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by jrochkind1
2396 days ago
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Eh, I don't think that's what was actually going on for most of the 20th century. Journalist was not a prestigious job, it was in fact done by working class people. I think. It's instead a new thing that journalism is dominated by "elites". "How journalism became a middle class profession for university graduates": https://www.theguardian.com/media/greenslade/2009/jul/21/new... "The death of the working class reporter": https://blog.usejournal.com/the-death-of-the-working-class-r... The original claim I was challenging was "journalists in particular no longer find themselves in the upper middle class" -- I don't think they ever were, it's possible that MORE of them are now than previous -- as you say, even as salaries drop. |
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This article is just standard journalistic myth-making. The journalists cited as examples of success without college degrees, Carl Bernstein and Walter Cronkite (who both went to college, just dropped out), came from privileged backgrounds just like the privileged kids who fill the industy today.