nation itself. The content of the socialization changed. The social nature underneath it held. Wood mistook a swap of tribes for the birth of the autonomous man.
That undercuts the radicalism thesis. Wood reads the loss of monarchy and patronage as liberation. Mearsheimer reads it as substitution. Men did not stop belonging. They began belonging to different things.
The second blow lands on Wood’s method. Mearsheimer ranks reason last among the three forces that set our preferences, beneath innate sentiment and beneath socialization, and he gives the plain cause: a man’s family and society pour their values into him through a long childhood, before his critical faculties can stand. By the time he can think for himself the work is done. Wood writes intellectual history. His craft assumes that ideas move men, that you recover the pamphlets and the sermons and you hold the engine of the age. Mearsheimer might say Wood over-rates the intellect because intellectual historians must, that the trade mistakes the reasons men give for the forces that move them. On this reading Wood’s whole apparatus rests on the rational actor Mearsheimer denies.
The third blow takes the semiquincentennial line. To be an American, Wood said, is to believe in something rather than to be someone. That is liberal universalism stated as faith: the creed of equal rights, the same for every man on the planet, chosen and held by a reasoning citizen. Mearsheimer’s book is built against it. Man is born into the group that hands him the creed, and he holds the creed because the group handed it to him, long before he could weigh it. The American who believes in something is first a member of something. Wood’s universal creed is a particular tribe’s catechism, told as a truth for all men. The recent fracture of the American consensus, the fracture Wood mourned, reads on Mearsheimer’s account as the return of tribe over creed once the postwar socialization that built the consensus wore thin.
There are two Woods. One reconstructs a thick inherited world, republicanism and virtue and corruption and deference, and insists the founders be understood inside the assumptions their society poured into them, never by the standards of our day. That Wood, the Wood of The Creation of the American Republic and of the late essays against present-mindedness, stands close to Mearsheimer. He says understand the man as his society formed him. He treats the value-infusion as real and binding. The other Wood, the celebrant, says the Revolution broke the infusion and freed the individual. Mearsheimer backs the first Wood against the second. The historicist instinct that made Wood great is a social anthropology hiding inside a liberal romance.
Mearsheimer does not erase Wood. He demotes the radicalism and promotes the historicism, turns the triumph of the free individual into the reshuffling of the social animal, and reads the idea-first method as the over-rating of reason that the trade requires. The Wood who survives is the one who said the past is a foreign country with its own gods. The Wood who falls is the one who thought 1776 taught men to stand alone.

The Voice

Wood came up in an age when American historians reached for theory and French abstraction and the vocabulary of social science, and he refused all of it. His sentences are clean, declarative, built to land on first reading. No jargon. Little metaphor. He writes the way a teacher writes, and the plainness carries an argument of its own: that the past can be told straight, that history is for readers and not only for the guild.
On top of that plainness sits his signature move, the great synthetic generalization. Wood reads everything, the pamphlets and sermons and private letters, and then he climbs above the evidence and tells you what an entire age believed. The Revolution was the most radical event in American history. The founders lived inside a world of virtue and corruption. These are verdicts delivered from altitude. He earns them with the archive and then states them with a calm that sounds like settled fact. The historian Ted Widmer (b. 1963) said you felt you were in the presence of an Olympian, and the prose has that quality, the assurance of a man who has done the reading and will now hand down the meaning.
His rhetoric runs on reversal. The structure repeats across his books: historians have long believed one thing, and the evidence shows the opposite. The Federalists, the elitists, reached for democratic ideas. The Anti-Federalists, the democrats, leaned on old republican ones. The Revolution looked conservative and was radical. Wood loves the counterintuitive turn, the moment the reader hears that the truth runs backward from what he assumed. It is the engine of his work and the source of much of its pleasure. It also explains the charge against him, that he is too fond of the clean inversion, that the surprise can flatten the mess underneath.
He thinks in pairs. Virtue against corruption, liberty against power, monarchy against republic, deference against equality. His sentences balance two terms and weigh them. Some of this he caught from the eighteenth century, which argued in antitheses, and some is his own taste for the ordered contrast. The binary gives his prose its architecture. It also gives critics their opening, the claim that the world had more than two sides.
The method is patient. He builds by accumulation, quotation after quotation, then steps back into the open for the summary. The rhythm is slow gathering followed by a clearing where the generalization stands alone. His books run long because the approach piles up, not because the writing is loose. The writing is tight. The length comes from the evidence.
His voice tries to vanish into the past. He reconstructs the founders’ assumptions from the inside and reports them without editorial heat, as if recovering a lost country and showing you its customs. This gives him a strange neutrality on the page, warm toward the men he studies and cool toward the present that judges them. The empathy points backward. The coolness points at us.
The temperature stays low. No purple passages, no confession, almost no first person. When he fights, and he fought hard in his later reviews and essays against present-minded history, the heat comes out as irony and firmness rather than rhetoric. He could be a severe reviewer, dry and cutting, the disapproval all the sharper for the restraint around it. He does not shout. He states, and the statement does the work.
He speaks the way he writes. The delivery is measured, unhurried, a plain New England cadence, the professor who settles the room and tells the story straight. He has a dry wit and turns it on himself, the joke that more people know him from Good Will Hunting than from any book he wrote. In a lecture or in front of a camera he becomes a storyteller, able to make a pamphlet war from 1787 hold a general audience, and that gift is the same one that sold the books. The clarity of the page is the clarity of the man at the podium. His semiquincentennial line, to be an American is to believe in something rather than to be someone, shows the taste for the memorable summary working even in speech.
Wood’s prose reads to admirers as common sense and to critics as a refusal to see complication. The big summary sounds like authority and like overreach at once. The serene confidence that makes him a great explainer is the same confidence his opponents hear smoothing over slavery and conflict and everyone his clean story leaves out. The voice and the case against the voice are one thing. You cannot get the assurance without the blind spots it can carry. Wood wrote like a man who had figured out the founding and could now tell you what it meant, and that is exactly what people loved in him and what they distrusted.

The Set

Picture a guild, small and old, that believes ideas make history.

At its center stands Bailyn, the Harvard master who taught that the road to the Revolution runs through the pamphlets and the sermons, and Wood is his most famous student. Around them gather the men and women of the republican reading. Morgan at Yale, the model of clean prose. Pauline Maier, who took the Declaration and the ratification debates as serious texts. J.G.A. Pocock (b. 1924), the New Zealander who traced classical republican virtue from Florence to Philadelphia. Jack Rakove (b. 1947), who read Madison’s mind. Lance Banning (1942-2006), who defended the republican synthesis. Joyce Appleby (1929-2016), who fought it from inside the same world, arguing the founders were Lockean liberals and not classical republicans. They quarrel over the content. They agree on the premise. The founders thought, and the thinking moved men, and the job is to recover it.

What this set values, above all, is the archive and the mind it yields. The badge of membership is having read everything, the letters and the debates and the obscure tracts, and the sin is to generalize without the reading. They value synthesis, the big book that gathers an age and explains it, prized far above the narrow monograph. They value clarity, prose a citizen can read, history that leaves the seminar room. And they value historicism, the discipline of entering a dead world and understanding it before you judge it. To them the past is a country with its own laws, and the historian is its respectful guest.

Their heroes are the master synthesizers. Bailyn is the patriarch. Morgan is the saint of clarity. Behind them stand the founders, half-studied and half-revered, Madison and Washington and the framers, men of ideas who built a thing that lasted. Immortality in this world is the book still read at fifty years, the place on the syllabus, the prize that canonizes. The Pulitzer and the Bancroft are its sacraments. To be Bailyn’s student, and to train students who train students, is to join a line of succession that outlives the man. Wood got a stranger immortality too, his name dropped in Good Will Hunting as the learning a townie can out-talk, and he liked to say more people knew him from the movie than from anything he wrote.

The status games run on prizes, chairs, and reviews. A chair at Brown or Harvard or Yale or Princeton. The Pulitzer, the Bancroft, the Parkman. And the review, the notice in the New York Review of Books under Robert Silvers (1929-2017), who published Wood for decades and ran the magazine as a court where reputations were made. The man who writes the sweeping account outranks the man who edits the document. Reach into the public confers a status the pure scholar cannot buy, the documentary with Ken Burns, the bestseller, the medal from Obama, and it draws suspicion in the same motion, because the founders-chic boom of the late nineties carried a whiff of the sellout. McCullough (1933-2022) with his John Adams, Joseph Ellis (b. 1943) with his Founding Brothers, Ron Chernow (b. 1949) with his lives of Washington and Hamilton, Walter Isaacson (b. 1952) with his Franklin, these men made the founders a popular religion. Wood moved among them as the scholar’s scholar who lent the genre credit while keeping a wary distance from its romance. Jill Lepore (b. 1966) stands at the edge of the same ring, a younger synthesizer who carries the public ambition but writes the excluded back in, a foot in each camp.

