BY DAN
KENNEDY
Serving the reality-based community since 2002.
Notes and observations on
the press, politics, culture, technology, and more. To sign up for
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For bio, published work, and links to other blogs, visit
www.dankennedy.net.
Friday, April 29, 2005
GOOD BUSH, BAD BUSH. There
were positives and negatives in President Bush's two main
pronouncements at last
night's news conference.
Unfortunately, the pattern with Bush is for the positives to be
strictly rhetorical, while the negatives actually get enacted as
policy.
Bush's hour-long encounter with the
press wasn't particularly newsworthy, so let me dispense with it in
three observations:
1. He said the right thing about
religion. Following last Sunday's Jesus-drenched
satellite-television special on Bush's hard-right
judicial nominees, the
president was asked by NBC's David Gregory whether he agreed with the
proposition that his choices were being filibustered because of their
religious views. Bush's answer:
I think people are
opposing my nominees because they don't like the judicial
philosophy of the people I've nominated. Some would like to see
judges legislate from the bench. That's not my view of the proper
role of a judge....
The great thing about America,
David, is that you should be allowed to worship any way you want,
and if you choose not to worship, you're equally as patriotic
as somebody who does worship. And if you choose to worship,
you're equally American if you're a Christian, a Jew, a Muslim.
That's the wonderful thing about our country, and that's the way
it should be.
Bush's statement that secular
people are "equally as patriotic" as those who are religious was
significant, and it's not something he always remembers to say. Too
often, Bush has allowed his presidency to be depicted as a right-wing
religious crusade, which pumps up his base, but which has had
the effect of intensifying the opposition as well.
Saying the right thing is
important, because it sets a tone. Still, I'm not too impressed with
the bone the president threw last night. That's because his answer,
really, was an exercise in having it both ways - in letting the
religious right do his dirty work for him, while he himself
ever-so-slightly disagrees. As CNN's
Jeff
Greenfield put it last
night, "he is once again the beneficiary of a base without tying
himself to that base on this particular matter."
2. His statements on Social
Security were a step forward. I'm not going to get carried away.
Josh
Marshall today is right to
mock the "media swoon" with which Bush was greeted. But though Bush's
embrace of "progressive indexing" is not new, his mentioning it in
such a public forum shows that he's actually ready to do something
he's never done with his tax cuts: help poor people by penalizing the
wealthy.
That said, the full
Robert Pozen plan that Bush
seemed to endorse ought to be dead on arrival. Under it, your
benefits will be cut if your "average career earnings" were $25,000 a
year or more. That's absolutely ridiculous, and never mind that those
earning up to $113,000 will be penalized even more.
Still, the notion that benefits
should be judiciously cut without hurting those who most need is
something that ought to be seriously considered. The late Paul
Tsongas was talking about this back when he was a senator in the
1970s and '80s. Cutting benefits for the truly wealthy, as well as
gradually raising the retirement age to 70, might not be a bad idea.
(If anything, the modern equivalent of 65, the retirement age set in
the 1930s, would be 75.)
Fortunately, the private retirement
accounts Bush still wants to set up appear to be a political non-starter, and I'm not going to
waste space on them except to say we should all have private
retirement accounts, and that they're called IRAs and
401(k)s.
3. Give him an out and he'll
duck the question. Not that that makes Bush unusual. By my tally,
the worst question of the night was this one:
Mr. President, you've made
No Child Left Behind a big part of your education agenda. The
nation's largest teachers union has filed suit against it, saying
it's woefully inadequately funded. What's your response to that?
And do you think that No Child Left Behind is
working?
The transcript doesn't indicate who
asked this question, and I didn't recognize the reporter (Bush
addressed him as "Richard"), but the flaw here is in the last
sentence. Bush was directly asked about the lawsuit
by the National Education Association and the accusation that NCLF
has not been properly funded. But Richard couldn't leave well enough
alone, closing with a general question that allowed Bush to puff NCLB
and run out the clock. Bush:
Yes, I think it's working.
And the reason why I think it's working is because we're
measuring, and the measurement is showing progress toward teaching
people how to read and write and add and subtract. Listen, the
whole theory behind No Child Left Behind is this: if we're going
to spend federal money, we expect the states to show us whether or
not we're achieving simple objectives - like literacy, literacy in
math, the ability to read and write. And, yes, we're making
progress. And I can say that with certainty because we're
measuring, Richard.
Etc., etc., etc.
Finally, after several minutes of
this, the hapless Richard, no doubt having instantly realized that
he'd fallen into a trap, interjected, "What about the lawsuit?" Bush
claimed he didn't know about it. But by that point, Bush already
appeared to have answered the NCLB question, and the moment was
lost.
MORE ON THE NETWORKS.
Jacques Steinberg, in today's New York Times, explains
what
was up with NBC and CBS
last night. Frankly, I'd have more respect for them if they'd simply
refused to carry the news conference. Cutting away with a few minutes
to go was a no-class act.
OUR FRIENDS THE IRAQIS. I'm
a day late with this, but if you missed it, you've got to read
Thanassis Cambanis's account
in yesterday's Boston Globe of Iraqi political figure Mithal
al-Alusi. Alusi is a pro-Western secularist who would like to see
better relations with Israel, and who has visited the Jewish
state.
Alusi's reward: his two sons were
killed in an assassination attempt aimed at him, he's been charged
with treason for his trip to Israel, and he's been shunned by
virtually the entire Iraqi political establishment.
This is what more than 1500
American troops have died for?
posted at 11:29 AM |
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Thursday, April 28, 2005
NET STUPIDITY. I'll write
more about George W. Bush's news conference tomorrow. Tonight, just a
brief observation about CBS's and NBC's decision to dump out of the
closing minutes so they could switch to their entertainment shows:
unbelievable!
I'd been watching NBC when, a few
minutes before 9, the network suddenly cut away to Brian Williams.
Williams chit-chatted with Tim Russert for a few moments, and that
was that. I also noticed Bob Schieffer wrapping things up on CBS. Of
the three broadcast networks, only ABC stuck with it until the
end.
Mind you, just before 9, Bush made
a joke about wrapping up so that the networks could get back to fun
and games. Little did he know that two of them had already left. And
it's not as if he went over by much. By my watch, he ended at 9:01.
I'm not sure how to characterize
the nets' decision. Disgraceful is a bit much; pathetic is more like
it. Do they really expect anyone to take them seriously?
posted at 9:43 PM |
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NEW IN THIS WEEK'S
PHOENIX. The religious right attempts
a coup against the federal
judiciary. Will it succeed - or prompt a backlash?
posted at 11:22 AM |
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Wednesday, April 27, 2005
MORE ON BAY WINDOWS.
Co-publishers Jeff Coakley and Sue O'Connell have posted
this
statement on the
newspaper's website.
posted at 3:00 PM |
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FREE SPEECH, 2; HOMOPHOBES,
0. Media Log has learned that the gay-and-lesbian newspaper
Bay
Windows will return to
two supermarkets, Stop & Shop and Shaw's, perhaps as early as
this week.
After objections were raised by the
anti-gay Article 8 Alliance, Stop & Shop declined
to carry the free weekly,
citing the explicit personal ads. Bay Windows has reportedly
moved to stop publishing such ads, and now Stop & Shop has
decided to welcome the newspaper back.
The situation with Shaw's has been
murkier, but I'm told Bay Windows will be back there,
too.
