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Rob Rosen spent decades inside the machine. From KCBS Los Angeles to five seasons producing Reasonable Doubt on HBO Max, he has watched journalism drift from fact-gathering into something closer to activism -- and he has documented exactly how it happened.
His new book, Crimes of Omission, makes a case most people already suspect but can't quite articulate: the media's biggest problem isn't outright lies. It's the stories they decide you never need to hear.
In this episode, Rob walks us through the cases, the newsroom culture, and the moment around 2012 when legacy media stopped holding up a mirror and started choosing sides. If you grew up trusting Cronkite and Brokaw, this one will hit.
TOPICS COVERED:
-- The "crimes of omission" concept: bias through silence, not fabrication
-- The 2012 inflection point when soft bias became active advocacy
-- Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, Freddie Gray: what the coverage left out
-- Tony Timpa: the police killing that was worse than anything you saw on TV -- and that you've never heard of
-- Why newsroom monoculture is the structural root of the problem
-- What the morning meeting decides about your reality
-- Reasonable Doubt: why 3 out of 4 cases they investigated, the convict was actually guilty
-- How to protect yourself as a news consumer
-- FCC pressure on legacy media and whether the market is the answer
-- The vibe shift: is the public ready for objective journalism again?
TIMESTAMPS:
0:00 -- Intro and Dead Files tangent (Jared is a fan)
1:17 -- What "Crimes of Omission" means
3:51 -- Why omission is more dangerous than an outright lie
5:01 -- The 2012 inflection point
10:21 -- Newsroom culture and who populates the room
13:30 -- Morning meetings set the national agenda
15:27 -- Behind the scenes during Ferguson and BLM
17:43 -- Where the pressure actually comes from
23:34 -- Reasonable Doubt: a real search for truth on HBO Max
27:46 -- Is there a path back to objective journalism?
35:13 -- Why covering Trump put the media on tilt
38:59 -- FCC and government pressure on legacy media
40:44 -- Why Rob wrote this book now
47:55 -- How to be a better news consumer
53:09 -- Tony Timpa: the case no one covered
1:01:25 -- Jared's Five rapid-fire
Crimes of Omission is available for presale now. Out June 2nd.
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The CommonX Podcast features long-form conversations with musicians, cultural voices, veterans, entrepreneurs, and independent thinkers who bring lived experience to the table. Hosted by Jared Mayzak and Ian Primmer, CommonX explores music, culture, work, identity, resilience, and the systems that shape everyday life—without talking points or manufactured outrage.
From iconic artists and creative pioneers to everyday people with extraordinary stories, each episode prioritizes honesty, curiosity, and meaningful dialogue. This is a Gen-X–driven show for listeners who value depth over noise and conversation over clicks.
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No transcript available for this episode.