The world's most-read Scottish politics website

Wings Over Scotland


A Table Of Cowards

Posted on October 25, 2012 by

Below is the originally-published version of an article entitled "A Table Of Doritos", which appeared on Eurogamer this week, before being censored by the site following a complaint from Lauren Wainwright, who was mentioned in the piece. Lauren Wainwright is a journalist whose entry on Journalisted includes Tomb Raider publisher Square-Enix in the roster of her "current" employers.

WoSland republishes the article here, without the permission or knowledge of either Eurogamer or the article's author Robert Florence, in the interests of news reporting. It is unedited save for the fact that we've highlighted in bold the passage that Eurogamer removed. If it's libellous, as Lauren Wainwright claims, we invite her to sue us.

——————————————————————————————

A TABLE OF DORITOS

There is an image doing the rounds on the internet this week. It is an image of Geoff Keighley, a Canadian games journalist, sitting dead-eyed beside a garish Halo 4 poster and a table of Mountain Dew and Doritos. It is a tragic, vulgar image. But I think that it is the most important image in games journalism today. I think we should all find it and study it. It is important.

Geoff Keighley is often described as an industry leader. A games expert. He is one of the most prominent games journalists in the world. And there he sits, right there, beside a table of snacks. He will be sitting there forever, in our minds. That's what he is now. And in a sense, it is what he always was. As Executive Producer of the mindless, horrifying spectacle that is the Spike TV Video Game Awards he oversees the delivery of a televisual table full of junk, an entire festival of cultural Doritos.

How many games journalists are sitting beside that table?

Recently, the Games Media Awards rolled around again, and games journos turned up to a thing to party with their friends in games PR. Games PR people and games journos voted for their favourite friends, and friends gave awards to friends, and everyone had a good night out. Eurogamer won an award. Kieron Gillen was named an industry legend (and if anyone is a legend in games writing, he is) but he deserves a better platform for recognition than those GMAs. The GMAs shouldn't exist. By rights, that room should be full of people who feel uncomfortable in each other's company. PR people should be looking at games journos and thinking, "That person makes my job very challenging." Why are they all best buddies? What the hell is going on?

Whenever you criticise the GMAs, as I've done in the past, you face the accusation of being "bitter". I've removed myself from those accusations somewhat by consistently making it clear that I'm not a games journalist. I'm a writer who regularly writes about games, that's all. And I've been happy for people who have been nominated for GMAs in the past, because I've known how much they wanted to be accepted by that circle. There is nothing wrong with wanting to belong, or wanting to be recognised by your peers. But it's important to ask yourself who your peers are, and exactly what it is you feel a need to belong to.

Just today, as I sat down to write this piece, I saw that there were games journalists winning PS3s on Twitter. There was a competition at those GMAs – tweet about our game and win a PS3. One of those stupid, crass things. And some games journos took part. All piling in, opening a sharing bag of Doritos, tweeting the hashtag as instructed. And today the winners were announced. Then a whole big argument happened, and other people who claim to be journalists claimed to see nothing wrong with what those so-called journalists had done. I think the winners are now giving away their PS3s, but it's too late. It's too late. Let me show you an example.

One games journalist, Lauren Wainwright, tweeted: "Urm… Trion were giving away PS3s to journalists at the GMAs. Not sure why that's a bad thing?"

Now, a few tweets earlier, she also tweeted this: "Lara header, two TR pix in the gallery and a very subtle TR background. #obsessed @tombraider pic.twitter.com/VOWDSavZ"

And instantly I am suspicious. I am suspicious of this journalist's apparent love for Tomb Raider. I am asking myself whether she's in the pocket of the Tomb Raider PR team. I'm sure she isn't, but the doubt is there. After all, she sees nothing wrong with journalists promoting a game to win a PS3, right?