Looks like Brian Camenker is going
to have to update
his website.
posted at 1:28 PM |
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Monday, April 25, 2005
KELLER AT LARGE. Longtime
WLVI-TV (Channel 56) political analyst Jon Keller, whose contract is
up this month, has decided to leave the station. Here's an e-mail
that went out today from Channel 56 news director Pamela
Johnston.
Please join me in wishing
Jon Keller the best of luck as he leaves us to pursue new
opportunities. Jon has been with The Ten O'clock news for 14 years
and through his tenure has emerged as the number one local
political reporter in Boston. It is to our credit that Jon is
about to embark upon bigger challenges. As you know, Jon is the
consummate team player... bringing terrific story ideas to the
table every day, always willing to work unique angles, dedicated
to uncovering exclusive stories and the first to pitch in when
breaking news happens. For many of us, myself included, Jon has
been an uncompromising friend and confidant for years. He will be
missed. Jon Keller's last day will be Monday, May 9th.
No official word yet on what those
"bigger challenges" might be. Keller declined to comment, and his
agent, Stephen Freyer, would say only, "We're working on details and
ironing things out, and hopefully things will be worked out in a
couple of days." But it's no secret that political reporter John
Henning has retired from WBZ-TV (Channel 4), and that Keller is
already a commentator on its sister operation, WBZ Radio (AM
1030).
Channel 4 spokeswoman Ro Dooley
Webster put out a statement a little while ago that doesn't exactly
discourage such speculation. "CBS4 News has no announcement to make
at this time," she said.
posted at 6:31 PM |
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I'VE FINALLY MADE UP MY
MIND. Not to beat this to death, but since I've finally decided
what I think about the Bob
Ryan column on Nomar
Garciaparra and his possible steroid use, I see no reason to keep it
to myself.
1. It wasn't unethical. I
don't really have a problem with a columnist writing about something
that people have been talking about for years. It's inconceivable
that anyone believes Garciaparra is (or was) a steroid user strictly
as a consequence of reading Ryan's Friday column. The mainstream
media's gatekeeper role is long gone, and it makes no sense for a
paper like the Globe to pretend that if it doesn't cover
something, people won't know about it. But -
2. It was useless. If a
mainstream news organization is going to travel down speculative
paths it might have avoided pre-Internet and pre-talk radio, it at
least needs to add some value. Ryan's column was nothing more than what
you might hear on sports radio. Obviously a columnist can't take the
time to poke into a subject the way an investigative reporter would.
But it strikes me that if you're going to speculate about
Garciaparra's devastating injury, there are two obvious questions you
might want to ask:
- Did Garciaparra stumble
out of the batter's box in such an awkward way that anyone might
have suffered the same type of injury, with the tendon pulling
away from the bone?
- Was Garciaparra's injury of
the sort that is known to be associated with steroid
use?
Media Log reader E.K. offers some
excellent ideas for a follow-up:
Rather than throwing out
steroid claims which will never be proven, I'd rather see
reporters check out the Athletes Performance Center in Arizona,
where Nomar works out all winter. He, Schilling, and Arizona
Diamondbacks Matt Kata and Robby Hammack also work out there and
all have had some pretty unusual and serious injuries in the last
couple of years (you can Google those last two to get the
specifics). Maybe they're just doing the wrong exercises to be
good baseball players. I'm sure David Wells would agree.
Finally, this
is just hateful.
posted at 10:45 AM |
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Sunday, April 24, 2005
MORE ON RYAN. Bob Ryan's
speculation over Nomar Garciaparra and steroids is not playing well
with two of his fellow sportswriters today. His Globe
colleague Gordon
Edes writes:
Garciaparra has had a
startling run of injuries, but in the absence of any evidence, it
is treading very dangerous ground to suggest that they were the
result of his intense training program, or the muscle-building
supplements (like creatine) that he has acknowledged using, or
illegal substances he has vociferously denied using, an assertion
backed up by Red Sox medical officials and teammates.
Here is Sports Illustrated's
Stephen
Cannella:
The point is, we don't
know if Garciaparra ever has used steroids. It would be easy to
name 50 other players about whom there were, or are, similar
whispers. But there's a difference between rumors that swirl
around the batting cage and what should make it's
[sic] way into print or onto our TV screens. Let's
face it: There's enough circumstantial evidence to indict nearly
everyone who's worn a major-league uniform in recent years as a
steroid user.
But without proof or probable
cause - a failed drug test, a public admission in court or to a
journalist, even an accusation in a tawdry tell-all book -
reporters can't try to deduce who's using and who isn't based on
appearance, home-run power or proclivity to major
injuries.
The Herald's
Tony
Massarotti takes a pass
today (click here
if you want to skip the top; although it's about D-Lowe, so you might
want to read it), writing a beefy Nomar item without mentioning
either the Ryan controversy or the S-word.
I'm not sure if I'm going to follow
this daily - it looks like it might blow over pretty quickly - but
for further developments, keep an eye on the Phoenix's
Mike
Miliard and on the
invaluable Boston
Sports Media Watch.
posted at 9:27 AM |
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Saturday, April 23, 2005
RYAN'S GOT THE JUICE. For
years now, the possibility that Nomar Garciaparra's home-run power
and brittle physique were the result of steroid use has been a
regular topic of idle baseball talk. Still, it kind of took my breath
away yesterday when the Globe's Bob Ryan said it
right
out loud following
Garciaparra's devastating injury earlier in the week.
Ryan's column was not even close to
the first time that Garciaparra has been linked to steroids. For
instance, last December 4, the Globe's Gordon Edes wrote this
in the middle of a piece on baseball's steroid scandal:
Former big league player
Mark Grace told the Arizona Republic that he doesn't expect
anything to change in a sport where a onetime 155-pound shortstop,
Nomar Garciaparra, was proudly featured bare-chested on the cover
of Sports Illustrated, flaunting a torso that appeared to be made
of coiled steel.
On February 11, the Herald's
Gerry Callahan, in writing about Jose Canseco's steroid claims,
said:
Canseco hit just 52 home
runs in his two seasons in Boston. He never wore a glove or a hat
and spent more time in front of the mirror than on the field. But
he was no pariah. He seemed to be friendly with a number of Red
Sox veterans, including Mo Vaughn and Roger Clemens. Could a young
Nomar Garciaparra have learned anything from Canseco when the two
played together at the end of the '96 season?
But until Ryan came along, it's
always been questions, hints, and denials from Nomar's former
teammates. Ryan took it quite a bit farther than that, writing on
Friday:
Look, I'm hardly the first
person to raise the question. When he was with the Red Sox, who
was bold enough to link our fair shortstop, a noted workout guy,
with the dreaded S-word? But he did go from, like, standard
athlete issue normal to ultra-buffed in one winter, and he has
been - there is no other way to say it - systematically breaking
down for the past six years, so you can't help wondering just what
he's been putting into his body other than Wheaties and sirloin
steaks. If we're going to assume that Mark McGwire's physical
breakdown was because of a reliance on steroids, then it would be
quite logical to adopt the same line of thinking about Nomar. It's
a legitimate question.
Ryan did tone it down right after
that, noting that it was possible Garciaparra's physical woes were
the byproduct of a flawed workout regimen rather than steroids. But
still, he'd said what everyone was thinking, and it makes a great
deal of sense - even though he presents no actual evidence.
Personally, I suspect Ryan is right on target. But it does raise an
interesting question about media ethics, doesn't it?