Against this set stands another, and the war between them is the deepest status game of all, a fight over what counts as real history. The bottom-up historians came up in the sixties saying the story belonged to the crowd, the sailor, the slave, the farmer’s wife. Jesse Lemisch (1936-2018) called for history from the bottom up. Alfred Young (1925-2012) wrote the shoemaker back into the Tea Party. Gary Nash (1933-2021) put the urban poor and the enslaved at the center of the Revolution. Woody Holton (b. 1959) argued the founders were forced by ordinary debtors and farmers, not led by pure idea. Annette Gordon-Reed (b. 1958) made the Hemings family of Monticello a national subject and set slavery at the founding’s heart. Nancy Isenberg pressed the case that Wood wrote the poor out of the story. To this camp the ideas school looks like a club of men in love with great men, and Wood is its grand old apologist.

Wood’s set holds a clear code. A historian ought to master the sources before he speaks. He ought to understand the past in its own terms and refuse the easy verdict of the present. He ought not judge eighteenth-century men by twenty-first-century morals. He ought to explain rather than condemn, and write so a citizen can follow. Evidence governs, and ideology must never drive the conclusion. The cardinal offense, in this code, is anachronism, the present-minded historian who scolds the dead. Wood spent his last decade naming that offense and the people he thought guilty of it.

Beneath the code lie beliefs the set treats as real. That there is a recoverable past mind, that the founders meant what they wrote, that an idea has a stable content you can carry across two centuries and set down intact. That America has a coherent founding, an origin with a meaning, an experiment with one continuous identity. That the Revolution had a real character you can name, and the name is radical. That there is such a thing as the historian’s task, a craft with proper and improper forms. The other camp keeps its own version of the real, opposite and just as firm: that race and class and bondage are the deep facts, that the founding’s true nature is domination, that the creed of liberty was a screen. Two churches, each certain it stands on bedrock, each calling the other’s bedrock a story.

The moral grammar follows. In Wood’s world the great virtue is empathy with the past, the patience to understand before you accuse, and the great vice is the vanity that flatters the present by trashing the dead. In the other world the grammar turns over. There the great virtue is honesty about the nation’s crimes and a voice for the silenced, and the great vice is complicity, the averted eye, the scholar who pores over the framers’ prose and steps around the auction block. Wood’s people hear the accusers as zealots and philistines. The accusers hear Wood’s people as gatekeepers and apologists. The two grammars share a hidden floor. Both sides hold that history is a moral undertaking. Both hold that the founding is sacred ground worth fighting over. The fight runs hot because the ground is shared.

You saw the whole set move at once in December 2019. When The New York Times built its 1619 Project around Nikole Hannah-Jones (b. 1976), and her lead essay tied the Revolution to the defense of slavery, five historians sent a letter of protest: Sean Wilentz (b. 1951) of Princeton, who organized it, the Civil War historian James McPherson (b. 1936), the historian of emancipation James Oakes (b. 1953), Victoria Bynum, and Gordon Wood. They were not, most of them, conservatives. Wilentz and McPherson were lifelong men of the left. Their objection was the guild’s objection, that a journalist had gotten a fact wrong and that authority over the founding belonged to historians who had read the record. The Times editor answered that their reading of the past was too narrow. The episode shows the set entire: the reverence for fact, the claim to authority over the nation’s origin, the old liberals lining up beside Wood out of craft rather than party, and the heat of men who feel the sacred ground misused.

Wood sits at the head of this world and a little apart from it at the close. He is Bailyn’s heir, prize-laden, famous past the academy, the dean the obituaries named. He is also a man the field’s leftward turn left exposed, claimed by Gingrich, and that claim marked him among the young as a relic. He kept writing his clear declarative books while the ground shifted beneath them. The grand old man and the embattled one are the same man. He prized what his guild prized, served its heroes, won its prizes, fought its war, and died on the eve of the anniversary his world had spent two centuries learning how to tell.

Essentialism

Turner (b. 1951) is the enemy of the shared thing. His quarrel with social explanation is that it keeps positing collective objects, a culture, a framework, a paradigm, a worldview, a mentality, and then treats these as real entities that people carry inside them and pass between them intact. He denies the entities. There are men, each with his own habits got by his own road, and the shared object is an inference the analyst draws from family resemblances and then hands back to the people as the cause of what they did. Name the essence, attribute the essence, explain by the essence. Turner calls the move empty. Hold it against Wood and most of his apparatus goes soft.
Wood runs on shared things. The founders inhabit a common intellectual world. They share republican assumptions about virtue and corruption and liberty. They think inside the eighteenth-century mind. Later the nation is held together by an American political culture, a body of beliefs that binds. And the Revolution has a character you can name in a word, radical. Every one of these is a collective essence, a single object with a content, possessed in common. Turner’s question is the same in each case. What is the thing, and where does it live?
Take the founding claim, that Federalists and Anti-Federalists operated within a shared intellectual world. The sharing is the load-bearing word, and Turner puts his weight there. Sharing is not given. It is the thing to be explained. There is no group head for a framework to sit in. Each man read his own scatter of pamphlets and drew his own lessons, and what Wood calls the shared world is a composite he built by gathering the common-looking parts and dropping the rest. Then he reattributes the composite to the men and says it moved them. The framework explains the texts, and the texts are the only evidence for the framework. The circle closes and no cause has been found.
Republicanism is the clearest case. It is Wood’s word, not theirs, an abstraction lifted off a corpus and frozen into a doctrine. The men used overlapping vocabularies, the same handful of Whig tracts, the same terms, corruption and virtue and tyranny. Turner grants the recurrence of words. He denies that recurring words are a shared belief. Men say the same thing and mean different things and do different things with it. A common vocabulary is a fact about language in circulation, not a single mind distributed across a generation. Wood treats the vocabulary as the visible surface of one underlying essence. Turner sees vocabulary and stops, because that is all the evidence will carry.
The cut reaches Wood’s pride, the recovery of the past on its own terms, the reconstruction of what the founders believed. The phrase “what they believed” hides a plural inside a singular. There is no they that believed. There are many men who believed many things, some overlapping, much not, and “the belief of the Revolutionary generation” is a figure of speech Wood has hardened into an object. His historicism, understand them as they understood themselves, assumes a collective self with a single self-understanding waiting to be found. Turner says the collective self is the reification, and the search recovers a thing the historian made.
Follow it to the end and Wood’s authority changes shape. The magisterial generalization, the verdict from altitude, looks like a discovery about a real shared mind. On Turner’s account it is an artifact of the abstracting. From high up the essence looks solid. Up close it scatters into particular men with particular habits, and the unity was the distance. The gift that made Wood great, the reach for the sweeping synthetic claim, is the gift Turner most distrusts, because the sweep is bought by reifying the scatter into a single named thing.
Now the honest part, because the frame flatters no one. Turner’s solvent is general. It dissolves republicanism, and it dissolves the things Wood’s enemies live on. The slave system, White supremacy, settler colonialism, the founding’s true nature, these are collective essences of the same kind, single objects with a content, attributed to a population and made the cause of its acts. Turner cuts them the way he cuts Wood. He does not pick the social historians over the ideas men. He indicts the common coin of the whole field, the habit of explaining by reified collectives, and on his ledger Wood and Nash and Gordon-Reed all spend the same counterfeit. The frame takes no side in the war over the founding. It tells both armies their currency is bad.
What survives in Wood, on this reading, is the part that is not essence, the close work, the reading of a given man’s letters, the tracing of who cited whom, the argument made by a particular pen. Turner has no quarrel with that. His quarrel is with the lift from the particular to the shared mind, the move from these men wrote these things to the generation thought this. Wood spent his life making that move with more grace than anyone. Turner says the grace is the danger. The better the synthesis reads, the more the construction passes for a discovery.

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The Last Generalist: Bob Ellis and Australian Public Life

Bob Ellis (1942-2016) worked across more fields of Australian public life than any writer of his generation. He wrote novels, plays, screenplays, memoirs, political histories, essays, poetry, songs, and journalism. He directed films. He drafted speeches for premiers and federal leaders. He stood for parliament. He held a role that thinned out during his lifetime, the public intellectual who passed between art, reporting, and partisan politics without treating the borders as real. For more than four decades he argued about culture, nationhood, and power.