Another journalist, one of the winners of the PS3 competition, tweeted this at disgusted RPS writer John Walker: "It was a hashtag, not an advert. Get off the pedestal." Now, this was Dave Cook, a guy I've met before. A good guy, as far as I could tell. But I don't believe for one second that Dave doesn't understand that in this time of social media madness a hashtag is just as powerful as an advert. Either he's on the defensive or he doesn't get what being a journalist is actually about.

I want to make a confession. I stalk games journalists. It's something I've always done. I keep an eye on people. I have a mental list of games journos who are the very worst of the bunch. The ones who are at every PR launch event, the ones who tweet about all the freebies they get. I am fascinated by them. I won't name them here, because it's a horrible thing to do, but I'm sure some of you will know who they are. I'm fascinated by these creatures because they are living one of the most strange existences – they are playing at being a thing that they don't understand. And if they don't understand it, how can they love it? And if they don't love it, why are they playing at being it?

This club, this weird club of pals and buddies that make up a fair proportion of games media, needs to be broken up somehow. They have a powerful bond, though – held together by the pressures of playing to the same audience. Games publishers and games press sources are all trying to keep you happy, and it's much easier to do that if they work together. Publishers are well aware that some of you go crazy if a new AAA title gets a crappy review score on a website, and they use that knowledge to keep the boat from rocking. Everyone has a nice easy ride if the review scores stay decent and the content of the games are never challenged. Websites get their exclusives. Ad revenue keeps rolling in. The information is controlled. Everyone stays friendly. It's a steady flow of Mountain Dew pouring from the hills of the money men, down through the fingers of the weary journos, down into your mouths. At some point you will have to stop drinking that stuff and demand something better.

Standards are important. They are hard to live up to, sure, but that's the point of them. The trouble with games journalism is that there are no standards. We expect to see Geoff Keighley sitting beside a table of s***. We expect to see the flurry of excitement when the GMAs get announced, instead of a chuckle and a roll of the eyes. We expect to see our games journos failing to get what journalistic integrity means. The brilliant writers, like John Walker for example, don't get the credit they deserve simply because they don't play the game. Indeed, John Walker gets told to get off his pedestal because he has high standards and is pointing out a worrying problem.

Geoff Keighley, meanwhile, is sitting beside a table of snacks. A table of delicious Doritos and refreshing Mountain Dew. He is, as you'll see on Wikipedia, "only one of two journalists, the other being 60 Minutes correspondent Mike Wallace, profiled in the Harvard Business School press book 'Geeks and Geezers' by noted leadership expert Warren Bennis." Geoff Keighley is important. He is a leader in his field. He once said, "There's such a lack of investigative journalism. I wish I had more time to do more, sort of, investigation." And yet there he sits, glassy-eyed, beside a table heaving with sickly Doritos and Mountain Dew.

It's an important image. Study it.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

36 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

[…] artikel, zijn heel erg interessant en het waard om door te pluizen. Stuart Campbell heeft ook bijtend commentaar geschreven over dit […]

Alex

Thanks for republishing this Stu.  Can't believe the way this has gone down, and so sad (but totally understandable, and honourable) that Rab has had to make the decision to stand down.  He's such a brilliant voice amongst increasingly sterile games writing.

Doug Daniel

Absolutely nothing wrong with the highlighted section. Yes, he names her, but he doesn't actually accuse her of anything. All he's saying is that certain actions lead to suspicion of being in the pocket of a PR team, before saying "I'm sure she isn't", which is explicitly NOT accusing her of anything, other than perhaps careless tweeting.
To quote the opening sample from the Manic Street Preachers' third album: "YOU CAN BUY HER, YOU CAN BUY HER. THIS ONE'S HERE, THIS ONE'S HERE, THIS ONE'S HERE AND THIS ONE'S HERE. EVERYTHING'S FOR SALE"

K

Any thoughts on how this battle is to be fought? How do we create a space (or more space) for dissatisfaction and antagonism from within games journalism (as opposed to having our own small blogs –  or whatever –  that don't contest the space), and not simply concede the mainstream to the compulsorily-positive shills, etc…

