E-mail makes access to Pilot easier than ever
TONY DODERO
Back when I started in this business, telephones and U.S. mail were
the main lines of communication to the newsroom.
Going through the mail was a tumultuous affair. Stacks upon stacks
of press releases and letters would be piled up on the desk of nearly
every editor and reporter. Letter openers and paper cuts were common.
If you used the word mouse, most people thought it was just a rodent
loose in the mail stack on your desk, not a computer tool.
Then came fax machines. And soon, faxes began to take the place of
the mail and even phone calls. After a while, it was a wonder how we
ever existed without fax machines.
Then came e-mail and the news business changed forever. But is it
a change for the good?
Routinely, I hear members of the news staff tell sources on the
phone to send their story ideas or press releases via e-mail. Indeed,
at the end of news stories we publish the reporter’s e-mail address
and phone number to give readers better access to our staff. I do the
same with this column. I know plenty of readers take advantage of
having that contact with reporters and with me. They let me or
reporters know right away when we have made a mistake, and likewise
the praise comes a lot easier with a click of a mouse instead of
having to put pen to paper and mail out the letter.
E-mails also have changed the way we report and gather news. Some
interviews are done solely by e-mail and story tips routinely come
through our e-mail baskets.
About a month ago, columnist Lolita Harper wrote a piece that
would never have been possible prior to the advent of e-mail. The
column was based on an e-mail that she had received from a local
reader regarding a U.S. postage stamp that commemorated the Islamic
holiday of Ramadan. The e-mail criticized the creation of the stamp
celebrating Islam, because of the Islamic ties of terrorist in the
Sept. 11, 2001, attacks and elsewhere.
Harper took the argument in the e-mail to task, noting that Islam
as a religion shouldn’t be condemned for the actions of a few, just
like Christianity or other religions shouldn’t be condemned for the
extreme actions of some their members.
The response was a flood of more e-mails from critics condemning
Harper, and Muslims who agreed with and thanked her for defending
their religion. Some of those came from as far away as Pakistan.
Obviously, we aren’t alone here at the Daily Pilot in our use of
e-mail journalism.
A survey of 271 political journalists last year by the Institute
for Politics, Democracy & the Internet at George Washington
University’s Graduate School of Political Management found 45% saying
they use the phone less often.
Half said they received more than 30 e-mails a day, 25% said 50 or
more and 5% more than 150, according to the survey.
I know I probably get 30 to 50 e-mails each day, a large portion
of them are spam of some sort, some pornographic in nature, some just
get-rich-quick schemes.
But enough about me. I asked the Daily Pilot staff what they
thought. Naturally, I sent them the questions via e-mail.
To my surprise, City Editor Danette Goulet walked into my office
to give me her opinion in person.
“I think e-mail has made things easier, but it’s also cut back on
personal communication and one-on-one conversations,” she said.
“Around here we send e-mails to convey every little thing rather than
just speaking to people. One of the problems with that is you don’t
hear somebody’s tone and things can be misunderstood. [E-mail] is
great to keep in touch with my 8-year-old niece who lives in
Massachusetts, but it’s overused when it’s the person sitting next to
you.”
I guess I should have got up and asked the question to her in
person.
Harper, who spends most of her time going through reader e-mails
as the paper’s Forum page editor, had this to say:
“E-mail has its ups and downs, as do most things,” she replied in
an e-mail.
“As much as I love the convenience of simply cutting and pasting
letters to the editor from the Daily Pilot inbox, directly into our
publishing system, it is daunting to open and delete dozens of “add
inches” and “refinance now” e-mails, as well as those pop-up porn
messages that would make Larry Flynt blush.
“I wish there were effective spam deletion programs because the
ones we have don’t work,” she continued. “I can get graphic pictures
of college coeds in very, um, compromising positions, but the e-mails
from my mom are marked spam. Go figure. However, hitting the delete
button 100 times a day is still easier than typing in all the letters
to the editor by hand. All in all, I would rather have it than not.”
From an e-mail response by Newport Beach reporter and erstwhile
grammar columnist June Casagrande:
“Putting up with the spam is absolutely worth it,” she wrote.
“E-mail lets me get extremely valuable documentation that otherwise
would be difficult or at least time-consuming to obtain: reports,
correspondence, supplemental agenda information, photos and
schematics.
“During the process of replacing Councilman Gary Proctor, I was
able to receive, via e-mail, full copies of applicants’ materials --
scanned, signed applications, resumes, statements, everything. As
offensive and annoying as some spam is, I think e-mail has
revolutionized the way we do our jobs.
“Councilman Dick Nichols last summer vowed to only communicate
with us in writing, usually via e-mail. In such cases, the technology
has allowed us to have an exact record of comments, which helps us,
while allowing people like Nichols to feel more secure, which helps
them.”
I tend to agree that e-mail is worth it, despite the spam, and
that it has made our job easier and our profession better. Although,
I agree with Goulet that we need to make sure that personal contact
with our sources and the public is not sacrificed.
But in all, giving readers and the general public instant access
to reporters and the media via e-mail will only help us improve our
communication with the community, improve our public image and
improve our reporting.
And just like the fax machine, it’s a wonder how we ever existed
without it.
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