He was born in Murwillumbah in northern New South Wales and raised nearby in Lismore. The home was Seventh-day Adventist, and the church marked him in ways he carried long after he left its doctrine. He lost an older sister in a road accident when he was a child, and he spoke of that death as a wound that set the emotional weather of his adult life. The theology fell away. The habits of mind did not. Adventism trained him in prophecy, in the language of judgment and ruin and rescue, in the conviction that history bends toward a reckoning. He moved that grammar into politics and never lost it. Friends and adversaries said the same thing in different tones: Ellis wrote about elections as a man who had once expected the end of the world. He kept the urgency and changed the subject.

He studied at the University of Sydney on a Sir Robert Menzies (1894-1978) Scholarship and arrived inside one of the richest student circles in postwar Australia. His contemporaries included Clive James (1939-2019), Germaine Greer (b. 1939), Robert Hughes (1938-2012), Les Murray (1938-2019), and Mungo MacCallum (1941-2020). The group wanted an Australian voice that owed nothing to British permission. Ellis took from those years a single durable belief. Australian speech, Australian memory, and Australian political life deserved serious treatment on their own ground, not as provincial copies of something larger and older.

His career opened in the upheavals of the 1960s and early 1970s. The Vietnam War shaped his politics. Work in broadcasting and journalism taught him how mass communication operates from the inside. From the start he mixed reporting, satire, advocacy, and literary ambition, and he showed no patience for the lines that separate them. He treated the boundary between the commentator and the partisan as an invention he was free to ignore.

Theatre and film carried him to national attention first. He stood at the center of The Legend of King O’Malley (1970), a musical satire that became a landmark of modern Australian theatre. The play argued, through performance rather than manifesto, that Australian political history and Australian vernacular could hold a stage. Australian cultural institutions still leaned on imported British models at the time. The production helped the country find a more confident theatrical voice of its own.

His deepest influence came through the revival of Australian cinema across the 1970s and 1980s. As a screenwriter he shaped several of the defining works of the Australian New Wave. His screenplay for Newsfront won an Australian Film Institute Award and remains a central film about Australian journalism and the national mood after the war. More AFI awards came for Goodbye Paradise and My First Wife. His scripts carried sharp talk, political awareness, and a habit of tying one ordinary life to the larger movement of the age.

He wanted the camera too. He directed Unfinished Business (1985) and Warm Nights on a Slow Moving Train (1988). Most Australian films of the period reached for landscape and myth. Ellis turned inward, toward close rooms, psychological conflict, and relationships built out of dialogue. The films followed his deeper artistic preference. He cared about character, talk, and moral confrontation more than spectacle.

Politics held the same weight in his mind as art. He read elections, parties, and leadership fights as national drama, not as institutional procedure. That reading found its fullest form in the television miniseries True Believers, which traced the history of the Australian Labor Party through the lives of its major figures. Ellis treated political conflict as a stage on which Australians work out who they are and argue over what the country should become.

He did more than watch. Unlike most commentators, he entered the contest. He wrote speeches for Labor leaders including Kim Beazley (b. 1948), Bob Carr (b. 1947), and Mike Rann (b. 1953), among others. His method was a scandal of disorder. Drafts came late and half-formed. Leaders kept asking for him anyway, because he could do the one thing they could not buy elsewhere. He turned policy into feeling. He gave an argument the shape of a story about fairness, obligation, and national purpose, and the story reached working voters and middle-class voters at once.

His direct part in politics went past the writing desk. In 1994 he contested the federal by-election for the Sydney seat of Mackellar as an independent, running against the Liberal candidate Bronwyn Bishop (b. 1942). He could not win the safe conservative electorate, and he knew it. The campaign showed how he understood politics, as theatre and argument bound together. He used the race to needle established figures and to drag attention toward questions he thought the major parties had buried. The run repeated a pattern of his whole life. He kept stepping over the line from observer to participant.

His output staggered even sympathetic readers by its size and range. He produced novels, memoirs, political histories, essay collections, poetry, songs, film criticism, and a flood of journalism. Books such as Goodbye Jerusalem, Goodbye Babylon, The Capitalism Delusion, and And So It Went braided memoir, political reading, and historical interpretation into a single voice. He wrote fast and published across genres in the same season. Writing was not his profession so much as the spine of his daily existence.

Goodbye Jerusalem, in 1997, brought the gravest controversy of his career. Tony Abbott (b. 1957), Peter Costello (b. 1957), and their wives sued Ellis and his publisher for defamation over allegations in the book, and they won. The judgment forced the withdrawal and revision of the first edition and laid heavy financial and reputational costs on the author. The case became a touchstone among political defamation disputes over an Australian book, and a standing warning about the hazard of mixing memoir, political rumor, and factual claim in one paragraph.

Controversy stayed close to him for the rest of his public life. He attacked friends as fast as enemies. The blend of literary gift and personal venom won him loyal admirers and committed foes in equal measure. Many readers prized his independence, his refusal to keep step with party discipline or professional manners. Others read him as careless, unfair, and ever more captured by old grudges. The heat of those reactions traced back to the personal grain of his writing. He rarely hid his verdicts behind institutional neutrality or cool analysis.

In his later years he moved his work onto the internet. Through his blog Table Talk he published commentary, campaign notes, memoir, poetry, and criticism at a rate few writers could hold. The blog kept his direct line to readers and proved an astonishing daily stamina. It also stripped away the editorial restraints that once shaped his prose. His writing grew more immediate, more personal, and often more reckless.

The blog years exposed his strengths and his weaknesses in the same light. He could still see a campaign clearly and write it in vivid prose. He could also drift, recycling grievances and sliding toward conspiracy, cut off from the literary institutions that had once feted him. Critics read decline. Supporters read a writer who would not soften to buy acceptance. The argument between those two readings became part of what he left behind.

Ellis died of cancer in 2016, writing almost to the end. By then he had published more than twenty books, written numerous screenplays and plays, composed roughly a hundred songs, drafted countless speeches, and produced one of the largest bodies of political commentary any Australian writer of his era left behind.

His importance rests not in a single work but in the reach of his engagement with the public life of the country. He belonged to a line that runs through Manning Clark (1915-1991), Donald Horne (1921-2005), and Les Murray, writers who saw Australia as an unfinished project that needed constant interpretation. Ellis spent his life explaining the country to itself. He wrote as if politics, literature, cinema, journalism, and national identity were one conversation held in different rooms. In an age of specialists he stayed a generalist, a participant who held that the writer should not only record public life but try to turn it.

