Category Archives: Journalism

“General Failure” by Thomas Ricks in The Atlantic

Must read. Though-provoking and spot-on, in my opinion.

On June 13, 1944, a few days after the 90th Infantry Division went into action against the Germans in Normandy under the command of Brigadier General Jay MacKelvie, MacKelvie’s superior officer, Major General J. Lawton Collins, went on foot to check on his men. “We could locate no regimental or battalion headquarters,” he recalled with dismay. “No shelling was going on, nor any fighting that we could observe.” This was an ominous sign, as the Battle of Normandy was far from decided, and the Wehrmacht was still trying to push the Americans, British, and Canadians, who had landed a week earlier, back into the sea.

Just a day earlier, the 90th’s assistant division commander, Brigadier General “Hanging Sam” Williams, had also been looking for the leader of his green division. He’d found MacKelvie sheltering from enemy fire, huddled in a drainage ditch along the base of a hedgerow. “Goddamn it, General, you can’t lead this division hiding in that goddamn hole,” Williams shouted. “Go back to the [command post]. Get the hell out of that hole and go to your vehicle. Walk to it, or you’ll have this goddamn division wading in the English Channel.” The message did not take. The division remained bogged down, veering close to passivity.

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Newspapers Are America’s Fastest-Shrinking Industry – The Atlantic

Newspapers Are America’s Fastest-Shrinking Industry – The Atlantic.

Rules of the game change as sports journalists compete against teams they cover | Poynter.

An interesting piece by Jason C. Fry of the National Sports Journalism Center at Indiana University. I strongly recommend sportswriters also pick up a copy of Fry’s book “Sportswriting for the Digital Age” on Amazon, too.

Rules of the game change as sports journalists compete against teams they cover | Poynter.

Facing trust issues in a post-newspaper age


The on-going slow-motion death spiral of newspapers has concerned me for quite some time. Normally I wouldn’t want to artificially prop up a business sector that can’t find a way to make itself profitable, but the loss of newspapers also means a serious diminishment of independent journalism.

That’s something I don’t want to see.

Sure, cable news networks will still be available to cover big events, with local TV news divisions filling in the blanks closer to home. But as we saw with the many of the Midwest tornadoes this past summer, cable news closes up shop in the late afternoon. While TV stations close to the action covered the devastation, folks like me — way off in the Pacific Northwest — scrambled to find out what happened through the Internet and social media sites.

And what about sports?

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Soapbox time!

image

Looks like I’m thinking about something, doesn’t it?  Once again, I’m dusting off the soapbox. In a surprise move though, this has very little to do with auto racing.

Excerpt from a Sportswriting 101 lecture

Okay, class. Let’s look at a case study from the Spring of 2010.

Tacoma News Tribune sportswriter Larry LaRue wrote a story about two conversations he had with unnamed Seattle Mariners players who told him legend Ken Griffy Jr. was asleep in the clubhouse and missed a chance to pinch-hit in the late innings of a close game.

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Digging up an old post

This post originally appeared in my blog, Trackside, on the website of The Herald newspaper, www.heraldnet.com. I’ve been gone from the paper for a while now, and my old articles are harder and harder to dig up out of the archives. Therefore, I’ve pulled this one out. It was originally published on Monday, July 20, 2009


And now for something completely different
By Scott Whitmore

Diatribe (di-a-tribe) – noun; a bitter, sharply abusive denunciation, attack, or criticism; Origin: 1575–85; deriv. of diatríbein, to rub away; Synonyms: tirade, harangue. — From Dictionary.com
OK, you’ve been warned. Read on at your own peril.

Who is/isn’t a member of the media


“Curious as to your definition of being in the media. …”    @christopherlion

I’d like to think I’m someone who doesn’t feel the need — the compulsion, practically — to share my opinion with all and sundry. I often go for days without telling folks what I think, while simultaneously browsing through the views, opinions and feelings of others (Ed: Ah, Twitter. What a great medium).

But as you can see above, my fellow blogger and Twitter friend ChristopherLeone of OpenWheelAmerica.com called me out the other day on an opinion I’ve given more than once without really stopping to define what criteria I use.

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