Journalism's "crazy old aunt": Helen thomas and paradigm repair

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Abstract

Veteran White House correspondent Helen Thomas abruptly retired in summer 2010 after she gave unscripted remarks widely perceived to be anti-Semitic. This case study applies paradigm repair and attribution theories to explore how mainstream journalists repaired the damage to their profession's reputation. It concludes that they (1) situated Thomas's remark against a backdrop of journalistic excellence, subtly reinforcing the point that her career should now come to an end; (2) suggested Thomas's remarks were caused by senility; (3) condemned her remarks as racist; and (4) raised the norm of objectivity. © 2013 AEJMC.

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Hindman, E. B., & Thomas, R. J. (2013, June). Journalism’s “crazy old aunt”: Helen thomas and paradigm repair. Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly. https://doi.org/10.1177/1077699013482909

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