

(Which is why I shy away from pitching stories to ideologically driven publications. But that doesn't mean that's how you have to end. Sometimes you have a basis for such a thing. Now, having a notion, an angle, a thesis going into a story is fine. In other words, it's hazardous to your job to actually do your job the way it's supposed to be done. They tend not to like when you bring them real-world results different than what they pre-determined what you should bring them. It's never served my career to come to an independent, reporting-based conclusion instead of the one an editor has dreamed up ahead of time.

The only problem was getting an assignment with a pre-determined conclusion, which invalidates the whole premise of the job, and which is hugely common in the newspaper world as well. I use to call my version of magazine writing a "reported conclusion," which my old boss liked very much. I stopped working for him, and I don't mean my old boss at Chicago magazine. That magazine editor, by the way, didn't so much as want me to have an opinion, but to have his opinion, which, typical for him, wasn't a very good one. (It's even easier in the digital world than in print, with the ease of search, the availability of video and the tool of linking.) It just takes skill, hard work and a certain mindset. The lack of time and resources is not an excuse, either it can be done nonetheless. That's probably worse than simply writing an opinion because it's disguised as truth when it's the least truthy version of journalism of all. In newspaper writing, the problem is of a slightly different sort - without the time or resources to report deeply enough, reporters (and their editors) fall back on the formulas of objectivity that aren't objective at all, but instead just catalog the unvetted claims and outright lies of everyone quoted in a story. No, it's not about having an opinion! It's about reporting deeply enough to state the truth! When a local magazine editor told me once that "In magazine writing, you can have an opinion, that's what I teach my students," as if I'd never heard that before, I blanched. Some people mistake that, though, for subjectivity. If you do your reporting deeply enough, you can write/speak with authority - that's objectivity, because the facts are incontrovertible. Once again showing us the difference between what the media says and the truth - all in the name of "objectivity." OTD in Beachwood History in 2016, I wrote this item: 8. See also: Media Watchdog Suspends Beachwood Reporter.

This week we talk to about suspending the site after 15 years, learn about ending money bail in #Illinois, and explore privatizing #Chicago recycling with /VQQJpnb0xQ- OTL Radio January 23, 2021 Here's the latest news from Beachwood HQ: The Papers By Steve Rhodes / Posted on January 25, 2021 If someone close ignores COVID restrictions, explain that every family needs to help lessen cases/hospitalizations. The position of the stars billions of years ago will not impact your life today.Īdmit nothing, blame everyone, be bitter. 1 Songs Black History Baseball History Wisconsin History Computer History Earthquake History Middle Earth History Reddit History Real History #OnThisDate History New York Times History Music History Rock History No. Irish twin's muscles and flesh turn to bone. A young man over 7-feet tall learns if he's still growing.
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