Garciaparra yesterday dismissed the
charges, and his Chicago Cubs manager, Dusty Baker, ripped into Ryan.
According to the Chicago Tribune, Baker
said, "How can you
speculate that? That's not fair to Nomar and to the reading
public.
I can't comment on what somebody says. But it's unfair,
period." The story slyly notes that, in the past, Baker had defended
Barry Bonds and Sammy Sosa on steroid charges.
In the Chicago Sun-Times,
Steve Stone has this
to say:
All of us have suspicions
as to who might have done what. However, it's really irresponsible
to come out publicly and say this guy did this unless you know
definitively that's the case. And to have horrific injuries and
ascribe all of them to steroids might be overstating it a touch.
From Nomar's standpoint, if he says it, I will believe he didn't
do it.
What's happened to Garciaparra is
sad. Whether he used steroids or not, his body has betrayed him, and
it's getting harder and harder to believe he'll ever be a full-time
player again.
What Ryan did wasn't completely
novel. Rather, he put the steroid accusation out there somewhat less
ambiguously than had been done in the past, and he did it right after
Nomar had suffered a major injury, guaranteeing that his column would
get a lot of attention. I'm still not quite sure what to make of it.
Ryan leveled a serious accusation for which he has no actual proof,
but for which there is a load of circumstantial evidence. Baseball is
in the midst of a crisis over its inability to get a handle on
juiced-up ballplayers. And now Nomar is the poster boy for all
that.
It will be interesting to see how this all plays out.
posted at 8:31 AM |
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Friday, April 22, 2005
SID STILL VICIOUS. Sidney
Blumenthal has a really
terrific piece in
Salon detailing the political alliance between George W. Bush
and Pope Benedict XVI, noting that then-Cardinal Ratzinger was a
virtual running mate of Bush's in 2004. Blumenthal writes:
In 2004 Bush increased his
margin of Catholic support by 6 points from the 2000 election,
rising from 46 to 52 percent. Without this shift, Kerry would have
had a popular majority of a million votes. Three states - Ohio,
Iowa and New Mexico - moved into Bush's column on the votes of the
Catholic "faithful." Even with his atmospherics of terrorism and
Sept. 11, Bush required the benediction of the Holy See as his
saving grace. The key to his kingdom was turned by Cardinal
Ratzinger.
Benedict, as Blumenthal notes, was
behind the call for priests to deny communion to politicians who
favor abortion rights, something that caused John Kerry considerable
grief.
Keep in mind that you can be a
faithful Catholic who believes that abortion is wrong, a view that
Kerry seems to hold quite sincerely. That's not good enough for
Benedict, though; instead, he insists that politicians legislate that
view for everyone else, Catholics and non-Catholics alike.
Anyway, read the whole
piece.
NAMING NAMES. Media Log does
not normally like to get bogged down in typos and misspellings, but
here I go for the second day in a row. You'd think that, by now,
someone would have fixed the spelling of Providence police chief
Dean
Esserman's name in the
photo caption on the
Globe's website.
(And perhaps now someone will.)
It's also misspelled on the front
page of the Globe.
GLOBAL DOWNSIZING. The
Herald's Greg Gatlin reports
that up to 40 positions in the Globe's finance and IT
departments are being eliminated. Hmm ... who's going to fix the
computers?
RADIO RADIO. I had a great
time mixing it up with Scott
Allen Miller this morning
on WRKO Radio (AM 680). Ms. Mass
Resistance managed to
generate precisely one call during my two-hour stint, and she seems
none
too happy about
it.
She also seems confused about who
and what I am, so let me borrow a line from my friend
Barry
Crimmins: I'm whatever
you fear most.
posted at 1:12 PM |
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Thursday, April 21, 2005
SCOTT AND DANNO? Hmm, I
don't know. "Dan and Scotto" sounds better, don't you think? Anyway,
I'll be filling in for Peter Blute tomorrow from 7 to 9 a.m. on
Blute
and Scotto, on WRKO
Radio (AM 680).
AND PEDRO WILL BE PITCHING!
Sharp-eyed Media Log reader P.S. called my attention to a half-page
house ad on page E10 of today's Globe. It's for an offer you
can refuse: "Subscribe to The Globe at 50% off and you could win two
tickets to Red Sox Opening Day!"
Just in case you're confused about
when opening day is (or was), the ad goes on to say that the grand
prize is "Two tickets to Red Sox Opening Day - Monday, April
11."
Follow the Web
address that's listed
(adjusting for the typo; sheesh), and you get "We're sorry. This
offer has expired." Indeed.
MORE CHANGES AT THE
HERALD. I'll miss his Monday column, but I'm glad that
Joe
Sciacca will be staying at
the Herald. Here is Mark
Jurkowitz's update on the
Herald's ongoing cost-cutting efforts.
NEW IN THIS WEEK'S
PHOENIX. Speaking of the Herald, I've got
some
advice - at no charge! - on
how to save the struggling tabloid. Click on over to page
two, and you'll find my
thoughts on the announcement that the Atlantic Monthly will be
moving from Boston to Washington.
posted at 12:06 PM |
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Wednesday, April 20, 2005
MEDIA LOG UNDER ATTACK! I
just learned that the anonymous "Mass Resistance" blogger has
come
after me, and is urging
readers to send me e-mail. To judge from the site, I'm hardly the
first person to have his or her e-mail address given out for purposes
of harassment. But unless I'm missing something, you can't talk back
to the anonymous blogger. Nice!
posted at 4:55 PM |
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MY WORLD AND WELCOME TO IT.
Media Log reader "F&S" (for "Frank and Sue," judging from the
incoming address) writes:
Those "hatemongers" at
Article
8..how dare they speak
out and stand up for decency? Look at all the good the gay groups
have done for our state and our country now that they've come out?
Because of these various gay groups, we now have state funded
"instructors" teaching our kids how to properly perform
constructive things such as...oral sex, how to figure out that
maybe the reason you can't get a girlfriend is because your gay?,
and of course proper fisting techniques 101. Face it
Dan...nothing, but nothing good comes out of these groups. Go back
in the closet and perform your sick sexual fantasies. It's odd how
when a priest touches a child it's big news on every station, but
when groups such as NAMBLA want to reduce the age for consensual
sex to some ridiculously low age there is no OUTRAGE!
Hey I'm with you Dan...Bay
Windows is just another great piece of media that will truly
"help" better this country. I mean when we represent everything,
and anything goes...I guess we really represent nothing. Hey Dan,
why don't we just all walk around naked and marry our pet goats
while we're at it then we could have sex with them in the street
too! It's all about tolerance right? As a nation we should be able
to tolerate that right? c'mon TOLERANCE. You know what's sad about
this whole thing Dan? Its that some people like yourself can no
longer discern between right/wrong or good/bad and where it will
lead us. These same people (like yourself) for the most part are
self serving idiots who never grew up nor learned anything about
societal responsibility.
We've got problem with teenagers
now having sex parties and doing all kinds of messed up
things.....geeez, why do you think that is Dan? To much sex being
spoon fed down their throats.
Good Job Dan....we need more
intellectuals like yourself in the world to straighten us out so
we're all more "tolerant"!
A few observations:
- What is it about homophobes and
bestiality? It seems that folks like F&S can't get through one of
their screeds without mentioning the critters. I actually took a look
at this phenomenon a couple of years ago. Click
here. (And is the "pet
goats" reference some sort of subliminal George W. Bush
thing?)
- I got called an intellectual.
