EDITOR’s NOTE: Greatest identified for his years of labor with The New Yorker, Peter J. Boyer has additionally labored with The New York Instances, Fox Information and elsewhere. He’s presently government vice current on the Authorities Accountability Institute in Tallahassee, Florida.
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It was a bit of nice luck for me that the “publish” button was clicked on the brand new GetReligion weblog in 2004 simply earlier than I acquired the unlikeliest task of my profession — the religion beat at The New Yorker.
I had been writing for the journal for greater than a decade, following my fancy on topics starting from politics and conflict to horse racing and hurricanes. I used to be a generalist, with the blessed (to me) freedom of
totally exhausting my curiosity in a selected topic after which, as soon as my piece was revealed, leaving it behind ceaselessly.
This instantly modified in November 2004, with the re-election of President George W. Bush. The election had been a Republican wipeout, with Bush not solely retaining the White Home however Republicans strengthening their maintain on the Home and Senate — the most important across-the-board GOP sweep since Ronald Reagan’s blowout in 1980.
The end result, to say the least, had come as a shock to many within the information enterprise, together with (maybe particularly) these populating the corridors of The New Yorker. The journal had claimed a stake within the election, having revealed an endorsement of a presidential candidate — the Democrat John Kerry — for the primary time in its 80-year historical past. The prolonged editorial framed the Bush presidency as a creature of a Supreme Court docket “fiat,” and decried its “document of failure, conceitedness and … incompetence.”
To his credit score, editor David Remnick thought our readers deserved an evidence of the sudden (to them) Republican wave. Polling steered that Republicans owed their victory to a cohort that the media rapidly labeled “values voters,” individuals who supported the Battle on Terror and believed that John Kerry and the Democrats didn’t characterize their values.
On the core of this group, in fact, have been individuals of religion who often attended worship companies. My task: Exit amongst these voters, and clarify their motivations to the insular world the New Yorker represents.
I used to joke that I used to be assigned the religion beat as a result of I used to be the man on the New Yorker who’d been to church, and I’m, certainly, a believer. However I used to be something however an knowledgeable on faith, and I rapidly realized that only a few (of any) reporters within the mainstream media have been.
Fortunately, I rapidly found GetReligion.org, a web site based on the popularity that the mainstream press didn’t “get” faith. Right here was a web site that took the Godbeat critically, and featured genuinely first-rate writing and pondering on a topic that was, by definition, extra significant to extra individuals than such customary media fare as politics and movie star.
From the beginning, GetReligion ventured into the nice and troublesome controversies of the faith sphere whereas holding quick to the requirements of the perfect American journalism — equity, accuracy and stability. The location set a terrific instance (if principally unheeded) for the mainstream press, and, for these reporters prepared to grab the possibility, GetReligion was a bottomless ocean of terrific story concepts.
One theme that the location often thought-about was the stress in Western church buildings between orthodoxy and the impulse to accommodate the secular tradition — a divide that’s deeply felt nonetheless, because the fracturing United Methodist Church can attest. A number of of my New Yorker items mirrored that divide, together with tales concerning the splintering Anglican Communion and the Pope Benedict XVI-era Roman Catholic Church; even a bit about Mel Gibson’s movie, “Ardour of the Christ,” was, at its coronary heart, a story of a selected type of ultra-orthodoxy at conflict with the sensibilities of the fashionable well-liked tradition.
After all, I additionally found that understanding this “pew hole” lends helpful perception into our present political tradition. I vastly valued Terry Mattingly’s counsel, and I remained a reader of GetReligion lengthy after my three-year stint on the beat ended.
I’ll miss this web site. However fortunately, tmatt (as readers got here to know Mattingly), will nonetheless be writing his syndicated faith column, doing the weekly “Crossroads” podcast and attempting to indicate displaying the remainder of us what it takes to be an actual professional.
FIRST IMAGE: A poster of the well-known “View of the World from ninth Avenue” cowl of the March 29, 1976 subject of The New Yorker, offered on the Posterlounge web site.