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The death of newspaper reporters and editors

For a number of years, I was a newspaper reporter. I started as a sportswriter and moved through the “cops and courts” beat and eventually became a political reporter, covering the legislature, local government and elections. I enjoyed the job because every day was different and you got to experience and learn about a lot of things. But I see by the local daily that the newspaper reporter is dead.

Cory and others have looked more closely at the latest round of Gannett layoffs, non-renewals, “retirements” or whatever you want to call them, in the local daily’s newsroom. One of the more ironic things — and evidence that money is more important than quality — is Cory noting that although it just got rid of some very experienced and excellent reporters, the daily had ads out seeking new ones. Cub reporters, of course, can be paid a lot less than someone who knows what they’re doing.

But that isn’t the death I’m talking about. The local daily’s recent moves also demonstrate that social media and related schlock have made “reporters” and “editors,” i.e., journalists, irrelevant.

  • One senior editor at the paper is now a “content strategist” while another and the assistant news editor are something called a “content coach.” Not only does the latter senior editor “coach” content, she is also responsible for “storytelling.”
  • A photographer is the “consumer experience director.” (The newspaper ought to be ashamed just by how it changed its job titles from English to buzzwords.
  • A business reporter and editor is now also an “audience analyst.”
  • The new sports editor isn’t the sports editor; he’s the “lead sports producer.”
  • The position I used to call managing editor is now apparently “engagement editor.”

This may come off as simply grumpy old man/reporter stuff. After all, I still much prefer the dead tree version of a newspaper and think Facebook, Twitter, etc., aren’t places to get the news you can trust. But back in the day content wasn’t created or massaged by strategists, experience directors or audience anlysts. The difference is seen in the title. You were a reporter and that was your job — to report the news.

It may be a new world for newspapers but changes like this makes me wonder if actual news reporting also is a victim.


I don’t so much mind that newspapers are dying — it’s watching them commit suicide that pisses me off.

Molly Ivins, March 23, 2006

Weekend Edition: 12-6

Interesting Reading in the Interweb Tubes

  • The Wanderers (“Once lost, people with dementia often begin to wander toward a past they think is present, returning in mind to a period in their lives more familiar than the foggy now. They are lost literally and lost in history[.]”)

Blog Headline of the Week

Innovative Murder Attempt of the Week

  • An Arizona woman this week was sentenced to a year in jail and four years probation for putting “fecal matter” in his hospital IV

Bookish Linkage

Nonbookish Linkage


I woke up thinking a very pleasant thought. There is lots left in the world to read.

Nicholson Baker, The Anthologist

What do you mean you lost Grandma???

Yesterday’s local daily carried what is undoubtedly the most intriguing classified ad of the year:

Classified

Granted, it doesn’t say whether the urn was empty but would you open it to find out? If it contains ashes, you gotta wonder how long it took someone to notice grandma, grandpa or whomever wasn’t in the car any more. Even the simple question of why you take an urn into a truck stop to begin with is thought-provoking.

Of course, maybe someone was simply complying with an over-the-road trucker’s wish to spend eternity at their favorite truck stop.


Life does not cease to be funny when people die any more than it ceases to be serious when people laugh.

George Bernard Shaw, The Doctor’s Dilemma

Weekend Edition: 11-29

Interesting Reading in the Interweb Tubes

  • Where Is America’s Real Youth Rebellion? (“The dream of youthful rebellion is so intense and so ubiquitous exactly because actual youthful rebellion has never been so dead.”)
  • The Origins of Aggressive Atheism (“It is hard not to come to the conclusion that atheists have spent a far greater deal of time thinking and writing about religion than religious people ever have of atheists as a group.”)

Bookish Linkage

Nonbookish Linkage


The three true ages of man are youth, middle age, and how the fuck did I get old so soon?

Stephen King, Revival

Weekend Edition: 11-15

Interesting Reading in the Interweb Tubes

  • Winter Is a Black Hole: How I Deal With Seasonal Depression (“The challenge to me each winter is in finding ways to work with feeling low like depression is some stupid, inconvenient friend who needs a place to crash for a few months and who also wants to shit all over my floor.”)
  • What Washington Refuses To Admit (“…the leadership in both parties cannot help themselves when they have a big shiny military and see something they don’t like happening in the world.”)

(Rear) Blog Headlines of the Week

Bookish Linkage

Nonbookish Linkage


Depression is melancholy minus its charms.

Susan Sontag, Illness as Metaphor