The Voice

Ellis wrote extravagantly. Where the spare style cuts, Ellis added. His sentences run long and pile up, clause on clause, the way a tide comes in, and he trusted accumulation to do the work that other writers trust the full stop to do. You can hear where it came from. He was raised a Seventh-day Adventist, and the King James cadence sits under everything he wrote, the rolling “and… and… and,” the prophetic lift, the periodic sentence that climbs and climbs and then breaks over you. He left the church and kept its music.
The diction mixes high and low without apology. A sentence might open in scripture and land in the pub. He sets the grand word beside the Australian vernacular, the cosmic beside the crude, and the collision is the point. He loved proper names, place names, the make of the car and the brand of the beer, the specific street in the specific town, and he used that grit to anchor the grandeur so the high notes had something to stand on. He piled adjectives, often three at a time, and he repeated his favorite words and rhythms until they became a signature you could pick out blindfolded.
He wrote in the present tense and he wrote like a man with a camera. The screenwriter never left him. He puts you in the room, the light coming through the window, the man at the bar, the woman crossing the floor, and only then does he tell you what it all means for the nation and the age. He thought in scenes and he thought in stakes, and the stakes were always enormous. Hyperbole was his native weather. Nothing was merely good or bad. It was the finest hour or the blackest betrayal, the most beautiful face or the cruelest act, and he meant it each time.
Two modes sat at the center of his gift. One was the elegy. He was a great mourner, and his tributes to the dead and the lost are among the best things he made, tender, swelling, unembarrassed by feeling, sometimes spilling over into the mawkish but always meant. The other was the kill. He could destroy a man in a clause. The savage character sketch, the contemptuous aside, the phrase that followed its target for the rest of his life, these came to Ellis as easily as the praise, and he aimed them at friends and enemies alike. The same pen that wept over a fallen leader could open the next paragraph by gutting a living one.
Gossip ran all through it. He wove the small human detail, who drank, who wept, who slept with whom, into the large story of the country, and he refused to keep them apart. History for Ellis was made of appetite and weakness and love, and he wrote the bedroom and the cabinet room in the same breath. That refusal gave his work its life and also its trouble. He wrote what felt true rather than what he could prove, the myth over the record, and the cost came due in court. Goodbye Jerusalem was pulped after Tony Abbott and Peter Costello sued for defamation. The looseness that made the prose sing was the looseness that sank the book.
His rhetoric leaned on the old devices and used them well. The catalogue, the list that builds and builds. Anaphora, the same words starting line after line until the repetition becomes a drumbeat. The rising tricolon. The rhetorical question thrown out and left hanging. And the trick he loved most, the build to grandeur followed by the sudden earthy drop, the cathedral undercut by the joke, bathos used on purpose to keep the reader off balance.
The speechwriting drew on all of it. He wrote for Labor leaders, Bob Carr and Paul Keating among them, and his gift there was to take a dry policy and write it back into a story of fairness and obligation and national purpose, language with a pulse, sentences shaped to lift a room. He was famously disorganized, his drafts late and half-formed, and leaders kept coming back because few men could make an argument feel like a cause the way he could.
He spoke as he wrote. A raconteur, rumpled and shambolic, given to long digression and the grand contrarian claim, he talked in cascades and in paragraphs, the same biblical roll in his mouth as on his page, the same readiness to charm and to wound. The film narration he recorded for The Nostradamus Kid catches the private register, wry, melancholy, self-deprecating, a literary voice musing over his own younger folly. In public he was rounder and more combative, the provocateur who would say the unsayable and then defend it past all reason.
The blog held the late voice. Table Talk, where the camaraderie of his regular readers became a source of joy to him in his last years, ran daily and torrential and unedited, the maximalism with the editor’s brake removed. The grievances multiplied and the discipline slipped, but the cadence never failed him. He kept the music to the end.
The flood that let him soar is the flood that drowned him when it ran unchecked. The hyperbole that thrilled could curdle into the unbelievable. The sentiment that moved could turn to syrup. The invective that dazzled could become plain cruelty, and the impressionism that gave the prose its warmth gave it its lies. Ellis had one instrument, a big, loud, beautiful, undisciplined instrument, and he played it the same way whether the result was a masterpiece or a mess. He wrote nineteen books that way, and you can love the voice and distrust it in the same sitting. Most of his readers did.

Hero System

Ernest Becker (1924-1974) argues that the creature that knows it will die cannot bear the knowledge, so it builds a defense, and culture hands it the materials. Every society offers a hero system, a set of roles and beliefs that let a man feel he counts and that his life leaves a mark the grave cannot rub out. The hero wins symbolic immortality. He fastens himself to something larger than his body and rides it past his own death, the work, the cause, the nation, the book. Becker names the deepest form the causa sui project, the attempt to father oneself, to stand as one’s own ground and so cancel the debt every creature owes. Under all of it sits the body, the aging, dying body that mocks each claim to significance. Man is a god who must defecate. The hero system hides the shame.
Read Ellis this way and the life falls into order.
The death comes first, and it comes early. He loses an older sister to a road accident when he is a child, and he says across his life that the loss set his emotional weather. Becker would start here, because here is the moment the abstraction turns real. Most children meet death as rumor. Ellis meets it as fact in his own home, against a body he knew. The terror Becker places at the root of character arrives in him young and stays. A man who learns at that age that the people he loves can vanish on a road must find a way to make himself proof against vanishing. The rest of the life reads as that search.
Adventism gives him the first answer and the lasting shape. Becker treats religion as the cleanest hero system men have built, a frame that meets death head on and promises to defeat it. Adventism does this with unusual force. It preaches the Second Coming, the resurrection of the saved, the end of the present order, the day the faithful are vindicated and the dead rise. The whole structure is a denial of death raised to cosmic scale, and it casts the believer as a figure in the last drama of history. Ellis leaves the doctrine as a young man. He keeps the architecture. He keeps the conviction that history bends toward a reckoning, that the present is a prelude to judgment, that a man’s task is to stand on the right side of the coming verdict. He sheds the content and holds the form, and the form needs a new object.
Politics becomes the object. Becker says that when a man loses the old immortality story he does not stop needing one. He transfers the need. Ellis transfers it onto the nation and its parties. He reads elections as the drama Adventism taught him to expect, the struggle of the righteous against the powers, the fairness that must come, the leaders who carry the cause or betray it. He writes speeches that turn dry policy into stories of obligation and national purpose because that register is native to him. He learned it in church. The miniseries on the Labor Party, the campaign for Mackellar, the lifelong reading of politics as moral theatre, all of it draws on a man who still expects an apocalypse and has moved the date and the venue. He keeps the heat and changes the subject.
Then the output. Twenty books, a hundred songs, screenplays and plays and speeches, a blog he feeds almost every day until cancer takes him. Becker would call this the immortality project in its rawest form, the causa sui bid made of paper. A man cannot stop the body from dying. He can build something the body’s death does not end. Ellis builds at a pace that frightens even men who admire him, and the pace itself carries the meaning. He writes against the grave. The work is the wall he sets between himself and the fact of his own end, and a wall that size shows how large the fear behind it must be. He does not write because he has finished thinking. He writes because the day he stops is the day there is nothing left between him and death.
The recklessness fits too. Goodbye Jerusalem brings the defamation suit, and Tony Abbott and Peter Costello and their wives win, and the judgment costs him money and standing and forces the book’s withdrawal. A prudent man would have cut the passage. Ellis would not, because for him the narrative outranks the consequence. Becker explains the choice. The hero project does not bow to ordinary safety. The man who is building his monument against oblivion will burn his ordinary interests to keep the monument true to his vision of it. The grievance, the rumor, the refusal to soften, these are the costs a man pays when the work has become his bid for permanence and he will not let editors or courts trim it down.
The way he treats allies belongs in the same reading. He attacks friends as fast as enemies and will not hold coalition discipline. Becker, drawing on Otto Rank (1884-1939), sets two motives at the center of the heroic life, the urge to stand out as a separate and singular figure and the urge to merge into something larger. The two pull against each other. Ellis tilts hard toward the first. To merge into a party, to take the line, to subordinate his voice to the team, would dissolve the singular self he is building. So he keeps breaking his own side. The independence his admirers prize and the disloyalty his enemies curse are the same trait seen from two angles, the hero’s refusal to disappear into the crowd even when the crowd is his crowd.
The late phase sharpens everything. The body begins to fail. The cancer arrives. And the writing does not slow. It speeds. Becker holds that the terror grows as the body betrays its owner, and the defense must work harder to cover the growing fear. Ellis on the blog writes more, not less, recycles old wounds, drifts toward conspiracy, loses the institutions that once gave his work a frame. A reader can call this decline. Becker would call it the immortality project under siege, a man pouring out words at the end because the wall must rise faster than the body falls. He writes almost to the day he dies, and that line, offered as a tribute, is the whole thesis in miniature. He could not stop. Stopping was the thing he had spent his life refusing.
His chosen role caps the case. He becomes the man who explains the country to itself, the bard of the national project, the writer who stands at the center of the conversation and tells Australia what it is. Becker would read the role as the largest immortality bid of all. A man who ties his name to the nation borrows the nation’s permanence. The country will outlast him, and if his words are woven into how it understands its own history, then some part of him outlasts him too. He spends his life explaining the nation because the nation is the vessel he has chosen to carry him past his own death, the last and largest beyond he can find after the church let go.
The sister on the road, the church and its end of the world, the wall of books, the suit he would not avoid, the side he would not keep, the words that came faster as the body failed. One fear runs under all of it, and one defense, built in paper and politics and national myth, against the knowledge a child took in too soon and never set down.

