Your voices are being heard
I received a nice postcard the other day from a reader who wanted
me to explain why we didn’t cover the July 4 Old Glory Boat Parade
put on by the American Legion Yacht Club.
Her postcard wasn’t the first criticism we’ve received about the
annual event that features yachts decked out in red, white and blue
flags, veterans of wars and patriotic music.
Local historian George Grupe took us and other media outlets to
task in the July 11 edition of the Balboa Beacon, a community
newspaper run by the husband and wife team of Bill and Gay
Wassall-Kelly, for not covering the parade with stories and photos.
Bill Kelly also chided us in a letter to the editor on the Daily
Pilot Forum pages.
By the way, the Beacon, I noticed in its July 11 edition, did not
have photos of the parade either.
But I digress. Still, being sufficiently stung, let me try to
explain why we didn’t cover the event.
First and foremost on the list is that we had no advance notice of
it. No one sent us a press release or an invitation to cover the
parade. While that may seem like a minor communication breakdown to
some, a press release can often make the difference between gobs of
ink or a press blackout like the one seen on July 4.
As the one with longest tenure here besides the sports department,
I do have a certain amount of institutional knowledge of the
Newport-Mesa community and have even covered the boat parade in the
past.
But readers and event planners can’t count on me knowing what
every reporter or editor has planned.
I leave the day-to-day planning of the paper to others, especially
city editor, James Meier. Meier is what some may call an assignment
editor, doling out stories and ideas to reporters as he gets them.
If you have a good story and are looking for a way in the paper,
you can always take a chance and call me, but I recommend calling him
directly at (949) 764-4324 or calling our City Desk line that rings
in the entire newsroom at (949) 574-4286.
Features editor Jennifer Mahal is also a good contact and can be
reached at (949) 574-4282.
The other culprit that I see here is staffing.
As a small community newspaper we have limited reporters,
photographers and editors. So, even if you do call, we can’t cover
every event that happens in town, especially on weekends and holidays
when we run the paper with a skeleton crew.
It’s a weekly discussion here in the newsroom to decide what
events to prioritize for coverage. But I can tell you, the earlier
you get us information the better chance it has to get in.
Difficulties on July 4 are usually magnified because we need to
make sure we have staff members here at night in case a major news
event breaks, limiting the number of people we can have in the early
morning hours.
This year, we covered the Mariners Park kids parade and the crowds
who flocked to the beaches and boardwalk of West Newport.
While Grupe and others contend that coverage didn’t have the
patriotic flavor of the boat parade, it certainly has news value in
that hundreds of thousands spend their Independence Day in West
Newport and the rest of the Balboa Peninsula.
Still, there’s always next year. Just make sure you drop us a line
before the first boat sets sail.
* * *
Since the redesign of our newspaper unfolded two weeks ago on July
15, we have received many reader comments, most of them favorable I
believe.
Many readers like the new business section, Your Work Week, that
appears on Mondays. The extra days of Forum with letters and
commentary and the Politics page also seem to be a hit.
The new look of the paper also has garnered response, both good
and bad.
“I’ve lived here 18 years and I just wanted to call and say the
new look of the Pilot is wonderful,” said reader Susan Moore. “It’s
cleaner. It’s more up-to-date, easier to read and looks fantastic.”
Thanks Susan.
Another reader, whom I know and respect, wrote me to say he wasn’t
so pleased, saying our type and headline styles were boring.
“I know it’s a matter taste, but I am really disappointed that you
chose to go in that direction rather than looking to be more dramatic
and more interesting,” he said.
Hopefully, we can make up for that in the news content.
Others have asked why we took the American flag off of the boat on
our logo at the top of the page.
The flag was never intended to part of our permanent look. We
placed it there immediately after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks as a
show of unity.
Taking it off doesn’t mean we are any less unified with our fellow
Americans, but as we changed the look of the paper, we just believed
that was the perfect time to return the logo back to its original
look.
Speaking of the logo, we have also received criticism over the
color of the sun that appears above the boat. Many want to see a
bright yellow sun, not the amber color that appears there now.
I’ll work on that. But as powerful as some may think we editors
are, changing the color of the sun is a pretty tall order.
* TONY DODERO is the editor. He can be reached at 949-574-4258 or
via e-mail at [email protected].
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