Jayson Blair

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Template:Short description Template:For Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox person Jayson Thomas Blair (born March 23, 1976) is a former American journalist who worked for The New York Times. In May 2003, he resigned from the newspaper following the revelation of fabrication and plagiarism within his articles.

In 2004, he published a memoir entitled Burning Down My Masters' House reflecting on his career, discussing his diagnosis of bipolar disorder following his resignation from the New York Times, and offering his perspective on race relations at the newspaper; he subsequently established a bipolar disorder support group and pursued a life-coaching career.

Background

Blair was born in Columbia, Maryland, the son of a federal executive and a schoolteacher. While attending the University of Maryland, College Park, he was a student journalist. For the 1996–1997 academic year, he was selected as the second African-American editor-in-chief of its student newspaper, The Diamondback. According to a 2004 article by the Baltimore Sun, "some of his fellow students opposed his selection, describing him as "an elbows-out competitor."<ref name="making"/>

After a summer interning at The New York Times in 1998, Blair was offered an extended internship there. He declined in order to complete more coursework for graduation, but returned to the Times in June 1999 with a year of coursework left to complete. That November, he was classified as an "intermediate reporter"<ref name="deception">Template:Cite news</ref> He was later promoted to a full reporter and then to editor.

Plagiarism and fabrication scandal

On April 28, 2003, Blair received a call from Times national editor James Roberts asking him about similarities between a story<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> he had written two days earlier and one published April 18 by San Antonio Express-News reporter Macarena Hernandez.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The senior editor of the Express-News had contacted the Times about the similarities between Blair's article in the Times and Hernandez's article in his paper.<ref name="making"/>

The resulting inquiry led to the discovery of fabrication and plagiarism in a number of articles written by Blair.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> Some fabrications include Blair's claims to have traveled to the city mentioned in the dateline, when in fact he did not.

Questionable articles included the following:<ref name="correcting"/>

  • In the October 30, 2002, piece "US Sniper Case Seen as a Barrier to a Confession", Blair wrote that a dispute between police authorities had ruined the interrogation of Beltway sniper suspect John Muhammad and that Muhammad was about to confess, quoting unnamed officials.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> This was swiftly denied by everyone involved. Blair also named certain lawyers who were not present as having witnessed the interrogation.<ref name="correcting">Template:Cite news</ref>
  • In the February 10, 2003, piece "Peace and Answers Eluding Victims of the Sniper Attacks", Blair claimed to be in Washington.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He allegedly plagiarized quotations from a Washington Post story and fabricated quotations from a person he had never interviewed. Blair ascribed a wide range of attributes to a man featured in the article, almost all of which the man in question denied. Blair also published information that he had promised was off the record.<ref name="correcting"/>
  • In the March 3, 2003, piece "Making Sniper Suspect Talk Puts Detective in Spotlight", Blair claimed to be in Fairfax, Virginia.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He described a videotape of Lee Malvo, the younger defendant in the case, being questioned by police and quoted officials' review of the tape. No such tape existed. Blair also claimed a detective noticed blood on a man's jeans, leading to a confession (which had not occurred).<ref name="correcting"/>
  • In the March 27, 2003, piece "Relatives of Missing Soldiers Dread Hearing Worse News", Blair claimed to be in West Virginia.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He allegedly plagiarized quotations from an Associated Press article. He claimed to have spoken to the father of Jessica Lynch, who had no recollection of meeting Blair; said "tobacco fields and cattle pastures" were visible from Lynch's parents' house when they were not; erroneously stated that Lynch's brother was in the National Guard; misspelled Lynch's mother's name; and fabricated a dream that he claimed she had had.<ref name="correcting"/>
  • In the April 3, 2003, piece "Rescue in Iraq and a 'Big Stir' in West Virginia", Blair claimed to have covered the Lynch story from her hometown of Palestine, West Virginia.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Blair never traveled to Palestine, and his entire contribution to the story consisted of rearranged details from Associated Press stories.<ref name="correcting"/>
  • In the April 7, 2003, piece "For One Pastor, the War Hits Home", Blair wrote of a church service in Cleveland and an interview with the minister.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Blair never went to Cleveland; he spoke to the minister by telephone, and copied portions of the article from an earlier Washington Post article. He also plagiarized quotations from The Plain Dealer and New York Daily News. He fabricated a detail about the minister keeping a picture of his son inside his Bible and got the name of the church wrong.<ref name="correcting"/>
  • In the April 19, 2003, piece "In Military Wards, Questions and Fears from the Wounded", Blair described interviewing four injured soldiers in a naval hospital.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He had never gone to the hospital and had spoken to only one soldier by telephone, to whom he later attributed made-up quotes. Blair wrote that the soldier "will most likely limp the rest of his life and need to use a cane", which was untrue. He said another soldier had lost his right leg when it had been amputated below the knee. He described two soldiers as being in the hospital at the same time, but they were admitted five days apart.<ref name="correcting"/>