Joe
Bob

link to laurenwainwright.com write frothing love for tomb raider > job at crystal dynamics LIVING THE DREAM

Justin

Twitter is free and open to the public. If you think something could be taken the wrong way, DON'T POST IT THERE. And if you do post it there and someone does take it the wrong way TOO FUCKING BAD because you know what? You were the one who said this in a public forum. Now the public is free and open to comment on it as Rab did. Bravo to him because it at least gets people thinking about how the appalling system works. She should've responded with her own article defending herself instead of rushing for the lawyers, ultimately a coward's move and one that clearly lets us all know just how right she thinks he is and how ashamed she is that she was called out on her behavior. THANK YOU for republishing this article in it's true form.

Pierre

Good grief, she has now removed Square Enix from her Journalisted entry.

Lacero

Thanks for fighting on this.  It's so sad it needed to be written about, let alone what's happened now it has been.

Pete

Right now, I'm seeing Wainwright at the top of the "Recently viewed" list of profiles on the Journalisted homepage. And this very URL is listed in the "Blogposts about Lauren Wainwright" on her profile page itself.
That's quite a mess she's making.

grumpysmurf

As an ex-games journalist, I can vouch that everything in that article is true. 99% games journos consider PR their close friends, and their readers annoying twats. 

[…] en el evento, citando sus tweets. La consecuencia fue que Eurogamer editó el artículo (que aquí teneis completo, sin censura) eliminando una de esas referencias por una queja de uno de los referenciados, asi que Florence […]

Marc

Stu, was this your article in Amiga Power?
link to i.imgur.com
Reddit thought it was relevant to the Robert Florence situation.

Lacero

While it's odd for a games writer to work for a games firm and review their games, all games sites work for games companies as advertisers and then review their games. 

This perspective to me was the entire point of Rab's article and I think it was a very clever way of making that point, and also I can see why he'd feel his message was compromised by the edit.  He was using an individual's behaviour which some would find odd to show how odd the entire industry was (or was very, very lucky with an arbitrary target.  I choose to believe he was being clever). 

This doesn't seem to have been explicitly described by anyone, and in fact I now see some people are using the behaviour of game news sites to defend having full screen adverts on twitter (by choice or not).  The war is indeed lost.

[…] men skandalen startede først for alvor, da Eurogamer redigerede artiklen (læs den oprindelige her) efter den kvindelige skribent og hendes arbejdsgiver havde bedt om at få fjernet citater fra […]

marc

He's had to fucking what!?
 

[…] sponsorship in video game journalism and had briefly mentioned Wainwright. The article was eventually edited to remove her mention in the article. It sparked a firestorm that caused many to look for more […]

[…] the Games Media Awards.What you should read first:One of the copies of EuroGamer’s original article about the ethical problems with the Games Media Awards: A Table of Doritos.Rock, Paper, Shotgun’s John Walker’s blog post titled “An Utter Disgrace” […]

[…] over Sealand: A Table of Cowards & The Wainwright […]

[…] with Square Enix much, much clearer in her work. If she’s going to list something publicly (such as on her Journalisted.com profile), then it would have been best to be open about that everywhere. (And she certainly shouldn’t […]

[…] Eurogamer pour diffamation. Heureusement, Internet c’est magique et de bonnes âmes ont republié l’article intégral avant qu’il ne soit […]

Drew Peacock

Stu, was this your article in Amiga Power?
link to i.imgur.com


 
"Having some sort of obvious gimmick (for example, a stupid bandana)…."
 
Zing!

Justin Amirkhani

It needed to be said. It needed to be said so hard.

I can't claim to be completely innocent of the muddy waters (I worked for a year as Microsoft's Xbox.ca community blogger), but holy shit you hit the nail on the head. I feel so grateful now to live in a time where I can crowd-fund my work, taking the need to pander to advertisers, cooperate with PR people, and bend over backwards for anyone but my readers to make a story happen.

