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Still something special about newspapers

Glendale : CA : USA | 4 months ago  
Views: 1,881


I was 11 years old the first time I had the feeling.

I don't remember much about the newspaper, other than to tell you it was a local weekly in Huber Heights, Ohio. I opened up the sports page, looked at the bottom of the broadsheet and saw my name and picture with a column about junior high school sports that I had written.

I had a 1961 crew cut and the shirt I was wearing had red and white stripes. I looked like someone out of a barbershop quartet.

But I was a newspaper man. Or maybe more accurately, a newspaper reporter.

I wish I could say it was the beginning of a lifelong romance with journalism, but after that one season in Ohio, it was 17 years before I wrote for a newspaper again. That was when the real romance began.

From the fall of 1978, when I returned to college and went to work on the school paper to January 2008, when I was one of the first victims of last year's massive job cuts in the newspaper industry, I was a journalist.

I worked for wonderful people and I worked for people I'm pretty sure will roast in hell. I worked for terrific journalists and I worked for others who had been promoted well past the level of their incompetence. I even worked for people who seemed eager to hasten the demise of America's newspapers.

If I live to be 90 years old, and people ask me what I did, I will say proudly that I was a journalist. I didn't work in the media; I worked in the newspaper business, and if 30 years from now I have to explain to people what newspapers were, I will do so proudly.

I covered almost everything -- sports, business, politics, entertainment. I even got to write a column three times a week for the best five years of my professional life. I wasn't Bob Greene or Mike Royko, but I had a following.

I'm currently reading Greene's latest book, "Late Edition: A Love Story," about the four summers he spent at the old Columbus Citizen-Journal at the beginning of his own career, and the best compliment I could ever pay him is to say that he gets it. He understands exactly what it is -- what it was -- that made so many of us fall in love with deadline journalism.

He understands what we're losing, too.

Says Greene:

"We were not in the 'information business.'

"That is the phrase that newspaper executives often use today, to explain what they do. It is intended to be heard as a descriptive, even boastful phrase, but it can sound vaguely desperate. With the newspaper business in trouble, some publishers seem ever eager to proclaim to the public that they're not in the newspaper business at all. They're in the information business. Web sites, cable television channels, drive-time radio partnerships, e-mail editions, Internet entertainment offshoots ... a newspaper, the implication seems to say, is only a part of it. It's as if the publishers want the readers to translate that as" only a small part of it."

The last boss I had in the newspaper business, the one who ended my employment, gave us a long speech on more than one occasion to tell us we were not in the newspaper business, we were in the information business.

The sad part of it is that he was a frightened little man who covered his fear with bluster and meanness. He was far too eager to write off newspapers, and he even said several times that he didn't care about the print edition at all.

Sorry, Steve, but when I read the New York Times or USA Today on my BlackBerry, it just isn't the same as holding a newspaper and seeing words in print. Probably the greatest non-sexual thrill I ever had in my life was when I walked the campus on Mondays during the year and a half I was editor in chief of my college paper and saw hundreds of people reading my paper and discussing it.

I never reached the heights of a Bob Greene, but I got to be Bob Greene on the local level for five years and there is nothing like writing stories about people and knowing they meant something. Knowing that someone was paying me to use my judgment to choose subjects, research them and write them.

Being a journalist was wonderful, and seeing my picture with my column three times a week was as good a feeling as I ever had professionally.

It was almost as good as when I was 11.

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  • Posted By birdpond birdpond | 4 months ago
    I'm old enough to have grown up with newspapers, too. I remember mornings around the breakfast table, hunting for the 'funnies' while my Dad scooped up the sports section and started grumbling. To this day, a cup of coffee and the paper mean 'family' to me.

    A few weeks ago I decided to actually go out and buy a Sunday paper, the AJC. I was taken aback at the scrawny, thin, filmy thing in my hands. The Sunday paper used to be something I had to cradle in my arms, not something I had to be careful didn't slip down between the seats of my car.

    This is a deeper loss than people realize.

    Enjoyed your story.

  • Posted By mona37 mona37 | 4 months ago
    wow this was actually a realization for me, more like a slap in my face! your so right! and really there is nothing more wonderful then knowing what actually you do and knowing it's worth and i'm sure it is applicable to everything that everyone does! great story!
  • Posted By amra1 amra1 | 4 months ago
    Californiamike, There always will be wonderful journalists who seek the truth and want to let the world know the truth regardless of what medium!

    It is not about the information business, it is about sharing with people the realities of issues and events surrounding them. It is about the stories, the facts and opinions. To me it is about engaging people/audience to learn what is going on. It is about impact on someone!

    Keep up the good work and I know the feeling of being 11, happy, secure and totally content!
  • Posted By JerrySatire JerrySatire | 4 months ago
    Yes, yes, I'm a newspaper junkie. The NY Mirror, The Herald Tribune,
    The Long Island Press, The Brooklyn Eagle, NYDaily News, The New York Times, The NYPost, Newsday, Village Voice, Queens Gazette, NYObserver,
    Gotham Gazette. Those were the days my friend, those were the days!
    [:-)
    JerrySatire
    www.Lampoon.net
  • Posted By lemondefrais lemondefrais | 4 months ago
    I agree..what ever happened to tradition,go get the paper on the weekends for breakfast with the family,,a true sit down at the table?
  • Reply By amra1 amra1 | 4 months ago
    The sad part is I only now have meals with my family on the weekend! my husband and I both work full time ...so we get home at odd hours, but kids have their set dinner time.
  • Posted By InspectorGadget InspectorGadget | 4 months ago
    I'm sure there are many more who feel as you do about the whole newspaper situation. It's unfortunate how the business has declined over the years, but its something that was inevitable. It's just faster and more convenient for people to get their news digitally from the internet, or through a smart phone. However, as long as there is some demand, there will be a supplier somewhere. So even though they are going down hill, newspapers aren't completely dead yet.
  • Posted By mellers84 mellers84 | 4 months ago
    I feel like I grew up reading newspapers and the beginning of the end. My parents have been avid newspaper readers since I was little and my grandparents were as well. To this day I am a huge clipper- I love cutting out things I read that are interesting. I keep them or pass them on to other people. I hate that with technology I have to write things down and if I want the whole story I have to print it.

    I think it may have always been in my stars to be a journalist because I want people to feel the same way about my writing. I want to have something that meaningful to say... I feel quite dorky when I get giddy opening my door every morning to my four newspaper subscriptions sitting on my porch.
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