Chautauqua Day 5: David Marash

David Marash is one of those Emmy-winning jour­nal­ists who trucks in a dif­fer­ent kind of celebrity than the name-trotting sort head­lin­ing news­casts today. He’s a gen­uine arti­cle, deep in voice and lan­guage, the rare breed of tele­vi­sion media per­son­al­ity who believes in the strength of long-format jour­nal­ism, report­ing sto­ries to con­clu­sion, rather than fatigue, and he’s got the resume to back it up.

Me with David Maresh

He’s most known for his 16-year stint with Ted Kop­pel on Night­line, win­ning awards for his cov­er­age of the Okla­homa City bomb­ing and TWA Flight 800. But, when that show was can­celled, he made an inter­est­ing move: Al Jazeera Eng­lish.

He’s lead anchor over there now, charged with the west­ern hemi­sphere. The net­work strives to be the first non-western inter­na­tional news net­work, div­ing head first into deep waters heav­ily patroled by CNN, Fox, MSNBC. They aim to com­pli­ment the oth­ers, to shift the bal­ance of the inter­na­tional news mech­a­nism, he says, and they do that by becom­ing a com­pli­ment to exist­ing cov­er­age, not a com­peti­tor.

“Where other agen­cies spend 80 per­cent of their cov­er­age in North Amer­i­can, Euro­pean, Japan­ese, and Israeli sto­ries,” he says, “Al Jazeera, on the other hand, does 70 per­cent of its report­ing every­where else.“

And of course, he opened with Iraq.

“One thing every Iraqi knows,” Marash said, “is that they don’t want to be dom­i­nated by out­siders. The coun­try has a long his­tory of dom­i­na­tion, and the Amer­i­cans ignored that his­tory. Instead, they went in with dis­tinctly Amer­i­can ideas of good gov­er­nance, incon­sid­er­ate of what the Iraqis want.“

Marash con­tends that we wrote our own book. That we ignored vol­umes of data in the world indi­cat­ing that what we were plan­ning would end badly. That the Mid­dle East has played host count­less times to invad­ing bod­ies and with­out fail, the con­flict ends badly. That, given all this, we should have known bet­ter.

It’s hard not to get into a dis­cus­sion of con­spir­acy the­ory here. And it’s dif­fi­cult, by the same token, to con­tra­dict Marash, who him­self has spent years in the region cov­er­ing these decades-long sto­ries. But boil­ing down the cur­rent sit­u­a­tion in Iraq to mis­un­der­stood objec­tives might just be too sim­ple, ing­no­rant of admin­is­tra­tion objec­tives beyond stem­ming con­flict in the region; objec­tives likely to take years to uncover.

More detail means richer com­mu­ni­ca­tion, Marash says of jour­nal­ists. “Reporters must rep­re­sent real­ity with fidelity.“

And that’s what Al Jazeera Eng­lish aims to do. By reduc­ing the num­ber of sto­ries reported in any given half-hour seg­ment, the net­work aims to drive up the qual­ity and depth of cov­er­age across all sto­ries. It’s a chal­lenge, he says, as the staff of the net­work comes largely from main­stream media, and break­ing bad habits is an ongo­ing fight.

Dave Marash is a smart guy. Put him on the podium and he’s your wise old grand­fa­ther duti­fully illum­ni­at­ing the world for you, one race at a time. He’s been every­where, seen it all, and has the breath left in him to talk about it at length. But in an era in which major media news is los­ing ground to info­tain­ment, Marash’s vision of Al Jazeera might just have arrived in the nick of time.

The Q&A brought out the ques­tion that most were undoubt­edly think­ing: “What’s a nice Jew­ish boy like you doing work­ing for Al Jazeera?” Marash was diti­fully diplo­matic and long-winded with a response that ended up hav­ing quite a fine point on it.

There were sort of two responses among my col­leagues. The major­ity of the responses were, “Well, that’s Marash. If there’s a brick wall, he’ll put his head into it.” And the sec­ond response was, sort of, “How dare he.” And par­tic­u­larly, “How dare he, as a Jew, work for the Arabs.” In many ways, it’s the same men­tal­ity as the Dubai ports case. “How dare we con­tract for port secu­rity with a global firm that hap­pens to be based in the Arab world?”


Al Jazeera is a funny net­work. In the West, it’s the voice­box of the ter­ror­ist arm, heav­ily crit­i­cized for dis­play­ing Al Quaeda behead­ings and desert man­i­festos. But what we don’t see, Marash con­tends, is the network’s dili­gence in report­ing both sides of the con­flict, as graphic as those sides may be. That’s what hap­pens when you have a boss “whose bot­tom line is not the bot­tom line, is not share-holder value, but is the prod­uct itself.”