Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Owens leaves Gatehouse

Howard Owens has left Gatehouse with little explanation, although Dan Kennedy says Owens promises one soon.

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Monday, February 23, 2009

Do you eat it, or shoot it?

Spotted in a restaurant ad in our local "Zipsheet":

Toppings:
Hummas ($1.00)


You know, that famous terrorist group seeking to free the chickpea and establish the Republic of Garbanzo ...

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Friday, February 20, 2009

Dupont Reviews 'PCJ'

A tip of the hat to Nancy McKenzie Dupont of the University of Mississippi for her positive review of "Principles of Convergent Journalism" in the latest issue of Electronic News.

I can't link directly, but there is a PDF of it on the reviews page at the PCJ wiki.

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Friday, February 06, 2009

TVs advised to prepare for newspapers' demise

And now you can add this to the mix.

Some of us have been saying for years that if newspapers die, others will try to fill the void. (Don't pile on -- I'm not saying it will be anywhere near what the traditional newspaper newsroom can produce, and a "they can't match the quality" argument is somewhat pointless in this "good enough" age. And I am NOT saying I want them to die).

Now from Lost Remote is "How local TV sites can take advantage of newspapers" -- basically a recipe to TV stations of how to do it over the cold, dead bones.

If this doesn't get your dander up, you truly are working in the wrong business. I'd post a copy of it in every newsroom ... jus' sayin'.

(Besides, a little competition never hurt anything.)

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Thursday, February 05, 2009

Snobbery in defense of grammar is no virtue

MSNBC has an article out this week basically asking if our current stressful social/economic situation might be pushing "spelling snobs" and "grammar grunions" over the edge. (Or see the Netvine version that has comments.)

Forget for the moment the framing of that article -- why do people who insist on correct spelling have to be "snobs," etc?

Let's just say it's time for everyone to back down and take a deep breath.

I think author Diane Mapes has the kernel of the situation, but a bit of a wrong explanation for it. I really think a lot of the explosive growth we are seeing in the "correcting class" is the result of:
  1. Failing to realize language (and punctuation) has always changed.
  2. There is a certain amount of "situational" logic in our language, so as situations change, it's likely the language will, too.
  3. The digital-powered speed at which changes now propagate.
First, let's try to agree on two things, one that language has always changed and second that all those "rules" you were taught in school are really just guidelines, useful in most cases when we are trying to communicate, but just waiting to be broken for style or emphasis or when they just plain get in the way of communicating.

In other words, take a deep breath, folks, and relax.

Yes, I'll agree that it is distressing to see some of the punctuation, spelling, etc., that appears on signs and in marketing materials. But the world is not going to hell in a grammatical hand basket. There have always been variations that appalled the learned class (think Cockney - hell, one of the most memorable musicals of all time is based on that very premise). And those variations, many of them adopted from other languages, have made it into almost every language (think of the long-running, sometimes not-so-good-natured debate over what to call a hot dog in French).

The key thing in all this is the digital speed of change. The thing that let Sister Conan the Grammarian teach you year after year that you don't begin a sentence with "But" or "And" was that the books you were using might well have been 15 years old, and were still considered up with their times. Today, 15 days - heck, 15 minutes - old is getting a bit dog-eared.

And you're not going to stop that.

That is unsettling to lots of people because it takes one less certain thing out of their lives. We all have things that we rely on to not change much so that we can concentrate on the other things that produce greater benefit or represent greater danger (as we perceive it). Frankly, screwing around with whether the acceptable use of "disinterested" or "begs the question" has changed, or whether "too" should be set off by a comma, isn't something a lot of us have at the top of our to-do lists. As well it should be.

Some of us are paid to agnonize over such things (and decide when the teaching should change), and we're part of the problem. We tend to cling to our shibboleths because, well, it's easy. How many people really want the "excitement" that a constantly changing job brings? So why would teachers and the like really want to have to constantly change what they are teaching of the language? (After all, for the math teacher, 2+2 always equals four, right?)

Finally, there has been a fundamental change in the way we learn language. We (or our children, to probably be a bit more correct) tend to learn our language these days by speaking it. In our video/audio saturated society, it's only natural. But it is a much different way from the way "previous generations" used to learn it - thorough their Dick and Jane readers and the daily newspaper and the Hardy boys books, etc. When we learn language by speech, we get all the additional nonverbal cues that add to and define meaning - body movement, pitch, etc. We don't have to learn homophones for understanding. When we learn "Standard Written English," we are learning a different language, a more formal one, one in which word order and punctuation (and spelling) can be critical to meaning.

Now, SWE is a fine thing. I teach it all the time. But it is not the end all and be all of what John Bremner used to call "this wonderful bastard language of ours." It is one version -- a very useful version. But with its time and place -- and limits.

That text message just isn't going to accommodate it. That marketing poster or billboard -- or road sign -- where you have to catch the speeding motorist or brisk walker with large text and limited message is more likely to use the easily understood "thru" than "through." (After all, we freely accept "thruway.")

Yes, there is value in explaining that using an apostrophe -- and its placement -- versus no apostrophe at all probably goes a ways toward aiding understanding (coffees being quite different from coffee's, for instance). But referring back to that pragmatism, we are happy to break those "rules" when convenient and it helps undestanding. The New York Times, for instance, does things like "CD's," when "CDs" is more "correct." Why does it do it? The answer is quite practical -- the Times uses some all-cap headlines, and CDS doesn't really look much like the plural. So it becomes CD's, and for consistency is carried over into text.

Why do many style guides approve of minding your p's and q's? Same idea - readability and consistency.

We might do better by helping people understand what version of the language to use and where it is best used (and why), rather than hovering, red pencil or black marker in hand, vulture blog at the ready, latest book proposal in the computer. (And some of those efforts have been incisively and wonderfully criticized for the pompous exercises they are.)

Correct if we must, but let us go gently into the night doing it. All that stress isn't worth it.

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Wednesday, February 04, 2009

Twitter etiquette

Mike Elgan has a good piece at Networkworld.com about some of the new Twitter etiquette questions arising as people tweet from places like White House press rooms and hospital operating rooms.

What's next? A live Mogulus feed of your appendectomy?

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Tuesday, February 03, 2009

A picture is worth ...

This one pretty much says it all. Check out the two lines bracketing the middle one trumpeting newspapers' new PR push.

In case it's too small to read, here they are:

  • A.H. Belo, Owner of The Journal, Plans to Cut 500 Jobs - Providence Journal
  • Newspapers fight negative perceptions in new ads - Associated Press/AP Online
  • Dallas Morning News Parent A.H. Belo to Cut About 500 Jobs - The Dallas Morning News

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Monday, February 02, 2009

The Guardian's new digs

Check out Dominic Ponsford's look inside the U.K. Guardian's new headquarters, complete with slideshow.

Compared with the Telegraph, which has gone with the hub-and-spoke idea, the Guardian is going with "pods" -- and some very posh digs. I kept hearing "Italian leather sofas."

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