Alliance Theory

David Pinsof and his coauthors argue that political belief systems do not grow from values. They grow from alliances. A man does not reason his way to a coalition from first principles. He picks allies and rivals, for similarity, for shared enemies, for mutual benefit, and then he assembles the moral story that serves the people he has chosen. The values come after. They are tools. Equality, authority, loyalty, fairness, these are the rhetoric a coalition reaches for when it needs to defend its own and wound the other side. Ask a man what he believes and you learn little. Ask whom he fights for and whom he fights against, and the beliefs fall into place. Belief systems, on this account, are patchwork narratives, ad hoc justifications stitched together to mobilize support for allies and opposition to rivals. The thread that seems to tie them is an illusion. There is no thread. There is a coalition.
Run Ellis through this and his politics changes shape.
Start with the rhetoric that made him valuable to Labor. He turns policy into stories of fairness, obligation, and national purpose, and leaders pay for the gift. Alliance Theory reads that gift for what it does rather than what it claims. The egalitarian language is not a principle Ellis holds and then applies to cases. It is a tool he reaches for on behalf of the groups he has already chosen, the working class, the union man, the Labor side of the national fight. The paper makes the point with data. Support for equality tracks allegiance to the disadvantaged group in question, not equality as such, and party identification comes first while egalitarian conviction follows. Ellis fits the pattern. He does not arrive at Labor through a theory of justice. He stands with Labor and then speaks the justice that arms it. The fairness is real as speech. It is downstream as conviction.
His treatment of politics as national moral drama looks different too. He reads elections as a struggle of the righteous against the powers, and he writes the Labor story as a crusade. The miniseries names the faithful outright, the true believers. Alliance Theory deflates the frame. The crusade narrative is coalition maintenance in costume. It codes one side as carrying the national purpose and the other side as betraying it, and that coding is the propaganda a coalition needs to hold its people and recruit third parties. The drama is not a window onto a deeper Australian morality. It is the patchwork story Ellis builds to support his allies and damage their rivals, and the conservative figures he casts as villains are villains because they are rivals, not rivals because they are villains.
The propagandistic biases run straight through his work. The paper lists three. Perpetrator bias rationalizes the transgressions of one’s own side. Victim bias embellishes the grievances of one’s own side. Attributional bias credits one’s allies with virtue and assigns their failures to circumstance while doing the reverse to rivals. Ellis is a machine for all three. He defends Labor men and the causes he loves, downplays their faults, and explains their defeats by the malice of the other side. He magnifies the wrongs done to the working class and the harm done by the Liberals. He grants his allies good motives and his rivals bad ones as a matter of reflex. None of this requires a theory of his sincerity. The biases are the toolkit of any partisan, symmetrical across the line, and Ellis simply runs them at higher volume and with better prose than most.
Goodbye Jerusalem. Ellis aims allegations at Tony Abbott and Peter Costello and their wives, the allegations damage the reputations of rivals, and a court finds them defamatory and forces the book’s withdrawal. Read through Alliance Theory, the book is not a failed attempt at truth. It is reputation attack, the core move of coalition conflict, the wounding of rivals through story. Ellis blends memoir, rumor, and factual claim into one voice because the voice serves the side, and the patchwork is the point. The paper would not ask whether the passage was true. It would ask whom it was built to harm, and the answer is plain. He harms the men on the other side of the Australian alliance structure, and the recklessness of the harm measures how much he wanted the rivals damaged.
His coalition itself looks contingent rather than principled. The paper holds that alliance structures are partly arbitrary, snowballing from small starting conditions, and that the same group can sit on either side in different countries and decades. The source notes the case directly. Australia’s Labor Party once fused economic leftism with ethnic nationalism before the 1970s. Ellis inherits a particular Australian structure, the postwar settlement of allies and rivals his generation was handed, and he treats it as the shape of justice. Alliance Theory says it is the shape of an accident he was born into and learned to defend.
Now the hard part, and the place the frame earns its keep by straining. Ellis attacks allies as fast as enemies. He will not hold coalition discipline. A theory built on supporting allies has to explain the partisan who keeps knifing his own side. The paper has an answer, and it goes some distance. People do not ally with parties as monolithic blocks. They ally with specific figures and factions inside conflicts that keep shifting, and they police transitivity, the demand that an ally share one’s allies and rivals. The two risks the paper names are infighting and betrayal, the ally who turns on a friend and the ally who sides with a rival. Ellis’s real allegiance is to a cluster, a vision of Labor and a set of men who carry it, not to the party as an institution. When a Labor leader compromises, drifts right, or makes peace with the rivals, Ellis reads betrayal and recodes the man as a rival. The attack on the friend is the expulsion of a figure who failed transitivity. By this reading his disloyalty and his loyalty are the same trait. He keeps the cluster pure by attacking anyone who pollutes it.
That answer covers much of the record. It does not cover all of it. Some of Ellis’s invective lands on his own side at his own cost and the cost of the causes he claims to serve, and a theory that explains belief by its use for the coalition has trouble with aggression that damages the coalition. The defamation suit hurt people near him and embarrassed the side he meant to help. A purely functional account of allies and rivals reaches its edge here, at the man who wounds his own camp in ways that win nothing. The frame lights up his partisan rhetoric, his villains, his reputation attacks, and the contingency of his loyalties. It dims at the point where his aggression turns self-defeating, where the harm serves no ally and no rival, only the man’s need to strike. Alliance Theory tells you whom Ellis fought and why the fighting took the moral shapes it did. It does not fully tell you why he could not stop fighting his own.
So the politics resolves into a structure rather than a creed. Not a man who reasons from fairness to Labor, but a man who stands with a cluster of allies against a cluster of rivals and speaks fairness as the weapon the standing requires. The Adventist crusade, the national drama, the egalitarian speeches, the defamatory book, the true believers, all of it is the propaganda of a coalition and the moral patchwork it throws off. The values shift with the fight. The allies and rivals hold the shape. What looks like Bob Ellis the conviction politician is, under this light, Bob Ellis the partisan, fluent in the moral languages that serve his side and willing to burn anyone, including his own, who steps to the wrong side of the line.

The Nostradamus Kid (1992)

The Nostradamus Kid is the most personal thing Bob Ellis ever put on a screen, and the last of only three features he directed. It followed Unfinished Business (1985) and Warm Nights on a Slow Moving Train (1987). He wrote it, directed it, and narrated it himself, and the boy at its center is a version of Ellis as a young man.
The film is autobiography barely disguised. It tells the religious and sexual coming of age of a Seventh-day Adventist boy in the 1950s and 1960s, and the hero, Ken Elkin, is Ellis’s alter ego. David Stratton, reviewing it on SBS in 1993, called it Ellis looking back with jaundiced nostalgia at two stages of his own life through Ken. The film moves between two times. Back to 1956, when Elkin sits as a reluctant camper at a Seventh-day Adventist summer camp in northern New South Wales, more interested in the daughter of a visiting preacher than in saving his soul. And forward to 1962, the year of the Cuban Missile Crisis.
The shape of the story runs from the camp to the city. In the first stretch the teenaged Ken struggles at the church camp run by the Adventists. He is not with the program. He asks heretical questions during prayer meetings and keeps an admiring eye on the preacher’s pretty daughter. Some six years later he leaves the religion behind to work at a university newspaper, and despite his scruffy appearance, or because of it, he finds himself attractive to girls. One legacy of the church years stays with him, a conviction that the world might end soon, and when the Cuban Missile Crisis breaks he tries to save his new girlfriend Jennie by hauling her out of Sydney into the mountains ahead of the nuclear war he expects, and that is the last straw for the romance. The title names the obsession. Ken is the kid waiting for the prophecy to come true.
The cast is a roll call of Australian talent caught young. Noah Taylor (b. 1969) plays Ken Elkin, with Miranda Otto (b. 1967) as Jennie O’Brien, Alice Garner as Esther Anderson the preacher’s daughter, Lucy Bell as her sister Sarai, Arthur Dignam as Pastor Anderson, Colin Friels (b. 1952) as the American Preacher, and Loene Carmen as Meryl. Carmen plays a bad girl who throws off her religious background and becomes a stripper and hooker. Claudia Karvan (b. 1972) and Imogen Annesley appear as Beat Girls, John Noble as General Booth, Peter Gwynne as a false prophet, and a play-within-the-film, “General Booth Enters Heaven,” brings on strolling players including Drew Forsythe, Kate Fitzpatrick, and Jonathan Hardy. Bob Maza turns up, memorable, as a Black philosopher Elkin meets in a bar. Wikipedia + 3
Behind the camera Ellis worked with a strong crew. Terry Jennings produced, Geoff Burton shot it, Henry Dangar edited, and Chris Neal wrote the music. An IMDb reviewer notes Ellis himself wrote and sang at least one song heard in the background, another mark of how much of himself he poured in.
The making of the film is a saga longer than the film. The project sat around for more than a decade. David Puttnam (b. 1941) suggested Ellis turn his upbringing into a movie and hired him to write it in 1979. Ellis described the writing as fast and painful. He wrote it in eleven days in a rented shed two houses up, from memory, in anguish, saying he had realized what a fool he had been all his life and went on being the same kind of fool in the same ways. Early in the 1980s it was announced with Paul Cox (1940-2016) to direct, Patric Juillet and Jane Ballantyne producing, and Robert Menzies and Sarah Walker in the leads. Later, John Duigan, Carl Schultz, and Chris McGill each attached as director. Phillip Adams, set to produce with Puttnam, said they could not raise the money, that it was obliterated during the 10BA tax-incentive rush because it was not expensive enough. Ellis then turned director to make it himself and raised the money through the Film Finance Corporation.
The casting of his lead came late and almost did not happen. Another actor was first cast as Ken, but the FFC had reservations and pushed Ellis to look further. He settled on Noah Taylor, and called it one of the happiest experiences he ever had, saying Taylor turned out far less of a soft wimp than he had assumed. Ellis fought the running time too. His first cut ran 148 minutes. He got it to 122, then trimmed it under two hours, and believed losing those last two minutes hurt the film.
Reception split down the middle. It opened to mixed reviews, some readers prizing the eccentric, idiosyncratic tone that suited a randy Adventist in dread of the apocalypse, others calling it a tedious bore with suspect sexual politics. The trade press leaned warm. Variety called it an autobiographical film of distinction, blending melancholy humor with hard-edged nostalgia, and likened it to a cross between Woody Allen and François Truffaut with an Australian tone. The review praised Taylor’s sad-sack hero, Otto’s glowing turn as the refined girl both drawn to and repelled by her grungy lover, and noted Ellis narrates in the style of early Truffaut and sends his young lovers to the cinema to watch Jules and Jim.
It earned recognition without sweeping anything. It drew two AFI Award nominations, for Best Original Screenplay and Best Costume Design. The money tells a sadder story. Made on an estimated four million Australian dollars, it took only about 242,800 dollars at the Australian box office. Ellis had his explanations, and a grudge. He blamed the October release, when the young audience that might have come was studying for exams, and said the film was dogged at every turn by The Piano (1993), which he claimed to both detest and resent.
The release dates float between 1992 and 1993 across sources, with the film completed and first shown around October 1992 and its general run landing in 1993. It came out on a Region 4 DVD through Beyond Home Entertainment in 2010, with no extra features at all. And there is the long shadow of what might have been. Ellis had cherished the project for eleven years before he made it, after it was first slated for Paul Cox to direct. The film he finally got was scruffy, talky, autobiographical, funny, and shot through with the end of the world. It is the closest he came to filming the Adventist boy he had been, the one who could not stop expecting the reckoning.