Woo-hoo!
- F&S does an excellent job of
keeping the caps-lock key under control, which is not usually the
case in e-mails like this.
- I'm offering a free subscription
to Media Log to the first reader who can find one instance in which
I've said anything nice about NAMBLA.
posted at 4:37 PM |
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A MAN AND HIS MEDIA SITE.
Jack Shafer has a smart
commentary in Slate
on how Romenesko's
media site, part of
Poynter.org,
has changed the rules for both journalistic misbehavior and media
criticism. One thing he leaves out, perhaps because it hits too close
to home for him (and me!), is that those of us who write about the
media for a living have grown accustomed to asking ourselves: How
is this going to play on Romenesko? I'm not sure that's entirely
healthy.
Personally, I have two rules: (1)
shamelessly hype my stuff in e-mails to Jim Romenesko, and (2) never
complain if he chooses to take a pass. I have noticed he's not crazy
about linking to blog items, which probably makes sense: there would
be no end of it if he headed down that road.
Shafer writes that Romenesko "never
tips his hand to reveal his views or prejudices." I agree, but not
everyone does. Andrew Sullivan, a frequent critic, has
called
Romenesko "a hard-line liberal who routinely refuses to link to any
conservative media criticism." I don't get it, and I don't think it's
because I'm a hard-line liberal. Shafer certainly isn't.
COSMO LIKES AMORELLO. The
Herald's Cosmo Macero Jr. has a
counterintuitive take (sub.
req.) on embattled Big Dig chief Matt Amorello. According to Macero,
if Governor Mitt Romney gets his way and forces Amorello out, the
result could be a dubious - and possibly even dangerous - method of
repairing the leaks.
As for Howie Carr today ... good
grief. Did you know that state
college presidents make a
lot of money? Howie, you and I might remember who Gerry Indelicato is
- or was - but I'm not sure anyone else does. The problem with
recycling is that you occasionally have to throw something new on top
of the compost heap.
posted at 11:45 AM |
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Tuesday, April 19, 2005
HOMOPHOBIA ON (AND OFF) THE
RACKS. Brian Camenker and his merry band of hatemongers at the
Article
8 Alliance are at it again.
For weeks, they've been pushing for a
ban on the gay-and-lesbian
newspaper Bay
Windows at local
supermarkets. The Herald's Greg Gatlin has the
latest today, reporting
that the paper has, indeed, been dropped at Stop & Shop and
Shaw's.
But it looks like Camenker's
victory might be temporary - a spokesman for Stop & Shop says
Bay Windows is likely to be back if the two sides can work out
a deal to carry the paper without the personal ads. The spokesman
adds that the Boston Phoenix is not carried for the same
reason. (I didn't know that! Oh, well.)
The Article 8 folks, bless their
twisted little hearts, have also included a link to this
Washington Blade article
about what you can do to get Bay Windows back on the racks.
Thanks, Brian.
And here's a gutless
anonymous homophobe with a
blog who's getting involved in the action.
Good grief. I need a
shower.
posted at 9:25 AM |
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Monday, April 18, 2005
SCHEER LAZINESS.
Connoisseurs of Media Log as well as the late, lamented
Spinsanity.org
will smile knowingly at Howard
Kurtz's item today on
columnist Robert
Scheer. The hapless pundit
picked up a story about William Bennett and the pope from the
Houston
Catholic Worker, of all
places, without bothering to check it out. Says Scheer: "I should
have been more careful." Yes, yes, a thousand times yes.
Here's
the column.
Kurtz also makes contact with
Barbara Stewart, the freelancer behind the Globe's fabricated
seal-hunt story. I feel bad for her. This seems like one of those
inexplicable errors in judgment that's going to hurt her for
years.
posted at 11:33 AM |
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Sunday, April 17, 2005
DOT DOT DOT. Cruise on over
to BostonHerald.com
today and take a look at what they've done to Peter Gelzinis. Just in
case this changes before you can see it, the tease reads, "Numbskull
fan's fiancée is world's biggest ho..." Now, that's language
that Howie Carr might use, but I was startled to see it atop a
Gelzinis column.
Click
and you get the full headline: "Numbskull fan's fiancée is
world's biggest homer."
Deliberate or accidental? Given the
way some other words are cut off on the home page, I'm willing to
believe it was an accident. But not a happy one.
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Saturday, April 16, 2005
THE HIGH ROAD. Mike Barnicle
makes a
classy exit as a regular
columnist for the financially strapped Herald, telling the
Globe's Mark Jurkowitz: "I didn't want to be sitting around
collecting a check from the Herald while someone who has been
over there for 25 years or 25 minutes was getting laid off. I like
the paper. I like the people. I wish them well."
Howie Carr, take note!
MORE ON THE SEAL HUNT THAT
WASN'T. The Washington Post's Howard Kurtz today
weighs
in on the matter of the
Globe and freelancer Barbara Stewart, who was dropped after it
was revealed that she'd fabricated a story on the Canadian seal hunt.
So
do the Herald's
Brett Arends and Jay Fitzgerald. (Disclosure: Kurtz and Arends, in a
sidebar,
quote me.)
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Friday, April 15, 2005
PRETTY FUNNY STUFF. As with
many websites, BostonPhoenix.com uses Google Ads to place
advertisements related to the subject matter, based on searching the
text. Well, if you click on my
first item about the phony
seal hunt off the coast of Newfoundland and Labrador, you will find
an ad urging you to vacation in - yes - Newfoundland and
Labrador.
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SEAL OF DISAPPROVAL. Here
are a
few more details, courtesy
of Reuters, on the partly fabricated seal-hunt story that the
Globe ran on Wednesday. Look for more tomorrow. Also,
Romenesko has found the
original story.
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AND NOW, THE REST OF THE
STORY. Today's Globe contains an "Editor's
Note" disclosing that, on
Wednesday, the paper ran a story by a freelancer who reported on a
seal hunt off Newfoundland and Labrador that had taken
place the previous day. Except that it didn't. The note
says in part:
In fact, the hunt did not
begin that day; it was delayed by bad weather, and is scheduled to
begin today, weather permitting. The article included details of
the day's hunt as if it had taken place and without attribution or
other sourcing, as if the writer had witnessed the scene
personally. Details included the number of hunters, a description
of the scene, and the approximate age of the cubs.
The note concludes that the unnamed
writer had committed "clear violations of the Globe's journalistic
standards" and has been dropped.
Here is an account
from the CBC - posted today - that corroborates the Globe's
findings:
ST. JOHN'S - After a
couple of delays, the seal fishery off the northeast coast of the
island has started.
Sealers have been waiting to go
to the Front, the traditional name of the seal hunt area on the
northeast coast, since Tuesday.
Heavy ice prompted the
Department of Fisheries and Oceans to defer the opening of the
hunt, while the coast guard juggled several dozen requests for
icebreaking assistance.
The hunt opened early Friday
morning.
The freelancer's story has been
dropped from the Globe's website, but it's available on
LexisNexis, with the "Editor's Note" attached. Here is the most
startling paragraph, given that she wasn't actually there. Remember:
the following did not really happen.
Hunters on about 300 boats
converged on ice floes, shooting harp seal cubs by the hundreds,
as the ice and water turned red. Most of the seals were less than
6 weeks old.
Wow. The freelancer's name, by the
way, is Barbara Stewart, and it appears that this was the third story
she's written for the Globe.
