Tuesday, January 24, 2006

Media Literacy Bureau
Since I have started working as a news editor I have realized that there is a vast ocean of difference between what the general public thinks news writing/reporting is and what it actually is. What could convince me of such a perception gap?

Two words - freelance reporter.

A freelancer at the college level is usually somewhere in the experience level of the average American, that is, totally unversed in the professional techniques of newswriting, but well steeped in the pervasive media that surrounds us.

So what does America think news writing looks like? Apparently something like this:
Read on...

Something happened on January, 24 2006 at 2:15 PM. People were really upset. Nicholas Copper who was there on the scene with the Police exclaimed that there was very little they could do and also that Italian vehicles are often dangerous. He also said he was just, "happy no one was hurt." This wasn't a real story they said.

This is all very, very wrong, but illuminating. If I were to write the same story it would follow a totally different convention, and it would look something like this:

A University student seriously injured himself and stopped traffic on E. 13th Avenue while attempting to jump over the busy street on a Vespa motor scooter using a homemade plywood ramp Tuesday afternoon.

Eugene Police spokesman Nicholas Copper said that most pedestrians had no idea what the man was planning to do, so the police were not called until the man rammed his red Vespa scooter through a Lane Transit District Bus window and halted traffic for almost an hour.

Copper said the man was not wearing a helmet and cautioned against performing dangerous stunts without the proper training.

"Although I can't condone trying to jump a busy intersection, you'd of thought this guy would have at least used a motorcycle," he said. "This is not a real story, by the way, but I am glad no one else was hurt."

I believe the problem here is that the general public has no idea how much work goes into attribution. That means taking the many specifics of a news story like dates, names, locations, titles and times, and weaving them together. The perception that we are mostly speculating about incidents while recounting a tale over a glass of lemonade, one that is heavily reinforced by casual and shifty television news reports, is unfortunate.

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Sunday, January 22, 2006

Dept. of Set Decoration
For those of you not in the know, and I'm assuming there's a fair amount of you, I have recently moved with the woman I love into a sparkling new apartment full of promise. This marks the first time either of us has dared to co-habitate, but we're about as optimistic as you can get.

Some perks and features of my new place:
- Dishwasher: We had a dinner party last night with 14 people at the house. I cannot - no - will not subject myself to the torture of handwashing 14 people's dishes.
- Garbage disposal: Um, I cook. Enough said.
- Double-height ceilings: The whole place feels so much bigger.
- Sliding french-doors: This will be so nice in the summer when it's hot.


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Thursday, January 19, 2006

I'm back, baby!
After an unsuccessful run on a web hosting server which I have deemed unstisfactory I have returned. Look for loads of new glorious images with my tons of bandwidth. Pics of the new apartment are coming soon.

Other blogs of note

  • Eric Neuman To infinity and beyond

    So maybe it is rocket science - this brother does it all with style.

  • Jeffrey Morgenthaler: Eugene mixologist

    The progenitor of the Richmond Gimlet has got some great spirits and tips up his sleeve.

  • Jess Mauer Gone Native

    Read what happens when an Alaska native drops Portland for the tropics.

  • Dahvi Shira: LA-la Land

    My old classmate now find herself working the red carpet.

  • Brownie Points: PDX Foodie Heaven

    If you must read a Portland food blogger (and there's lots) read this.

  • Stuff Designers Like: Style and mirth

    Who says life isn't pretty? It's a hot new project I'm putting together.