Interaction Ritual Chains

Randall Collins (b. 1941) builds his sociology on one unit, the interaction ritual. He takes it from Durkheim (1858-1917) by way of Goffman (1922-1982), and he asks what happens when people gather in a room. A ritual works when a few things line up. Bodies share a space. A boundary marks who belongs and who stays out. The group fixes its attention on one thing. A common mood rises and feeds on the shared focus, and the two climb together until the bodies fall into rhythm. When that happens the encounter throws off three products. Solidarity, the feeling of membership. Symbols, the words and names and objects that stand for the group and turn sacred, so that an attack on them lands as an attack on the group. And emotional energy, which Collins sets at the center of his book Interaction Ritual Chains.
Emotional energy, EE, is the charge a man carries out of a good ritual. High EE feels like confidence, warmth, drive, the readiness to act and to lead. Low EE feels like flatness, withdrawal, the draining away of initiative. A live ritual charges the battery. A flat or failed one empties it. Men do not sit still between encounters. They move through a chain of them, carrying the charge and the symbols from one into the next, and they steer toward the rituals that pay the best return. Collins calls us EE-seekers. We go where the charge is.
Read Ellis as an EE-seeker and the whole life lines up on a single axis. The rise runs on rich rituals. The fall runs on their loss. One logic covers both.
Start with the Sydney circle. The student milieu at the University of Sydney gives Ellis his founding ritual. Bodies in one place, a boundary that fences the brilliant generation off from the dull and the deferential, a shared focus on the task of making an Australian voice, and the high mood of young people who believe they are about to matter. The encounter charges him, and it hands him his sacred symbols. Australia as a project worth taking seriously, the vernacular, the conviction that the country’s own stories carry weight. He walks out of those years with a full battery and a set of symbols he will spend a career defending. Clive James, Germaine Greer, Robert Hughes, Les Murray, and Mungo MacCallum are not just friends. They are the first ritual group, the circle that lights the charge.
Theatre and film give him the next rituals, and richer ones. The Legend of King O’Malley is a ritual machine, a company of people focused on one performance with an audience entrained to the same beat. The film sets work the same way. A crew and a cast lock onto a shared object for weeks, and the solidarity and the charge pour off the work. Ellis says the happiest stretch of his life was directing The Nostradamus Kid with Noah Taylor and the young actors around him. Collins reads that joy with no mystery. The set is co-presence, focus, and shared mood at full strength, and a man comes off it charged. Ellis keeps reaching for these collaborations because each one refills the battery.
Politics gives him the most intense rituals of all, and he steps into them again and again. A campaign rally is an interaction ritual in its purest form, a crowd fixed on a speaker, a mood swelling on the shared focus until the room beats as one body. Ellis can build that mood with words. His speechwriting is the craft of manufacturing collective feeling, of taking a policy and turning it into the kind of language that entrains a crowd. He is a technician of effervescence, and Labor leaders keep hiring him because few men can charge a room the way his sentences can. The run for Mackellar against Bronwyn Bishop is a losing race he enters anyway, because the contest is a ritual and the ritual pays in EE. His charisma is real in Collins’s exact sense. A charismatic man is a ritual star, the one who sits at the center of high-charge encounters and amplifies what they throw off. Ellis has that gift, and he needs the stages on which it works.
Even his solitary writing runs on this fuel. Collins holds that a man alone at a desk draws on symbols charged in live rituals, holding an internal conversation with an audience he has met in the flesh. In The Sociology of Philosophies he argues that creativity concentrates in networks, that the productive thinker sits inside a web of teachers, rivals, and allies who keep his symbols hot. Ellis writes at a furious rate for decades while plugged into theatres, party rooms, editorial offices, and the literary scene. The live encounters keep recharging the symbols, so the prose stays vital. The volume is the visible sign of a man whose batteries keep getting refilled.
Then the rituals thin, and the fall begins. Goodbye Jerusalem brings the defamation suit and the costs that come with it. The mainstream literary institutions that once feted him pull back. He drifts toward the margins, and the circles that charged him close their doors. Collins predicts what happens next. Cut from the live rituals, the battery does not recharge. The blog looks like a daily ritual, and Ellis treats his contact with readers as one, but it is thin ritual. No bodies share a room. The audience is diffuse and faceless. The feedback is weak and slow, a scatter of comments rather than a crowd beating as one. Thin ritual gives just enough charge to keep a man typing and not enough to refill him. So the output holds its volume while the charge behind it falls.
The symbols curdle for the same reason. A sacred symbol stays alive only when a live ritual recharges it. Cut off, Ellis keeps circulating his old symbols inside his own head, the villains, the grievances, the betrayals, and Collins names that move the second-order circulation of symbols, the internal conversation that runs on stored charge. Without fresh rituals to renew them, those symbols decay. The righteous anger that once bound him to a vital group, the moral heat of a man defending sacred things alongside his circle, has nothing live to attach to. It turns into grievance, which is what righteous anger becomes when the group around it is gone. His position has flipped as well. In his prime he stood at the center of attention, the order-giver, the sought-after voice. In decline he sits at the margin, the man the institutions dropped, and Collins ties the margin to low EE, to resentment and withdrawal, the emotions of the order-taker.
So the rise and the fall need only one explanation. When the rituals were thick and live, Ellis ran high, generous, vital, prolific in a way that reached people, a ritual star charging rooms and walking off charged in turn. When the rituals thinned to a man alone at a keyboard typing toward a crowd he could not see, the charge drained, and the same furious drive that once produced plays and speeches and films now produced grievance at the same rate. The output never stopped. The charge behind it did. A battery that no live encounter refills runs the engine until the engine runs rough, and that rough running, recycled daily and aimed at old enemies, is the sound of a ritual star left without a stage.

