{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/697a7c8bf17fced4fd00dc60/69dfd072de282b92729960c9?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"What the Media Left Out for a Decade | Emmy Producer Rob Rosen","description":"<p>Rob Rosen spent decades inside the machine. From KCBS Los Angeles to five seasons producing Reasonable Doubt on HBO Max, he has watched journalism drift from fact-gathering into something closer to activism -- and he has documented exactly how it happened.</p><p><br></p><p>His new book, Crimes of Omission, makes a case most people already suspect but can't quite articulate: the media's biggest problem isn't outright lies. It's the stories they decide you never need to hear.</p><p><br></p><p>In this episode, Rob walks us through the cases, the newsroom culture, and the moment around 2012 when legacy media stopped holding up a mirror and started choosing sides. If you grew up trusting Cronkite and Brokaw, this one will hit.</p><p><br></p><p>TOPICS COVERED:</p><p>-- The \"crimes of omission\" concept: bias through silence, not fabrication</p><p>-- The 2012 inflection point when soft bias became active advocacy</p><p>-- Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, Freddie Gray: what the coverage left out</p><p>-- Tony Timpa: the police killing that was worse than anything you saw on TV -- and that you've never heard of</p><p>-- Why newsroom monoculture is the structural root of the problem</p><p>-- What the morning meeting decides about your reality</p><p>-- Reasonable Doubt: why 3 out of 4 cases they investigated, the convict was actually guilty</p><p>-- How to protect yourself as a news consumer</p><p>-- FCC pressure on legacy media and whether the market is the answer</p><p>-- The vibe shift: is the public ready for objective journalism again?</p><p><br></p><p>TIMESTAMPS:</p><p>0:00 -- Intro and Dead Files tangent (Jared is a fan)</p><p>1:17 -- What \"Crimes of Omission\" means</p><p>3:51 -- Why omission is more dangerous than an outright lie</p><p>5:01 -- The 2012 inflection point</p><p>10:21 -- Newsroom culture and who populates the room</p><p>13:30 -- Morning meetings set the national agenda</p><p>15:27 -- Behind the scenes during Ferguson and BLM</p><p>17:43 -- Where the pressure actually comes from</p><p>23:34 -- Reasonable Doubt: a real search for truth on HBO Max</p><p>27:46 -- Is there a path back to objective journalism?</p><p>35:13 -- Why covering Trump put the media on tilt</p><p>38:59 -- FCC and government pressure on legacy media</p><p>40:44 -- Why Rob wrote this book now</p><p>47:55 -- How to be a better news consumer</p><p>53:09 -- Tony Timpa: the case no one covered</p><p>1:01:25 -- Jared's Five rapid-fire</p><p><br></p><p>Crimes of Omission is available for presale now. Out June 2nd.</p><p><br></p><p>SUBSCRIBE for new episodes and follow us at CommonXPodcast.com.</p>","author_name":"Ian Primmer & Jared Mayzak"}