On February 20, the paper published
a piece by Stewart on a deal that Newfoundland premier Danny Williams
had made with the national government that will bring more oil
revenue to the impoverished province.
On January 2, Stewart reported on a
lawsuit brought by former residents of Africville, once Canada's
oldest black community, razed in an urban-renewal effort in Halifax,
Nova Scotia, in the late 1960s.
MORE ON THE ATLANTIC.
In retrospect, the tragic death
of Michael Kelly may have
sealed the fate of the Atlantic Monthly, which will move from
Boston to Washington by the end of the year. Kelly was a real
Washington guy - a native in a town of transplants. But after he
became editor of the Atlantic, he found that he loved it up
here, buying a big place in Swampscott near the ocean and commuting
back and forth between Boston and Washington, where he helped run the
National Journal, the Atlantic's sister
publication.
Kelly's frequent presence in
Washington was probably sufficient to make owner David Bradley feel
like he was connected to the Boston office. But then Kelly stepped
aside as editor so that he could cover the war in Iraq. And, as we
all know, he was killed in an accident after the Humvee in which he
was riding came under fire.
Bradley felt a kinship to Kelly,
and I don't think he ever got over Kelly's death. But that is no
excuse for Bradley now to dismantle a small but essential part of
Boston's cultural landscape. This is a bitter reminder that owners
can do whatever they like. If Bradley doesn't want to publish the
Atlantic here, he ought to find out whether he can find a
local buyer. Maybe not; but did he ask? (And is it too late?)
Bradley has gotten a lot of praise
- in retrospect, more praise than he deserves - for his stewardship
of the Atlantic. The magazine just won a National
Magazine Award for fiction
- right after dropping
fiction except for a
special annual edition and the website. (No, I don't read the
fiction, but I like to know it's there.) And now this.
Bradley tells
the Washington Post: "It's a Boston institution. It's a huge
disappointment ... and I'm really sad about it. I've actually written
an apology which I'm sending to all of the Boston staff tonight." Oh,
please. He's portraying this as an economic move, but is he really
going to save all that much money by no longer having to pay rent at
77 North Washington Street?
Managing editor Cullen Murphy won't make the move, so there's another loss. The Atlantic now becomes just another Washington political magazine. And an increasingly neoconservative one at that. Ugh.
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Thursday, April 14, 2005
A BOSTON INSTITUTION LOST. A
long-rumored, much-dreaded move has come to pass: the
Atlantic
Monthly, a legendary
Boston institution, is being uprooted and moved to Washington, the
home of owner David Bradley. Romenesko has posted the
memo.
This is truly awful news. Bradley
has been a reasonably good steward since buying the magazine from
Mort Zuckerman, but owners come and owners go. Bradley may have the
legal right to yank the Atlantic out of Boston, but he doesn't
have the moral authority, any more than he would to roll up the
Boston Common and spread it out a few blocks from Capitol
Hill.
In October 2003 I did a
column
on how the magazine was faring following the tragic death of Michael
Kelly, who had stepped down as editor in order to report on the war
in Iraq. I asked Bradley about rumors of a Washington move, and he
responded by e-mail that "the honest answer is that this is proving a
harder issue than I had imagined. My original thinking (and
statement) was that Atlantic would remain in Boston. As it
remains. The problem, principally for my account, is that I'm finding
it hard to lead a culture at such distance. Whatever my skills, they
do not include a strong public presence, a natural gift for
leadership."
Well, now he's done it. Almost as
bad, managing editor Cullen Murphy has decided to step down rather
than make the move. It's one more sign that Boston just doesn't
matter anymore.
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ANOTHER ONE BITES THE DUST.
The Pennsylvania company that owns the Nashua Telegraph has
purchased
the Cabinet,
a small, (formerly) independent weekly in Milford, New
Hampshire. Founded in 1802, the Cabinet had been owned
by the same family since 1809. Cabinet Press publishes three other
papers as well, and those have been included in the deal. (Thanks to
Media Log reader S.L.)
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TERM LIMITS. Globe
ombudsman Christine Chinlund has finished her tour of duty, and will
become co-editor of the suburban Globe South supplement. Question:
will the ombudsman slot be filled? Before Chinlund got the post,
editor Marty Baron and publisher Richard Gilman briefly considered
doing away with it. (See this
Phoenix story from
August 23, 2001.)
My guess is that the post will be
retained. Three years and a half years ago, the last time there was a
vacancy, the Globe's corporate parent, the New York Times
Company, was well-known for its aversion to ombudsmen. But following
the Jayson Blair scandal and the resignation of top editors Howell
Raines and Gerald Boyd in the spring of 2003, the Times went
the other way, creating a "public editor" position and handing it to
a reasonably high-profile outsider, Daniel
Okrent. I thought Okrent
did a splendid job, and now he is due to be replaced by
Byron
Calame, a retired deputy
managing editor at the Wall Street Journal.
(An aside to a few concerned Media
Log readers: Calame is from the WSJ's news side, which has a
reputation for being unusually segregated from the paper's
ultraconservative editorial pages. Forget the traditional
"church-state" separation; this is more like India and
Pakistan.)
The Globe would do well to
follow the Times model: a respected outsider who will serve
for a limited time, and who will then leave the paper entirely. I
would imagine that being the ombudsman is miserable enough without
having to wonder about how your colleagues will receive you after
your ombudding days are through.
Chinlund's new job was announced in
an internal memo sent out by regional editor David Beard, and sent
along to Media Log by an in-house source. The full text
follows.
All,
She talked the talk; now she'll
walk the walk. Again.
Christine Chinlund is heading to
Globe South as the regional edition's new co-editor, replacing the
Business-bound Mark Pothier.
New arrivals know Chris as the
paper's ombudsman, a tough task in which she has prevailed over
the past three years. Chris was also the Globe's foreign editor
during Sept. 11, as well as a former national editor and head of
the paper's Focus section. Before that, Chris covered the 1988
presidential campaign and was a member of the Spotlight
investigative team (which anyone who has read Gerry O'Neill and
Dick Lehr's "Black Mass" soon would recognize). She began at the
paper as a reporter in Metro's [as the City & Region
section used to be known; this is not a reference to the free
commuter tab] then-Suburban SWAT team. Like Pothier, she was a
Nieman Fellow (note: not a requirement for the job).
After listening to readers and
judging the paper for the past three years, Chris, with co-editor
Kim Tan, has a new chance to make a difference. At Globe South's
launch party 3 1/2 years ago, David McCullough said the section
had a responsibility to a region that he claimed was the root to
half of America's history. McCullough also said the Globe had a
responsibility to place in context the local news that
cost-cutting competitors in the region had been increasingly
unable to do.
The regional editions are
fortunate to have Chris aboard. She begins April 25. Please join
me in welcoming her.
Dave
BOOBY PRIZE. The annual
Jefferson Muzzles have
been announced, and among
the winners - given for doing the most to suppress freedom of speech
- is the US Marshals Service, for going above and beyond the call of
duty in protecting Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia from the
media.
The Jefferson Muzzles, awarded
every year since 1992 by the Thomas Jefferson Center for the
Protection of Free Expression, are the inspiration for the
Phoenix's regional Muzzle
Awards, begun in
1998.
NEW IN THIS WEEK'S
PHOENIX. While television network news flounders
toward the future, the
present belongs to NPR.
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Wednesday, April 13, 2005
FISH, BARREL, MARK STEYN.
