John McIntyre has once again nailed it when it comes to commenting on the vanishing copy editor.
I have become so tired of things that I just kind of shrugged with Digital First announced it was effectively doing away with copy editors at the Denver Post and Bay Area News Group. The cuts took effect yesterday, and here are a few of John's comments from his perch atop the copy editing and production process inside the Baltimore Sun:
When explanations of these and
similar changes are made, there is talk of moving away from
"assembly-line editing" and "outmoded nineteenth-century industrial
processes" to some bold, modern, fresh, immediate journalism that
removes all those unnecessary "touches" between the writer and the
reader.
This is, of course,
cant. The brutal facts are these: Terrified by declines in revenue,
newspapers are shedding employees to save money. They are attempting to
keep as many reporters as possible to generate content, and they are
gambling that you will tolerate shoddier work.
To make this new era work effectively,
with the editing/production tasks shifted upstream to the
writing/editing level, will require some cultural changes about which I
am deeply skeptical.
Reporters
tend not to be production-oriented. They want to report and write and
take as much time as they can. The question I've most frequently heard
from reporters over the past thirty-plus years is "What's my deadline?"
(And from assigning editors, too.) Some reporters, as you can see from
reading their blogs, cannot even be troubled to run spell-check before
publishing.
What you can
expect from the copy-editor-free newsroom is a first-draft text from a
writer to which someone bearing the title of editor will have made a
quick swipe before posting it online. You will notice the typos and
lapses in grammar and usage, which stand out. What you may not be so
quick to notice is that the reporting is often thin, superficial,
uncritical, because no one was there to pose hard questions.
Mr. Brady is right that the old model
is passing away or already gone, not to return. Mr. Moore and other
editors are right to explore new models, to see what can best serve the
needs of the organization and the readers. Editors, people like me and
the dwindling band of survivors of the purges, are right to focus on
what is most essential for accuracy and clarity. There never was much of
what you might call bespoke editing at newspapers, and there's going to
be much less now.
If we
are smart enough, and lucky enough, we will discover the balance between
those feet on the street and those eyes on the desk.
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