I've been through it all; had review scores changed by editors, had reviews pulled when PR put pressure on the outlet, even been fired from one job because I got blacklisted for being negative about a game we'd been given special access to. This industry may be pixel perfect on the outside, but I encourage everyone, reader or journalist, to seriously think about what's being written, and more importantly why.

Ash J. Emmes

Excellent article and absolutely true.
I've seen the picture plenty of times on the internet recently, however, I never really stopped to think just what this really implies about the state of game journalism.

Sad how this all went down…

Fenrir007

Video game industry in a nutshell:

EA

link to pcgamer.com

GEARBOX

link to arstechnica.com
e-reviews.ars

SQUEENIX

link to kotaku.com

ACTIVISION

link to kotaku.com

link to venturebeat.com

SONY

link to kotaku.com

And this nice verbose analysis of the whole subject

link to insomnia.ac

link to insomnia.ac

Also a video made by someone on the subject:

[…] right on cue, forcing the female journalist in question to protect her profile. People started republishing the integral article and digging for proof that the journalist lied about not having professional relationship with a […]

[…] seeped into gaming journalism as well. To get an idea of what I’m speaking of, kindly read this article first. In that article you’ll see examples of just what gaming journalism is now all about. […]

Truth

And she still doesn't get it.
Wainwright's Facebook status today is that she doesn't understand why she gets crucified for tweeting about Tomb Raider, but other journos are tweeting about GTA without getting any flak.
Unbelievable.

[…] media accounts to win free gaming consoles. (The latter was apparently edited after the fact and reproduced on other blogs in the wake of the original writer’s departure from […]

[…] il fustige le copinage entre journalistes spécialisés et industriels du jeux-vidéo. Article rapidement censuré sur demande d’une journaliste expressément nommée dans celui-ci, qui vaudra à son auteur […]

[…] I think I’ve made it quite clear in past blog entries that I enjoy playing video games, and I enjoy writing about video games equally as much. In fact, I would love nothing more than to make a career out of writing for a video game news outlet like IGN, Gamespy, or Gamasutra, among others. However, there are some aspects about gaming “journalism” that absolutely terrify me. For a little more clarity on what I’m talking about, I highly suggest reading this article (as well as the uncensored version). […]

Da5e

Hmm, nearly five years ago, this whole business. Hey Stu, did Wainwright ever sue you?


  • About

    Wings Over Scotland is a (mainly) Scottish political media digest and monitor, which also offers its own commentary. (More)

