The Atlantic

We May Never Know the Full Story of COVID-19

Grit plus luck was sufficient to break open the SARS story. I doubt the same will be true for COVID-19.
Source: Getty / The Atlantic

Updated at 1:07 p.m. on October 26, 2020.

Journalism, even practiced at its highest levels, has an element of chance. Reporters spend hours riding in taxis or trains or airplanes, or on the telephone or online, hoping to land that meeting that might yield a quote or secreted document resulting in a story. And if the story is particularly noteworthy, that’s a scoop. A big scoop for a reporter is like hitting your number at a roulette table.

In 2003, when SARS was threatening to become a global calamity, those of us covering China had to work long hours and put our chips down. SARS barely registered in the United States. The invasion of Iraq was looming, and the resources of big news operations were devoted to the Middle East. But for those of us in East Asia—I was the editor of Time Asia—SARS was what mattered. I never had a big scoop. I told myself that was because I’m not lucky. But others were able to report on the disease with a remarkable level of detail.

[Read: A glimpse at the coronavirus’s possible legacy]

Looking back on the SARS

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