They take calls about lips on Valentine's Day, the cross on Easter and gas prices on Memorial
Day weekend. They share expertise on solar power and lunar landings, Woody Guthrie and Irish
dance, Church politics and selective conscientious objectors. They appear for live interviews on
CNN, CNBC and The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer, and they're as likely to be quoted in major
dailies like The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal and opinion magazines from The
Nation to the National Review as they are in such smaller publications as The Herald Bulletin of
Anderson, Indiana.
"They" are Notre Dame's media magnets, the experts who journalists on deadline turn to
when they need to interpret the news. A Notre Dame Magazine notepad survey -- with
unashamed emphasis on the unscientific -- of the daily online clipping service produced by the
University's Office of News & Information (N&I) from January 1 to July 31 found no fewer than
139 professors, administrators, staffers, coaches and students quoted in 72 different news
sources. (Coverage of Fighting Irish sports wasn't included because the Athletic Department
handles its media relations separately, and it would have overwhelmed the poor notepad guy
anyway.)
Judging by mere numbers of experts contacted for comment at least once, the schools and
departments with the highest media profile appear to be law, theology and biological sciences.
Among the University's numerous academic institutes and centers, the Kroc Institute for
International Peace Studies and the Institute for Latino Studies host the most sizeable
populations of reliable sources.
The University's media relations staff hustles to place ND experts in print articles and
television and radio news segments. They train the media-shy to handle reporters, cameras and
microphones -- and the inevitable frustration of having complex comments clipped into sound
bites or, worse yet, scrapped altogether by ruthless editors. "We don't exercise any editorial
control" over what professors do or don't say, notes Bill Gilroy, who handles media relations for
the colleges of science and engineering, the Graduate School and the University libraries.
Gilroy acknowledges that with some stories extra care goes into identifying the best
person to associate with the Notre Dame name, but it is not unusual for reporters to bypass N&I
altogether when they know they can count on a particular professor for a quick, pithy quote. The
thin partition between good publicity and controversy isn't always left standing, especially when
alumni or the general public have the impression that a professor is speaking on the University's
behalf.
Matthew Storin '64, a former editor of The Boston Globe who since served as the
University's associate vice president for news and information and now teaches on the
journalism faculty in the American Studies department, has seen all sides of the media-academia
connection. Working in Boston, he watched professors practically throw elbows to get in the
public eye. But northern Indiana lacks the intense media atmosphere of the coasts, and he found
the majority of Notre Dame faculty initially lukewarm to media coverage. "They would rather
tend to their scholarly gardens than set up a roadside stand," he says.
The public intellectual
Storin credits recent N&I initiatives and Father John Jenkins' promotion of the role of the
public intellectual in his first presidential address to the faculty in 2005 with driving up faculty
interest and, consequently, the public profile of Notre Dame scholarship.
Still, some professors prefer not to talk to reporters for reasons that may seem familiar to
all of us. It takes time away from scholarly priorities, often with little personal payoff for the
investment. Sometimes reporters just get it wrong. And "public intellectual" is a role at times
more readily played by law or arts and letters professors than others. Gilroy and Storin note
several exceptions, such as the oft-quoted biology professor David Lodge, director of the Center
for Aquatic Conservation, whose work on the economic and environmental impact of invasive
species has put his group on the source-radar for publications ranging from the Times to the Traverse City Record-Eagle.
Taking, or making, the media call isn't always convenient. American studies Professor
Robert Schmuhl '70, director of the journalism, ethics and democracy program, is often tapped
by RTE's Morning Ireland radio news program. "Several times a year, I drag myself from bed to
try to make sense of American political life for Irish listeners," he says. "With the time
difference, we're usually chatting around 3 a.m."
Then there's the comic unpredictability of it.
"I do a fair bit of my radio commentary in the morning, from home," says law Professor
Richard Garnett. "Once, while doing a live interview on a call-in radio program, about a
constitutional-law question, my daughter demanded loudly — loud enough for host and audience
alike to hear — that I turn on Dora the Explorer."
When an advocacy group circulated a press release accusing the Republican Party of
using the image of a cross on the podium at the 2004 national convention as "subliminal
advertising" to attract religious voters, a reporter called from the floor of the hall to ask political
science Professor David Campbell for his opinion. "I did my best to explain that there really was
no need to accuse the Republicans of subterfuge on the issue of religion, since the party is pretty
open about its use of religious language and imagery.
"All my 'sophisticated' analysis was for naught, as the reporter simply wanted to know
whether I thought the podium looked like it had a cross on it. So much for my Ph.D. in political
science, my years of research, et cetera. All of a sudden I had become an expert on interior
design," he says.
Even funnier, Campbell adds, these comments probably had the widest distribution of
any he's made because the reporter worked for the Associated Press and the story was picked up
by a lot of newspapers. "It was even read aloud by Rush Limbaugh on his radio program," he
says.
Interest in particular professors ebbs and flows, too, reflecting reporters' judgment of the
newsworthiness of their expertise. George Lopez, a Kroc Institute scholar and authority on state
coercion and economic sanctions who won N&I's 2005 "Media Legend" faculty award for his
work with reporters that year, was quoted in only one article retrieved by the N&I service this
year.