This is way too easy, but here I go anyway. Yesterday I was reading
right-wing columnist Mark
Steyn - who, you will not
be surprised to learn, is a major fan of the red-faced ranting UN
ambassador-designate, John Bolton - when my eyes alighted upon this
extraordinary passage:
The assumption seems to be
that, with things going Bush's way in Iraq, Lebanon, Egypt and
Saudi Arabia, Bush needs to reach out by stiffing the counselors
who called it right and appointing more emollient types who got
everything wrong. Each to his own. But as I see it, the question
isn't why Wolfowitz and Bolton should hold these jobs, but why
Kofi Annan, Jacques Chirac, John Kerry and assorted others still
hold their jobs. (Mark
Steyn, Chicago Sun-Times,
3/20/05)
Now, I realize it has become a sign
of terminally unhip liberalism to point out that we supposedly went
to war to root out Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction.
Nevertheless, I thought it would be fun to review Steyn's
pronunciamentos before and during the war. Roll the tape:
There may be valid
arguments for not going to war with Iraq, but not the ones that
begin: Oh, even if Saddam has weapons of mass destruction, he'd
never use them against the West. Never bet on a dictator's
rationality. (Mark Steyn, Jerusalem Post, 1/22/03)
Let's say Saddam has long-range
weapons of mass destruction. If he nuked Montpelier (Vermont),
Chirac would insist that Bush needed to get a strong Security
Council resolution before responding. If he nuked Montpellier
(France), Iraq would be a crater by lunchtime. (Mark Steyn,
Chicago Sun-Times, 2/7/03)
"Weapons of Mass Destruction.
Remember them? Not a single one has yet been found" (Bill Neely,
ITV, April 10). MBITRW [Meanwhile Back in the Real World]:
Actually, I almost wish this one were true. Anything that turns up
now will be assumed to have been planted. If I were Washington,
I'd consider burying anything I found. After all, an America that
feels no need to bother faking justifications for invasion would
be far more alarming to most Europeans. Instead, horrible things
will turn up, but will never be "conclusive" enough for the
French, who've got all the receipts anyway. (Mark Steyn, Daily
Telegraph, London, 4/12/03)
Maybe the Bushies took Steyn's
advice and buried the weapons. Because here, lest we forget, is the
conclusion of Bush's hand-picked weapons inspector, David
Kay:
Two days after resigning
as the Bush administration's top weapons inspector in Iraq, David
Kay said Sunday that his group found no evidence Iraq had
stockpiled unconventional weapons before the U.S.-led invasion in
March. (CNN,
1/26/04)
Now, a fair-minded observer would
note that Steyn never came right out and said that Iraq had weapons
of mass destruction - rather, he claimed that Bush's war was
justified because of strong suspicions that Iraq had such weapons.
True enough. Check the record, and you'll see that even Hans Blix
thought Saddam possessed such weapons.
But what Steyn omits, of course, is
that UN inspectors were on the ground, assiduously searching for
those weapons, and were forced to leave only so that Bush could get
his war on before the desert got too hot. Bush's mistake wasn't in
being wrong, or in overhyping the evidence; it was in
short-circuiting the very process he'd agreed to as an alternative
to war. Sorry for the italics, but this stuff just drives me
crazy.
And remember, Mohamed ElBareidi,
director-general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, had
already pretty much cleared Iraq of possessing nuclear weapons. (Yes,
Saddam wanted nukes. News value, please?) Except that folks
like Bush, Dick Cheney, and, of course, Steyn didn't believe
ElBareidi. Except that ElBareidi was right.
But what about the progress Iraq
appears to have been made? I'm glad; I hope it lasts; and it could have been accomplished far more effectively if Bush had been willing to build a genuine international coalition. Since the weapons turned out not to exist, then there really wasn't any hurry, was there?
Now, let me return to trying to
figure out what Bush was right about, and what Chirac, Annan, and
Kerry were wrong about. The mind boggles.
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BARNICLE UPDATE. It looks
like the relationship between Herald publisher Pat Purcell and
columnist Mike Barnicle hasn't gotten any better since January.
That's when I reported
that all was not well, and that the Herald had killed a
Barnicle column about former FBI agent John Connolly, now in federal
prison for corruptly enabling organized-crime figure James "Whitey"
Bulger.
As Barnicle's one-year anniversary
with the Herald approached recently, Purcell told me that the
columnist would be staying. Now Barnicle's former employer, the
Globe, carries
an item today (scroll down
to "Job Description") that Barnicle and Purcell met recently, and
that Barnicle "agreed to redefine and renegotiate my role." Whatever
that means.
In any case, Barnicle remains under
contract. But with Purcell looking to slash $7 million from his
struggling tabloid's bottom line by June 30, this is one deal he
probably wishes he'd never made.
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Monday, April 11, 2005
PAT PURCELL, YANKEES FAN.
It's true! It's true! Here is the lead of a short
profile (free reg. req.)
written by Shorenstein Center director Alex Jones for
CommonWealth
magazine in 2001:
When the Yankees came to
town to play the Red Sox in the 1999 playoffs, Pat Purcell,
publisher and owner of the Boston Herald, showed up at
Fenway Park in a Yankee cap and jacket; he even wore a pinstripe
shirt. It was an in-your-face demonstration of defiant team
loyalty, displayed in enemy territory with a swagger intended to
be a thumb in the eye of every Red Sox fan.
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TEAMSTERS V. THE
HERALD. The Teamsters plan to hand out leaflets about
their ongoing contract negotiations with the Herald at today's
Red Sox opener. The full text of the Teamsters' press release
follows.
HERALD STRIKES OUT IN
CONTRACT NEGOTIATIONS WITH TEAMSTERS
Union to Leaflet Fans at Red Sox
Home Opener
(Boston, MA) - Teamsters from
Local 1 in Boston, Massachusetts will hand out leaflets to fans at
the April 11, Yankees-Red Sox game in protest of the continued
refusal of the Boston Herald management to address job security
and healthcare concerns of their mailroom employees during
contract negotiations.
More than 50 workers have been
working for two years through ongoing negotiations with the
Herald. Management at the newspaper, led by owner and Yankee fan
Patrick Purcell, continues to only provide the bare minimum to the
employees for healthcare insurance and will not share any facts
regarding the future of their jobs. With the Herald's recent
announcements concerning the plans to reduce union jobs in the
newsroom, the workers are understandably concerned.
WHAT: Leafleting
WHO: Teamsters Local Union 1
Members
WHERE: Fenway Park, Boston,
Massachusetts
WHEN: Monday, April 11, 2005,
1:00 p.m.
Two observations: (1) Purcell does,
indeed, have New York ties, but I have no idea whether he's a Yankees
fan; (2) if management would like to respond, I will post it as soon
as I'm able. Just send an e-mail to dkennedy[a]phx.com.
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Saturday, April 09, 2005
TECHNICAL DIFFICULTIES. No
one other than Media Log e-mail subscribers will know what I'm
talking about. Yesterday, though, Blogger.com was down for hours, and
I was unable to post any content. I finally deleted the post and
wrote a new one this morning.
But I've discovered that even
though I couldn't upload yesterday's post to the Web, e-mail
subscribers received it anyway. So if you're confused, that's why.
(Unless you're confused by my prose, which I deal with
below.)
LEXIGRAPHICAL DIFFICULTIES.
Media Log reader M.B. suggests that my description of inside
information regarding the Globe's business plans as
"dirt"
was, uh, imprecise. After consulting a
reliable source, I would
agree. And no, I don't suppose "lexigraphical" is really a word.
