Archive for January, 2009

No news is bad news

Saturday, January 17th, 2009

Occasionally I attend SPJ meetup events. Usually held once a month on the first Friday of the month, we sit around, drink beer and eat incredibly unhealthy food.

This one was different.

On Monday, the staff at the Seattle P-I was told that the paper was being put up for sale. If a buyer was not found, the paper would either fold or it would move to an online-only production.

Feel free to watch the entire heartbreaking announcement.

Editor Dave McCumber has started a blog called Sixty Days. It’s a really good read, by the way. For years the P-I has told the stories of Seattleites. Now, McCumber tells the stories of the newsroom. With only 60 53(?) days, you can be sure he won’t have time to tell them all.

With this in mind, an emergency SPJ meetup was called (like we ever need an excuse to get together and drink beer, hah). I wanted to show support for friends who work there. So after work I drove to the Whym Diner, not sure what to expect.

It was a somber gathering. But there was also hope. Monica Guzman told me about a plan while holding a ball gown she planned to take with her to the inauguration in D.C.

Thursday, a group of people got together and brainstormed ideas to save the P-I. The result is this page, no news is bad news. It’s pretty bare bones so far, but there’s a lot of potential. I signed up, and am waiting to see if I can do anything to help.

They’ve already got a Twitter hash tag, #nnbn, and a Flickr Page.

Toward the end of my time at the meetup, I was talking with a Seattle Times online worker, whom I’ve never met. As we were talking, I saw the Seattle P-I globe peeking out from between two buildings. If I hadn’t stood in that exact spot, the globe would not have been visible.

The text that rotates around the globe usually states “It’s in the P-I,”but due to damage from winter weather, the “t” in “It’s” was unlit. Will the globe go completely dark? I would like to think not. There are a lot of passionate people who want to see the P-I continue, and I am among them.

But for me, it’s not because it’s the P-I, though I love their online content and the several friends I’ve made there. For every news organization that folds, fewer stories are told and fewer governments and organizations are held accountable. Who will be the voice of record? The PR people? The spin doctors? They won’t get away with that if a good journalist is doing his or her job.

I know the Times will still be around, and that guy I talked to seemed frustrated that nobody cared about the Times. The Times newsroom has probably had probably about 80 layoffs or buyouts in 2008 alone and is likely relying on attrition to balance the 2009 budget. The challenge of the Times is more subtle. Competition makes everyone stronger, and the Times will be less by the loss of the P-I.

Keep an eye on no news is bad news, folks. There are a lot of people who talk the talk about saving journalism. It’s time to walk the walk. We have 53 days and counting.

Top three fun stories in 2008

Thursday, January 1st, 2009

Again I’ll post the top three fun stories of 2008. I wrote a post about this last year. The goal is not to write about the best stories I wrote, but the stories where I had the most fun reporting them.

3. Trent Henderson follows in his father’s footsteps

At the time when this story was written, the Mitchell Report was in the forefront of many players’ minds. Talking with a baseball scout and the players about steroids gave this story extra context. I am also grateful that my editors gave me time to work with the sports department to write this story. I’ve always enjoyed writing sports stories, and this was one of two I wrote in 2008.

2. A standard for failure

One of the most challenging tasks for reporters is making sure government speak is translated so an average reader can understand. I am not sure how often I succeed, but I think I did with this story. Every year in August, the results for the Washington Assessment for Student Learning are released to the public. And every year, reporters struggle with how to present that information to their readership. The data is complicated and it’s difficult to sum up that amount of information into an easy-to-digest format.

I had thought about how to do this for weeks, when I had an idea. Long story short, there are about three dozen categories schools must pass in No Child Left Behind. If the school fails one, the entire school fails. So I measured how many categories each school had passed as a percentage of the total they measured against (because not all schools use each category). The result is a tidy bar graph for each 10th-grade class in the county. A reader can quickly glance at the graphs and compare other districts’ 10th graders. They can also see that every district has lost ground because the standards have risen.

The story also gave school officials a chance to vent about the system. This was my first year reporting on the WASL results. Next year I’ll definitely reach out to more parent groups and students to gauge their thoughts.

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