Porous vs Buffered Selves

Philosopher Charles Taylor (b. 1931) draws a line through the history of the self in A Secular Age. On one side stands the porous self, the older self, whose boundary with the world is thin. Meaning lives outside it, in the cosmos, in charged objects, in spirits and grace and the hand of God. The porous self can be entered. Forces press on it from outside, bless it, curse it, call it, claim it. The world is enchanted, thick with significance the self does not make but finds, and the self stands open and exposed to it.
On the other side stands the buffered self, the modern self. It has drawn a wall around the mind. Meaning lives inside now, made by the self, and the world beyond the wall goes inert, disenchanted, a field of matter that carries no message. Max Weber (1864-1920) named the long retreat of the gods disenchantment, and Taylor traces what it does to a man. The buffered self is safe. Nothing reaches in from the cosmos, because the cosmos has gone quiet. It masters its own meanings, holds the world at arm’s length, possesses itself. The cost is flatness, the sense that the world has thinned, what Taylor calls living inside the immanent frame, a closed natural order with the transcendent bracketed away.
Most moderns live buffered, inside that frame. Ellis does not. He carries a porous self into a buffered age, and the gap between the two holds his power and his strangeness in the same hand.
The training came from the church. Adventism builds the most porous self a man can carry. Its cosmos is charged at every point. Prophecy reads the future as already written and bearing down on the present. The Second Coming hangs over each day. History bends toward a reckoning, grace can enter a man and remake him, and the world brims with signs for those who can read them. The Adventist boy does not make his own meaning. He receives it from a world saturated with God’s purpose, and he stands open to a future that presses in from beyond. That is the porous self in its full religious form, and Ellis is raised inside it.
He leaves the doctrine as a young man. He keeps the porousness. The wall never goes up. He stops believing in the Adventist God and goes on feeling a world charged with stakes that reach past the self, and he moves that charge onto politics and history. An election is not administration. It is a struggle with the weight of the last things on it. History does not drift. It bends toward judgment, and a man’s task is to stand on the right side of the verdict. The nuclear dread that runs through The Nostradamus Kid, the boy who drags his girlfriend out of Sydney ahead of the end of the world, is the porous self meeting the Cuban Missile Crisis. The world can end. Forces gather beyond him and bear down. He never enters the immanent frame. He camps at its edge his whole life, a man for whom the cosmos still speaks.
His readers and his country live on the other side of the wall. Secular Australia, the literary set, the party rooms, the press, all of it sits inside the immanent frame. They treat politics as procedure and policy as management. They hold meaning private and optional, a thing a man chooses for himself and keeps to himself. The world for them is disenchanted, and the stakes of an ordinary Tuesday are ordinary. Ellis writes to that audience with a self built for a different one.
The gap gives him his power. A porous self feels the charge a buffered self has walled out, and that charge runs into his prose and his speeches and gives them a force the buffered cannot summon on their own. His gift as a speechwriter is the gift of re-enchantment. He takes a policy, a dry thing in the immanent frame, and he writes it back into a world of obligation, fairness, and national purpose until a buffered listener feels, for the length of a paragraph, that the stakes are cosmic again. Taylor’s word for the experience of meaning and plenitude is fullness, and Ellis draws his fullness from a charged world. He lends it out. He gives readers who live in a thinner world a borrowed hour inside a thicker one. The phrase secular evangelist gets its exact content here. He is a porous prophet working an immanent age, carrying the structure of religious feeling, prophecy and reckoning and the elect, into a frame that has bracketed every word of it.
The same gap gives him his strangeness. To a buffered eye a man who feels an election as Armageddon, who waits for the reckoning, who reads cosmic weight into a campaign, looks overwrought and excessive and at last unhinged. The porous self reads meaning as already inscribed in the world, so where the buffered see contingency and accident, Ellis sees design and telos and malice. This is the deep root of the late grievance and the drift toward conspiracy. A buffered self meets a bad turn of events and calls it chance. A porous self meets the same turn and feels a hidden hand. Disenchantment never took in Ellis, so his world stays full of forces and plots and fate, and in the blog years, cut off and aging, that openness to hidden agency curdles into a hunt for the design behind his defeats. The trait that let him re-enchant a rally is the trait that lets him see enemies moving in the dark.
The honest objection runs the other way. A skeptic might say Ellis is only a buffered secular intellectual with a taste for apocalypse, that the enchantment is a style he reaches for rather than a world he lives in, aesthetic and not real. Taylor’s test is whether the world presses on the man from outside or whether the man decorates an inert world with borrowed intensity. The record leans toward the first. The dread is felt, not posed. The boy who flees the city before the bomb, the grown man who keeps expecting the end and reading the signs, behaves as a man on whom the world genuinely bears down, not as a man choosing a mood. The enchantment goes deeper than taste. It is the shape of his self.
There is a cross-pressure in him too, and Taylor names that condition. Ellis is not a believer and not a buffered secularist. He left the doctrine and kept the openness, and so he stands between the frames, drawn toward a transcendence he no longer names and unable to settle into the flat safety of the immanent. That in-between might account for the restlessness, the man who cannot stop writing toward a meaning he can feel and cannot ground.
So the power and the oddity come from one source. A porous self speaks to a buffered age. When the charge runs into his work, it lifts dull material into something that feels like the last things, and the buffered, for a moment, are moved by a fullness they had forgotten. When the charge runs the other way, into his reading of his own life, it fills the world with hidden hands and turns an old man’s defeats into a plot. The gift and the affliction are the same self, open where the age is closed, reading a world the age has agreed to call silent.

Dark Morality & Dark Idealism

David Pinsof writes:

Dark morality. When morality—the heartfelt conviction that we are doing the right thing—fuels tribalism, dishonesty, bullying, censorship, hatred, terrorism, and genocide.
Dark idealism. When idealism—the heartfelt conviction that we are pure and noble and benevolent—fuels dark morality, by blinding us to our biases and making those who don’t share our ideals seem evil or subhuman.

David Pinsof sets two concepts side by side, and they work as a pair. Dark morality is the heartfelt conviction of doing right turned into tribalism, dishonesty, bullying, and hatred. Dark idealism is the conviction of one’s own purity and nobility, and it blinds a man to his own bias and makes those who do not share his ideals look evil or subhuman. The order runs from the second to the first. The idealism comes first, the belief in one’s own goodness, and that belief fuels the dark morality, the righteousness that licenses cruelty. The cynical edge cuts here. The sincerity is not the defense. The sincerity is the engine. A man who knows he is doing wrong holds back. A man certain he is doing right does not, and the more heartfelt his sense of virtue, the darker the conduct he will allow himself in its name.
Ellis is a clean case, and the church built the foundation.
Adventism trains a man to grade the world. The saved and the damned, the righteous and the wicked, the elect who read the signs and the world that ignores them. The boy learns to feel moral weight in everything and to sort people onto the right side or the wrong side of a coming judgment. Ellis leaves the doctrine and keeps the sorting. He carries into politics the conviction that history runs as a moral contest, and he knows which side he stands on. His side carries the cause. The other side carries the harm. That grading, learned in church and moved onto Labor and its enemies, is the soil both concepts grow from.
The dark idealism shows in how he sees the two sides. He holds his own camp as noble, the working man, the fair go, the Labor cause, the decent country trying to be born. He holds the conservatives as something worse than wrong. He casts them as villains, mean of spirit, enemies of the good, and he writes them that way for decades. Pinsof’s point is that this conviction of his own nobility does a specific work. It blinds the man to his own bias. Ellis cannot see his contempt as contempt, because the contempt feels like clear sight. He cannot weigh whether his anger is fair, because the conviction of his own goodness has already settled the question. He reads his opponents as evil, and a man who reads his opponents as evil grants himself permission he would refuse to anyone else.
The dark morality is what that permission produces, and Goodbye Jerusalem is the sharpest instance. Ellis aims allegations at Tony Abbott and Peter Costello and their wives. A court finds the allegations defamatory and forces the book’s withdrawal. Read through this pair, the case is dark morality in plain form. Pinsof lists dishonesty among the things a heartfelt conviction will fuel, and here the conviction fuels it. Ellis does not defame as a cynic working an angle. He defames as a man so sure of the cause that wounding the rivals feels like duty. The false claim does not register to him as a lie. It registers as the truth the enemy deserves to have told about him. The idealism has already decided that these men are wicked, so the harm done to them looks like justice rather than slander. That is the whole move. The certainty of the cause converts cruelty into righteousness inside the man’s own head, and he never sees the conversion happen.
The venom toward his own side fits the same pattern. A man who holds a standard of purity will turn it on anyone who fails the standard, friend or enemy. Ellis attacks allies as fast as opponents, and dark idealism explains the reflex. The Labor figure who compromises, who makes peace with the rivals, who falls short of the noble vision, becomes impure, and the impure draw the same fire as the wicked. The purity that arms him against conservatives arms him against his own when they disappoint him. He polices the camp by the standard the idealism set, and the standard has no mercy in it.
The late years follow the logic to its end. A man certain of his own rightness, cut off and aging, does not lose the certainty. He turns it on the world that rejected him. The grievance hardens, the search for the hidden malice behind his defeats begins, and the opponents grow more plainly evil in his telling as the evidence for it thins. Dark idealism running without check produces this. The conviction of one’s own nobility, met by failure, does not consider that the nobility was overdrawn. It concludes that wicked forces must be at work, and it goes looking for them.
This pair names the thing the other readings circled. Becker found the venom in a man’s terror of death and his need to stand alone. Collins found it in a battery of emotional charge that ran dry when the rooms emptied. Both account for where the venom came from. Neither calls it a moral failing. This pair does. It says the cruelty is not only a symptom of fear or a sign of drained energy. It is the predictable fruit of a man who believed too firmly in his own goodness and let that belief license what it would have condemned in anyone else. The sincerity that his admirers prize as integrity is, on this reading, the source of the harm. He was not a hypocrite. He was a true believer, and the true belief is what did the damage, because it hid the cruelty from the one man who most needed to see it.
The frame has a cost. The Darwinism cuts so hard that it can flatten every moral conviction into suspicion, and it cannot, on its own terms, tell us when Ellis was right. He sometimes attacked real abuses of power and told truths the polite would not. A lens that treats heartfelt virtue as the engine of cruelty struggles to grade the cause, to separate the righteous anger that the target earned from the tribal anger that only flattered his side. The pair explains the structure of his moral aggression with great economy. It cannot, by itself, hand down the verdict on whether a given target deserved the blow. It tells you why a man certain of his goodness will bully and lie in its name. It does not tell you, in any single case, whether the man he bullied was a villain after all.
So the moral shape of Ellis comes clear. The Adventist sorting, carried into politics, becomes a conviction of his own side’s nobility and his opponents’ evil. That conviction blinds him to his own bias and licenses the venom, the dishonesty, the defaming book, the contempt poured on enemies and on friends who fell short. The certainty that made him brave made him cruel, and the two were the same certainty. He did not lie because he scorned the truth. He lied because he was sure he was good, and a man sure he is good will do almost anything and call it right.

