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January 26, 2004

What journalism is all about...

John M. Glionna works for the Los Angeles Times--a big-time national newspaper. And he apparently thinks it's just sooooooo cute that the cub reporters working for the 21,000-circulation Concord Monitor in New Hampshire get to cover the big campaign. In fact, these adorable little cubs sometimes even scoop the big-time reporters. Imagine that!

But, alas, the campaign will eventually end:

Then staffers, many in their early 20s, return to covering the school board meetings and local sewer issues that are the stuff of small-town dailies.

"It's not true depression but more like 'Do I really have to go back to covering this stuff?' " said Monitor editor Mike Pride. "They go from reporting on why Howard Dean didn't back sending troops to Iraq to whether a local town should buy a new school bus."

The problem with this is that, to the community, the decision to buy a new school bus is anything but trivial. And any reporter who doesn't understand this also doesn't understand his/her impact on the community as a journalist. While I'm sure it's fun to be a big-time insider, the fact of the matter is that such seemingly mundane political decisions are the stuff of life for most communities.

Further, the community doesn't need Mr. Big-time Glionna taking such journalism less than seriously.

Posted by acline at January 26, 2004 11:03 AM | | Spotlight