After internal investigations, The New York Times reported on Blair's journalistic misdeeds in an "unprecedented"<ref name="cq-cx"/> 7,239-word front-page story on May 11, 2003, headlined "Times Reporter Who Resigned Leaves Long Trail of Deception". The story called the affair "a low point in the 152-year history of the newspaper."<ref name="deception"/>

After the scandal broke, some 30 former staffers of The Diamondback, who had worked with Blair when he was editor-in-chief at the university newspaper, signed a 2003 letter alleging that Blair had made four serious errors as a reporter and editor while at the University of Maryland. They said these and his work habits brought his integrity into question. The letter-signers alleged that questions raised by some of these staffers at the time were ignored by Maryland Media, Inc., the board that owned the paper.<ref name="making">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="diamondback">Template:Cite web</ref>

Aftermath

The investigation, known as the Siegal committee, found heated debate among the staff over affirmative action hiring, as Blair is black. Jonathan Landman, Blair's editor, told the Siegal committee he felt that Blair's being black played a large part in the younger man's initial promotion in 2001 to full-time staffer. "I think race was the decisive factor in his promotion," he said. "I thought then and I think now that it was the wrong decision."<ref name="NewsHour-20080224">Template:Cite web</ref>

Others disagreed. Five days later, New York Times op-ed columnist Bob Herbert, an African American, asserted in his column that race had nothing to do with the Blair case:

Listen up: the race issue in this case is as bogus as some of Jayson Blair's reporting... [F]olks who delight in attacking anything black, or anything designed to help blacks, have pounced on the Blair story as evidence that there is something inherently wrong with The New York TimesTemplate:'s effort to diversify its newsroom, and beyond that, with the very idea of a commitment to diversity or affirmative action anywhere. And while these agitators won't admit it, the nasty subtext to their attack is that there is something inherently wrong with blacks.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Executive editor Howell Raines and managing editor Gerald Boyd resigned after losing newsroom support in the aftermath of the scandal.

After resigning from the Times, Blair struggled with severe depression and, according to his memoir, entered a hospital for treatment. He was diagnosed with bipolar disorder for the first time. He has acknowledged that he had been self-medicating when he was dealing with substance abuse of alcohol and cocaine in earlier years.<ref name="poynter">Letter by Jayson Blair: "Blair: Outsourcing EAP is a mistake", Poynter Online, 15 June 2005</ref>

Later career

Blair later returned to college to complete his postponed degree.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The year after he left the Times, Blair wrote a memoir, Burning Down My Masters' House, published by New Millennium Books in 2004. Its initial print run was 250,000 copies; some 1,400 were sold in its first nine days.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Although most reviews were critical, sales of the book increased after Blair was interviewed by Larry King and Fox News Channel host Bill O'Reilly.<ref name="AP">Associated Press, "Few buyers for books by disgraced journalists Jayson Blair and Stephen Glass", USA Today, 18 March 2004</ref>

In his book, Blair revealed extended substance abuse, which he had ended before he resigned from the newspaper, and a struggle with bipolar disorder, which was diagnosed and first treated after he resigned. He also discussed journalistic practices at the Times, and his view of race relations and disagreements among senior editors at the newspaper. Since the scandal, Blair has spoken to journalism classes and groups about what he describes as the slippery slope that led him to fabricate and plagiarize. He has also said he regretted writing the book as early as he did and recommends people not read it.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In 2006, Blair was running a support group for people with bipolar disorder, for which he has received continuing treatment.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In 2007 he became a life coach, working in Virginia, opening his own coaching center three years later.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In 2023, Blair renentered journalism when he started a podcast called the Silver Linings Handbook that focus on interviews with people from different walks of life, including journalists, business people, family members of victims of crimes, attorneys, law enforcement and others.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>He also has advocated for more ethical reporting in the true crime genre.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In 2024, he started a Substack called The True Crime Times, where he is a writer and editor, with podcast hosts Brett Talley and Alice LaCour, American lawyers who served in the Justice Department.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

See also

Bibliography

References

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Further reading

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