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YOU WIN ONE, YOU LOSE ONE.
The Globe exposed a significant ethical problem at the
Herald yesterday - which the Herald corrected - but
then had to run a rather abject "Editor's Note" about one of its own
stories today.
First, the Herald. On
Friday, Globe reporter Raphael Lewis revealed
that former Romney-administration official Charles Chieppo, now
getting paid to write a weekly
column for the
Herald, had just landed a $10,000 state contract to promote
the governor's environmental policies. Weirdly, the Herald
first stuck by Chieppo; does he really have that many readers? But
late yesterday, after learning that Chieppo also had a $32,000
contract with the Massachusetts Convention Center Authority, the
Herald said goodbye.
And by all means, let's keep those
conflicts of interest coming. In today's Globe,
Lewis
quotes Stephen Burgard,
director of Northeastern University's School of
Journalism:
As a regular op-ed
columnist for one of two major papers in Boston, Chieppo couldn't
go near two big subject areas without creating a conflict. Both
the environment and tourism are significant arenas of public
interest for editorial pages. It got to the point where he
couldn't write credibly for the paper that hired him or,
ironically, be of much use as a hired pen for either
client.
My conflict in presenting this: I
work as an adjunct professor for Burgard, and next fall will become a
full-time visiting professor.
Another conflict! Though Chieppo
was a perfectly legitimate story, it was overkill for the
Metro to make it the page-one lead yesterday. Of course, it
escaped no one's attention that the Globe's corporate parent,
the New York Times Company, owns 49 percent of the Metro, and
that the free commuter tab is now sharing content with the
Globe.
Now, the Globe. Yesterday
the paper led with yet
another frightening story
about the Big Dig. Reporter Mac Daniel's lead:
Numerous fire exit doors
in the Big Dig tunnels are either boarded up or missing, and many
fire exits are blocked, because of work to find and plug the
hundreds of leaks in tunnel walls, a Globe survey found
yesterday.
In a project marred by monumental
leaks and falling debris, Friday's piece seemed like just one more
piece of the puzzle. Who would have doubted it? But as the paper
acknowledges in an "Editor's Note" today (appended to Daniel's
story), it was wrong. Globe reporter Michael Levenson has a
fuller explanation here.
By the way: if the Herald
has anything on either of these stories today, it's not on the
paper's website,
other than some AP stuff.
HYPOCRISY DEFINED. A
Romenesko
reader posted a link to this wonderful Mitch
Albom column from 2003
about Jayson Blair. The white Detroit Free Press columnist
used Blair's fall as an object lesson on the hazards of affirmative
action. Albom wrote: "It happens because newsrooms are so devoted to
diversity, they sometimes overlook what no normal business would
overlook: the incompetence of an employee."
Now that Albom has been
exposed
for writing a semi-fabricated column (does that make it a
half-pipe?), perhaps we will be treated to a similar lamentation on
the risks of loading up the newsroom with arrogant white
guys.
Does this mean that Albom didn't
really interview the five people you'll meet in heaven? And if Morrie
Schwartz came back, would he claim Albom misquoted him?
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Thursday, April 07, 2005
SPECIAL NARCISSIST EDITION!
The Boston Herald's Greg Gatlin writes
about me in today's paper.
He includes some amusing quotes from the paper's editorial editor,
Ken Chandler, as well as some real news: John Carroll, executive
producer and on-air talent of WGBH-TV's Greater
Boston, is leaving to
teach at Boston University. Carroll and Terence Burke - a Greater
Boston producer who's leaving to go to work for state attorney
general Tom Reilly - will be missed.
And Ken, be careful what you wish
for. My successor in this slot just might have you longing for the
good old days.
More Gatlin-generated news: he's
got some interesting
dirt on plans the Boston
Globe is making to hand out free shoppers in the
suburbs.
NEW IN THIS WEEK'S
PHOENIX. I put my deep theological expertise to work in
explaining the phenomenon of Pope
John Paul II: loved,
admired, and irrelevant.
Also, checking in with Globe
science reporter (and former Phoenix news editor)
Gareth
Cook, who earlier this week
won the Pulitzer Prize for explanatory journalism.
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Wednesday, April 06, 2005
PURCELL SPEAKS. Boston
Herald publisher Pat Purcell popped up on WGBH-TV (Channel 2)
last night to discuss the future of his troubled paper with Emily
Rooney on Greater
Boston. (So did I, in
the set-up piece.) Purcell's strategy apparently was to sound candid
without making any news. He succeeded.
Asked about the devastating
cutbacks he announced on
Monday - 35 out of 140 or so union positions will be eliminated in
the newsroom, and that only accounts for $2 million of the $7 million
he intends to slice out of all operations by June 30 - Purcell blamed
the advertising market, and asserted that other papers, including the
Boston Globe, have seen at least as steep a falloff as the
Herald.
"You've got a period of economic
softness that you have to fight your way through," Purcell told
Rooney. "We've fought our way through for the last 20 years, and
we're going to fight our way through for the next 20 years." He also
insisted the Herald will be competitive on news, noting that,
since 1984, the number of newsroom employees (union and non-union)
has grown from 118 to 210. In light of that, he said, the paper
should be able to eliminate some positions without affecting the
coverage too much.
Purcell added that the paper now
has "all sorts of other information that we can utilize," citing the
Internet and his own chain of more than 100 community newspapers in
Eastern Massachusetts.
Asked by Rooney what role
high-priced star columnists will play in a dramatically downsized
Herald, Purcell replied, "We're taking a look at
everything.... I think it's safe to say that we're looking at all of
our expenses." However, he added, "We're not going to do anything to
shoot ourselves in the foot." Translation: Barnicle, Howie, et
al. stay if Purcell is convinced that getting rid of them would
cost him too much in terms of circulation. Otherwise - look
out.
Asked about the possibility that he
might embrace the free-distribution model being tried by the
Examiner papers in San Francisco and Washington, Purcell
conceded there has been "a lot of speculation," adding, "We have a
business plan to do our own free competitor to the Metro." But
what about the Herald itself? He noted that the reincarnated
San Francisco Examiner has been on the streets for only six
months, and the DC Examiner for less time than that, making it
"a little funny that people [moi?] say this is a model
for success. Who knows?"
Asked whether the Herald's
current round of downsizing is being driven by the New York Times
Company's acquisition of a 49 percent share of Boston's Metro
- something Purcell tried unsuccessfully to fight by filing an
antitrust complaint with the Justice Department - Purcell replied,
"It just makes it that much harder to compete." He noted that the
Times Company now owns the Globe, the Worcester Telegram
& Gazette, a chunk of New England Sports Network (through its
minority share of the Red Sox), and nearly half of the Metro.
However, he claimed, in the three years that the Boston Metro
has been in existence, it "really didn't have an impact on
us."
Asked whether he would consider
selling if he's unable to succeed with a slimmed-down Herald,
Purcell said, "The only way you can be sold is if somebody's
interested in buying it. I think this is more of a strategy to make
sure that we are viable. We've fought the good fight for a long
time." (On February 25, I reported
that Purcell had had serious talks with the Hollinger chain, which
owns the Chicago Sun-Times and a string of suburban papers.
However, since that time, principals at Hollinger have taken to suing
each other, making a purchase pretty unlikely.) Purcell added that
the other segments of his local media holdings - Community Newspaper
Company (CNC) and his Internet properties - are doing
well.
