Matti Kuusela (born 12 June 1956) is a retired Finnish journalist. He worked for Aamulehti for nearly 40 years.[1] Kuusela received many journalism awards in his career. In 2024, Kuusela revealed in his autobiography, that he has written self-invented material in his articles.[2]
Career
editKuusela started his career in 1981 and worked as a regular journalist for Aamulehti from 1983 to 2020, when he retired. After this, Kuusela worked as an occasional assistant for Iltalehti.[1][3] Kuusela worked as a sports reporter, editor of the Sunday pages and from 2000 as a culture journalist.[1]
For the majority of his career, Kuusela has worked with narrative journalism and reportages, travelogues, personal interviews and columns, among other things.[3] He has received several important awards during his career, such as the Tiedonjulkistamisen valtionpalkinto, Lumilapio-award for investigative journalism, Best newspaper story of the year award by Sanomalehtien Liitto and Bonnier's best newspaper story award.[2] Kuusela was especially known for his reportage trips aboard, which he made to Asia, Middle East, Russia and Ukraine. Kuusela worked as a Beijing correspondent for six months in 2004.[1]
Kuusela lives in Nokia with his wife. They have 2 adult kids.[1]
Disclosure of fictitious interviews
editIn March 2024, it was revealed that Kuusela had written fabrication in some of his interviews with Aamulehti. He admitted in his biography Journalisti – Toisenlainen toimittaja that he used fiction in some of his articles. After the book was published, Aamulehti removed 551 articles written by Kuusela and launched an internal investigation. The investigation stated that Kuusela had used fiction in several articles made at different times. Determining the total amount is difficult.[3]
Kuusela denies that he distorted the statements of the interviewees. He says that he used exaggeration, sarcasm and amusement as stylistic devices. According to Kuusela, readers should understand that not all articles are completely true.[2] A complaint has been made to the Council for Mass Media in Finland.[4]
Matti Apunen was the editor-in-chief of Aamulehti between 1998 and 2010. He has defended Kuusela's experimental style and has said he understand the context in which the stories have been published. Apunen says that there should be room for experimentation and play in journalism, as long as the context is clear. According to Apunen, the limits are absolute in news articles, but an experimental body text is a different matter.[5]
In May 2023, Iltalehti had to remove 33 articles about the Russian invasion of Ukraine from its website. The magazine's investigation raised unethical concerns in the assistants activities, such as the misuse of images at different times and places. This also raised doubts about the truthfulness of the information in other stories.[3]
References
edit- ^ a b c d e Annu Laine (2016-06-13). "60 vuotta: Toimittaja Matti Kuusela antaa viisi ja puoli neuvoa". Aamulehti. Archived from the original on 2018-01-31. Retrieved 2018-01-31.
- ^ a b c Hankamieni, Anu Leena; Palomaa, Antti (22 March 2024). "Matti Kuusela Ylelle: En arvannut, että minua ruvetaan syyttämään – myönsi keksineensä juttuihinsa kohtauksia" [Matti Kuusela to Yle: I didn't think I'd be accused– admitted that he made up scenes for his stories]. Yle (in Finnish).
- ^ a b c d "Aamulehti poistaa 551 toimittaja Matti Kuuselan juttua verkosta" [Aamulehti removes 551 articles by journalist Matti Kuusela from the web]. Aamulehti (in Finnish). 22 March 2024.
- ^ Palomaa, Antti (2024-03-22). "JSN sai kantelun Aamulehden päätöksestä poistaa satoja juttuja verkosta – puheenjohtaja: "Järkyttävän kokoinen paukku"" [JSN received a complaint about Aamulehti's decision to remove hundreds of articles from the web - chairman: "A shockingly big bang"]. Yle Uutiset (in Finnish). Retrieved 2024-03-23.
- ^ Lehtonen, Veli-Pekka (22 March 2024). "Ex-päätoimittaja Matti Apunen alaisensa sepittämistä lehtijutuista: "Journalismissa pitäisi olla tilaa leikittelylle"" [Ex-editor-in-chief Matti Apunen about newspaper stories concocted by his subordinates: "Journalism should have room for play"]. Helsingin Sanomat (in Finnish).