As if to prove the point that timing is everything, the undisputed lord of the Notre Dame
media ring in the first half of 2007 was an undergraduate student. Junior Emerson Spartz, a
management major, told the Indianapolis Star in July that he was fielding a dozen phone calls
from reporters each day. Spartz's expertise? Harry Potter. During the media stampede leading up
to the July release of the fifth Potter film and the seventh and final novel in author J.K.
Rowling's series, the 20-year-old founder of the Potter fan site mugglenet.com was conducting a
book tour of his own to promote Mugglenet.com's What Will Happen in Harry Potter 7.
Spartz, who was profiled in the Autumn 2005 issue of this magazine, has indicated he's
ready to cash out of the Potter industry and re-invest in new enterprises, leaving a media vacuum
for other Notre Dame experts to fill.
Other ND names most often in the news this year:
Richard Garnett
John Cardinal O'Hara, CSC, Associate Professor of Law
Areas of expertise: Church/state relations, free speech, the death penalty, others
Quoted in: The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer, The New York Times, USA TODAY, others
Asked about: Saddam Hussein's execution; free-speech decisions handed down this summer by
the Supreme Court
He said it: On the conservative trajectory of the U.S. Supreme Court under Chief Justice John
Roberts: "I don't see anything like a seismic shift. It seems to me, to use the word I used before,
that we're seeing incremental steps. We're seeing a reluctance to extend dramatically some of
the precedence from the Warren and Burger court eras." NewsHour, June 25
Christian Smith
William R. Kenan, Jr., Professor of Sociology and Director of the Center for the Study of
Religion and Society
Areas of expertise: Sociology of religion, moral behavior, the religious and spiritual lives of
American teenagers
Quoted in: The Durham News, Newsweek, Chicago Tribune, San Francisco Chronicle, others
Asked about: Teens' beliefs and parental influence; pop culture and teen morality; faith on
campus
He said it: "In more religiously involved families, parents monitor young people more, pay
more attention, have higher standards of moral expectations, and that could be reflected in the
sort of boundaries that teens feel in their behavior and how they present themselves to peers with
makeup, clothing or general attitude." The Philadelphia Inquirer, January 6
David Campbell
John Cardinal O'Hara, CSC, Associate Professor of Political Science
Areas of expertise: American politics, political participation, religion and politics
Quoted in: Deseret Morning News, The Washington Post, NPR Weekend Edition, others
Asked about: Mitt Romney and the 2008 presidential race; voter apprehension about Mormons
and comparisons with John F. Kennedy's run for president in 1960
He said it: "The fact that his Mormonism is out there is going to be manifest more in the
whispered conversations and that sort of thing, rather than overt speeches or comments made
during a debate." CNN Newsroom, May 13
Lawrence Cunningham
John A. O'Brien Professor of Theology
Areas of expertise: Systematic theology and culture, Christian spirituality and its history
Quoted in: USA TODAY, The Washington Post, Baltimore Sun, Chicago Sun-Times
Asked about: Church embezzlements; confession; The Lost Tomb of Jesus; sainthood causes;
papal statements
He said it: On the popular fascination with The Da Vinci Code and the Discovery Channel's
documentary on the purported lost tomb of Jesus, which aired March 4: "Everything in the New
Testament is foreground, there is not much background on the kind of details people naturally
have an interest in, such as what did Jesus look like. There is a natural human curiosity and
interest in depicting him." Our Sunday Visitor, March 8
Teresa Ghilarducci
Professor of Economics and Director of the Higgins Labor Research Center
Areas of expertise: Labor research, economics of aging, the effect of pension losses on older
Americans
Quoted in: South Bend Tribune, The Christian Science Monitor, Marketplace
Asked about: Indiana's minimum wage hike; a local strike; health care for auto workers
She said it: "It's a huge waste of money to give tax breaks to low-income workers if you don't
raise the minimum wage." South Bend Tribune, January 4
Mark Noll
Francis A. McAnaney Professor of History
Areas of expertise: American religious, cultural and intellectual history
Quoted in: The Associated Press, The New York Times, The Boston Globe, Christianity Today
Asked about: Religion and the 2008 campaign; college dancing policies; American religious
illiteracy; the creationism-evolution debate
He said it: "My own sense is that the Bible is a pretty explosive book. If students read it
carefully, they'd be changed in a way that public schools couldn't handle." The Boston Globe,
March 4
Robert Schmuhl '70
Walter H. Annenberg-Edmund P. Joyce Professor of American Studies and Journalism, and
Director of the John W. Gallivan Program in Journalism, Ethics & Democracy
Areas of expertise: American communications and political culture
Quoted in: RTE News -- Morning Ireland, The New York Times, Chicago Tribune, The
Christian Science Monitor
Asked about: The Democratic takeover of Congress; the Colts-Bears Super Bowl match-up;
public misgivings about the death penalty; Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels; the U.S. economy
as a political issue
He said it: "I think that there's a new mood in the country, and it might not lead to the complete
abolition of the death penalty, but it's clear that government officials are taking a more cautious
approach." The Baltimore Sun, February 22.
(October 2007)