The Set

Three sources for the Bob Ellis set: the University of Sydney cohort around 1960 (James, Greer, Hughes, Murray, MacCallum, John Bell), the libertarian Push that grew from John Anderson’s lectures (Roxon, Moorhouse, Cox, Bacon, McGuinness), the theatre and film New Wave (Boddy, Wherrett, Williamson, Hewett, Buzo, Hibberd, Romeril, Beresford, Weir, Schepisi, Armstrong, Noyce, Duigan, Adams, Neville, Sharp, Marr, Summers, Oakes, Ramsey), and the Labor court he served (Whitlam above all, then Wran, Hawke, Keating, Carr, Beazley, Rann, Richardson, Latham, with Anne Brooksbank beside him).

What they prized: brilliant talk, an Australian voice free of London, the sixties package, and drink. Their hero: the stay-at-home genius who made the great work and took the local authenticity as his prize, the prophet who read the nation’s moral history, the truth-teller punished by philistines, the man who died at the desk. Their status games: wit, output, proximity to power, the leaving-versus-staying contest, sexual and drinking reputation, the public feud. Their normative claims: the republic, the engaged left artist, the wickedness of the wowser, Labor as moral home, the fair go, loyalty to mates. Their essentialist claims: a true Australian character, the conservative as a born type, genius as innate, class as character, the genius assumed male. And the moral grammar under all of it, the two-color world of the generous and the mean, the sacred and the damned, betrayal as the cardinal sin, redemption through the great work and the noble defeat, and nostalgia laid over everything.

Posted in Adventist, Australia | Comments Off on The Last Generalist: Bob Ellis and Australian Public Life

WEHT to Investigative Journalism?

Investigative reporting cost a fortune long before the money dried up. A single story takes months, lawyers, travel, document review, and most of it ends in nothing publishable. Newspapers paid for that out of fat ad revenue and classified monopolies. Those revenues are gone. One-third of the country’s newspapers have shut down and two-thirds of its newspaper journalists have lost jobs since 2005, with nearly 3,000 of 9,000 newspapers closed and 43,000 journalists out of work over two decades. The expensive watchdog work was always the first thing cut.
So what replaced the old model? Three answers, none of them complete.
The first and largest is philanthropy. ProPublica set the template. Herbert Sandler (1931-2016) and Marion Sandler (1930-2012) sold Golden West Financial for billions and went looking for something to fund. They wanted to donate $10 million a year to investigative reporting and asked everyone they knew in journalism what to do. Paul Steiger (b. 1942) left the Wall Street Journal to run it. The trick was giving stories away free to partner papers so those papers would run them on the front page instead of burying them. That worked. ProPublica now runs on about $58 million a year with more than 200 staff, and it has won nine Pulitzers. The money comes from individual donors and big foundations: Knight, MacArthur, Ford, Carnegie, and Open Society among them.
The weakness is obvious. Foundation money carries the politics of the men who give it, and donors drift toward the causes they already love. A watchdog funded by rich progressives watches certain things and not others. The model also concentrates the work in a few national shops while the local paper that once covered the county courthouse stays dead.
The second answer is membership and subscription. Reader money instead of advertiser money. Membership models show promise in places as different as Chile, Hungary, South Africa, South Korea, and the United States. This puts the reader back in charge, which is healthier than chasing clicks. But it favors outlets with a loyal tribe and a clear point of view, and it rewards the writer who flatters his audience as much as the one who tells it hard things. Global Investigative Journalism Network
The third answer is the individual. The reporter who builds his own audience on Substack or YouTube and takes the subscription money himself. A former head of BBC News calls creator journalism the most disruptive shift the industry has seen, a wholesale move from one information ecosystem to another. A man like Chris Hedges (b. 1956) or Gretchen Morgenson (b. 1956) keeps the brand he built at an institution and walks out the door with it. The reader pays the writer, not the building.
Now a new threat sits on top of all this, and it hits every model at once. AI answer engines give people the reporting without the click. Some projections put the loss of publisher referral traffic as high as 43 percent, which for an outlet on thin margins is not a dip but a collapse. The machine reads the expensive investigation and serves the answer, and the newsroom that paid for the reporting sees no visit and no ad. Only about 20 percent of publishers expect AI licensing deals to bring in real money.
The hopeful read, which the Reuters Institute pushes, runs like this. Routine content goes to the machines, and complex, source-driven, accountable reporting stays human, because trust is not something you can train a model on. The skills that survive are the old ones: cultivating sources, working a paper trail, filing the records request, showing up in person, knowing the subject cold.
Here is the truth under all of it. The advertising model never funded investigative work because investigative work paid. It funded it as a byproduct of a monopoly on local attention. That monopoly is gone and is not coming back. So the question now is whether enough people will pay directly for accountability reporting, either as donors, as members, or as subscribers to one man’s feed. The early evidence says some will, but not enough to replace what was lost, and not spread across the local beats where most corruption hides. The national exposé survives. The county-courthouse watchdog mostly does not.

01:00 Autumn Gold film, https://www.autumngoldfilm.com/
02:00 Autumn Gold: Secrecy, Time, and the Recovery of Truth, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=190968
03:00 Eric Longabardi: An Investigative Journalist Between Two Media Orders, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=190949
08:00 Project Shad, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_SHAD
10:00 Project 112, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_112
21:00 Operation Tailwind, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Tailwind
23:00 CBS Evening News broke the story in May of 2000
33:00 The business model of investigative journalism
54:40 CBS News turmoil, 60 Minutes, Scott Pelley, Bari Weiss
55:30 Deepak Chopra, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deepak_Chopra
1:06:30 Israel, Lebanon, Hezbollah, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O-Jj6V8B7mk
1:27:00 The Henry Nowak Death, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=191756
1:30:30 Buck Sexton on AI, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vaIn95Bdi6g
1:38:00 Who Are The Leading Public Intellectuals Doing The Least Alliance Work?, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=191766
1:44:00 Alliance Theory and the Iran War, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=191320
1:55:00 The Clay Travis & Buck Sexton Show, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=191682
1:56:00 Buck Sexton’s & Clay Travis’ Predictions, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vaIn95Bdi6g
2:03:00 Decode the Declaration of Independence, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=191485
2:10:00 Convenient Beliefs, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=178665
2:12:30 Who Can Narrate?, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=172725
2:15:00 The Mark Halperin Trajectory, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=181927
2:23:00 Iran launches missiles at Israel in response to Israeli strikes on Beirut
2:40:00 Live: The Enforcer: ISRAEL ATTACKED BY IRANIAN MISSILES; MAJOR RESPONSE IMMINENT! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TcVOZ_Fjif4

Posted in Journalism | Comments Off on WEHT to Investigative Journalism?