Two years ago, the Herald
morphed itself from a somewhat sober purveyor of local news into a
glitzy, gossip-heavy tabloid. Rooney asked Purcell, "How will you
settle on what works? Is Boston really a tabloid town?" Purcell
didn't quite answer the question, replying that the Herald has
been a tabloid for a long time and that the Globe is now
partners with a tabloid, the Metro. Come on, Pat - Rooney was
clearly asking about sensibility, not size. Still, he then went on to
say that the Herald would retain what he called its
"entertaining" approach, and added that he's convinced it's had some
success. "We're seeing less erosion. I think we've arrested the
slide," he said. He also offered an unsolicited shoutout to business
editor Cosmo Macero, saying, "Cosmo is doing an absolutely phenomenal
job on the business pages."
Rooney's final question: will the
Herald appeal a
$2.1 million libel verdict
that it lost earlier this year in a case brought by Superior Court
judge Ernest Murphy? "We're still in the process of evaluating that,"
he said. "I think in all probability we're going to
appeal."
THE LONG GOODBYE. You will
find news about what
I'm up to in the "Names" column
of today's Globe. Scroll down to "Last Writes."
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Tuesday, April 05, 2005
BODY COUNT. The
Globe's Mark Jurkowitz has more today on those
newsroom
cutbacks at the
Herald. Thirty-five bodies amounts to 25 percent of the union
workforce in the Herald newsroom - and it sounds like plenty
of non-union newsroom employees are going to find their heads on the
chopping block as well. This is ugly, ugly stuff, and it makes you
wonder what kind of a paper publisher Pat Purcell intends to put
out.
Worth noting: the Herald has
been pretty good about covering its own story, whether it was the
libel trial earlier this year or the paper's economic woes. But
nothing today - although there is this
AP story on the paper's
website.
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Monday, April 04, 2005
A PULITZER FOR THE
GLOBE. The Boston Globe wins
its second Pulitzer Prize of the Marty Baron era and its first since
2003, when it received the public-service award for its coverage of
the pedophile-priest crisis.
This time, science writer Gareth
Cook wins for explanatory
reporting, "for explaining,
with clarity and humanity, the complex scientific and ethical
dimensions of stem cell research." His portfolio is online
here.
Gareth was the Phoenix news
editor for several years in the late '90s.
TOUGH TIMES FOR HERALD
STAFFERS. Word out of One Herald Square this afternoon is that
publisher Pat Purcell has told the unions he needs to eliminate 35
jobs from the newsroom as part of his goal of cutting $7 million in
expenses by June 30.
Given that there are already fewer
than 150 union positions in the newsroom, this is bound to have a
serious effect on coverge. More on this as it develops.
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WHAT IS THE "CULTURE OF
LIFE"? Sister Helen Prejean has a touching
op-ed in today's New
York Times on how Pope John Paul II decisively moved the Catholic
Church against the death penalty. She writes: "The effects of the
pope's leadership will be felt for years to come, both in the highest
echelons of the Catholic hierarchy and among the Catholic faithful in
the pews."
But then there's the
story of Kathleen Moltz and
Dahlia Schwartz, a lesbian couple with kids from Detroit, who are
fighting to retain their health benefits after Michigan voters
approved an anti-gay-marriage ballot question last fall. Last month
the state attorney general, Mike Cox, ruled that the initiative bans
health-care benefits for same-sex partners as well.
Would John Paul have approved of
such wanton, dehumanizing cruelty? Oh, yes. Because what has happened
to Moltz and Schwartz, and thousands of other couples, is supported
by the plain meaning of the Church's 2003 JP-approved
statement
on same-sex marriage, which
ordered elected officials who happen to be Catholic to fight against
marriage rights by any means necessary.
That's the statement that carries
such lovely phrases as "serious depravity" and "intrinsically
disordered." And no, those are not references to people who would
deny health benefits to families.
Cox, according to his
official bio, is Catholic.
We have John Paul to thank for having to point out such things again,
45 years after we had thought that John F. Kennedy had rendered it
unnecessary.
The pope can do whatever he likes
within his Church, and people can decide whether to stay or leave.
But civil society has got to speak out against the Church's
increasing insistence on messing around with the lives of the
non-Catholic majority.
GO, LARRY! The
question
of the weekend goes to
Larry King: "Jim, you think he's with Jesus now? We only have 30
seconds."
The answer didn't really matter.
But "Jim" - James Caviezel, star of The Passion of the Christ
- averred that, yes, the pope was with Jesus.
If Caviezel was right, perhaps J.C.
is setting J.P. straight on gay marriage right now.
TERRI SCHIAVO AND THE
DISABLED. Last week I was talking with a friend, a staunch
disability-rights activist who believed Terri Schiavo's feeding tube
should not have been removed. My answer - something to the effect
that Schiavo wasn't so much disabled as virtually brain-dead - didn't
satisfy either me or her.
Then I read this fine
essay in yesterday's
Boston Globe by Michael Bérubé and Janet Lyon,
academics who are also the parents of a child with Down syndrome.
Bérubé is the author of Life
As We Know It, which I
recommend as a way of thinking about disability and humanity, despite
Bérubé's digressions into post-modern literary
criticism.
Anyway, I'm sending my friend the link.
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Saturday, April 02, 2005
POSITIVE QUOTE TK.
This
is hilarious. (Via InstaPundit.)
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R.D. ON J.P. The networks
aren't getting it done; CBS isn't even around a good part of the
time. Neither are the cable channels, although CNN's got Aaron Brown
in Rome and Christiane Amanpour in Krakow, so at least there are some
signs of intelligence on the ground.
Then I hit upon New England Cable
News, and saw an outstanding retrospective on the pope's life by R.D.
Sahl. This is what you want to see. Click here,
then poke around. It's right near the top as I write this.
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Friday, April 01, 2005
ANOTHER "P" WORD. I
couldn't
care less if Jeff Gannon is
a prostitute. But a plagiarist? That's another matter. Gannon, whose
real name is James Guckert, was briefly famous a while back after he
was exposed as a Republican activist - and former (?) sex toy -
posing as a reporter at White House press briefings. Well, really
now. Who's to say who's a reporter?
Now, though, the Raw
Story is
reporting
that a Salem News staff writer has accused Gannon of
plagiarizing one of her stories from a couple of years ago, when she
was working for the Waltham Daily News Tribune. And her former
editor backs her up.
Plagiarism is a loaded word, and
I'm not going to use it myself. Based on the evidence as presented,
it looks like Gannon lightly rewrote a piece by Melissa Beecher and
passed it off as his own work. At the bottom, there's even a
copyright notice for his ex-employer, the GOP-affiliated
Talon
News. Not
good.
Raw Story editor John Byrne
writes that Gannon did not respond to two e-mail requests for
comment. On his blog today, Gannon writes,
"Friday is a travel day for me, so don't think my silence means you
should start seaching [sic] Ft. Marcy Park." What a sense of
humor!
CLARIFICATION. Media Log
reader M.D. (it doesn't stand for "medical doctor," but it could) has
taken me to task for referring
to the late Terri Schiavo
has having been "brain-dead" for the previous 15 years. Based on all
credible evidence, her condition might have fit a lay definition of
the term; but it most certainly did not fit the medical definition.
"Virtually brain-dead" would have been more accurate.
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MEDIA LOG ARCHIVES
Dan Kennedy is senior writer and media critic for the Boston Phoenix.