    Stats: 6,670 Posts, 1,202,821 Comments

  • Recent Posts

  • Archives

  • Categories

  • Tags

  • Recent Comments

    • Robert Hughes on The Long Unravelling: “Yes , indeed , B . I’ve never known such levels of mendacious propaganda being spewed 24/7 by MSM &…Nov 22, 06:03
    • Oneliner on The Long Unravelling: “Yep – better to stick to an ad hominem like ‘microbe’ Do you have any mirrors in your butt an’…Nov 22, 05:21
    • Mark Beggan on The Long Unravelling: “He should have grown a moustache like Neil Gray.Nov 22, 04:59
    • Breeks on The Long Unravelling: “I haven’t either, indeed it’s something of a fallacy calling them newspapers. A cursory glance in the direction of the…Nov 22, 04:56
    • The Flying Iron of Doom on The Long Unravelling: “Don’t you mean “You fall out with the Tsar, you fall out of a window”? 🙂Nov 22, 03:00
    • Robert Matthews on The Long Unravelling: “https://www.progressscotland.org/uploads/Progress-Scotland-Nov-Release.pdfNov 22, 02:51
    • Robert Matthews on The Long Unravelling: “https://www.progressscotland.org/uploads/Progress-Scotland-Nov-Release.pdfNov 22, 02:49
    • Robert Matthews on The Long Unravelling: “Julius Evola – The Yoga of Power: Tantra, Shakti and the Secret Way, should steer you in the Right direction.Nov 22, 02:43
    • Campbell Clansman on The Long Unravelling: “I see that I’m living rent-free in your head. … Perhaps you’d explain how childish name-calling advances your cause?Nov 22, 02:23
    • Michael Laing on The Long Unravelling: “Perhaps you could explain to us, Camp Bellend, how Scotland benefits from being in the UK? How does having governments…Nov 21, 23:37
    • Michael Laing on The Long Unravelling: “It’s deliberate. He’s an unelected UK state plant. He’s just continuing the sabotage and destruction that’s been ongoing since 2014.Nov 21, 23:11
    • Zander Tait on The Long Unravelling: “You do like your facts embedded in your fantasy future Dumpster CamelMan. Unfortunately for you Cancer FannyBaws the last two…Nov 21, 22:58
    • Shug on The Long Unravelling: “I do hope Swinney and co turn up at Salmond’s memorial so we can tell them what we think of…Nov 21, 22:52
    • wull on The Long Unravelling: “Flynn should also have known that Alex Salmond also donated one of the two salaries he had at one point…Nov 21, 22:39
    • Campbell Clansman on The Long Unravelling: “Glasgow is an Indy stronghold. If these areas vote 2-1 Unionist parties, all the Alba/Salvo fantasies and all the lies…Nov 21, 22:37
    • Zander Tait on The Long Unravelling: “There ain’t no medals for his kind of bravery.Nov 21, 21:38
    • Mac on The Long Unravelling: “I have not bought a newspaper in 20 years but I have an X subscription which I bought just a…Nov 21, 21:30
    • Mac on The Long Unravelling: “What Craig Murray is doing is beyond brave. I really thought he had a death wish this last couple of…Nov 21, 20:56
    • Ian Brotherhood on The Long Unravelling: “Watching that right now. It’s remarkable, listening to these people, (regardless of whether you agree with them or not) and…Nov 21, 20:50
    • znovak on The Long Unravelling: “Craig Murray’s argument about purity is fallacious. When organic chemists say that that the product of synthesis was 95% pure,…Nov 21, 20:46
    • Zander Tait on The Long Unravelling: “And you are a thing of wonder, Camel Humpster TransMan. Let’s see, the last 2 polls on Scottish Independence clearly…Nov 21, 20:31
    • Campbell Clansman on The Long Unravelling: “There are four council elections today. Three are in Glasgow, an SNP stronghold. I wonder if the “Indy” parties (assuming…Nov 21, 20:12
    • George Ferguson on The Long Unravelling: “I was surprised Flynn didn’t know that Ross donated one of his salaries to charity when questioned on the Sunday…Nov 21, 19:41
    • Zander Tait on The Long Unravelling: “And, of course, let’s not forget the double salary, double staff and double expenses. There are few more impressive sights…Nov 21, 19:17
    • George Ferguson on The Long Unravelling: “Stephen Flynn finding out that double jobbing motivated by naked ambition is not a good look especially when sitting politicians…Nov 21, 19:09
    • Stevie on The Long Unravelling: “Actually, people have been asking for decades what happened to huge donations left to the SNP in deceased willsNov 21, 18:45
    • Al Dossary on The Long Unravelling: “Cant watch that and Danny Haiphong / Mark Sleboda at the same time unfortunately……..Nov 21, 18:33
    • twathater on The Long Unravelling: “NO he”s just a fucking corrupt moron elected by imbecilesNov 21, 18:25
    • Mia on The Long Unravelling: ““Close Holrood” No. I have a much better solution: get a political party to stand on a manifesto to: gain…Nov 21, 18:23
    • twathater on The Long Unravelling: “I vote Alan that we get rid of the BIGGER more incompetent and more corrupt WM parliament and while we…Nov 21, 18:23
  • A tall tale



↑ Top
114
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x