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Lang, Gladys Engel..
Battle for public opinion : the president, the press, and the polls during Watergate / Gladys Engel Lang and Kurt Lang. [023105548X] New York : Columbia University Press, 1983.
Call#: [z] Lost copy. E860 .L36 1983
 
    There have been many long term effects of Watergate. The event has altered perceptions of the presidency and the media. Watergate has become a symbol that has determined public attitudes and behaviors. Chapter 10: Continuity and Change deals with this issue. The authors discuss the public image of Watergate that has evolved over time, resulting from “a pooling of ideas that are then reaffirmed by the media.” This image is not always reflective of what really happened. Memory of the event makes the story into a legend instead of history.
    The authors argue that one of the most important aspects of the story that has become a part of the legend is the role of the media. Watergate taught the country a lesson about the importance of a free press – the legend tells us that the Watergate cover-up never would have been revealed if not for the press. The Watergate legend also remembers journalists as heroes, which the authors state is hardly ever accurate. The movie All the President’s Men, as well as the book of the same name, contributes to this aspect of the country’s collective memory. The authors believe that an overblown image of newspapermen is dangerous because members of the press can become conspiracy theorists in hopes of cracking a non-existent ring of corruption and “exposing wrongdoing.” Making moral judgments and being a government watchdog, Lang & Lang argue, are not a reporter’s job.
    The authors credit Bernstein and Woodward with doing a good job at investigating Watergate. Publicity through the press did prevent Nixon from regaining public support and from thwarting attempts to persecute his crimes, and press kept the issue alive in the mind of the public. However, they point out that there were many other people involved, and that the journalists only played a small roll. The press depended on information from official bodies such as the Senate Watergate Committee, the Special Watergate Prosecution Force, and the House Judiciary Committee. Yet, Bernstein and Woodward are still the first (and often only) names that come to mind as the “good guys” of Watergate. Lang & Lang explain, “ since the facts are so quickly forgotten, the folklore is what survives.”