Pilot’s bias opens gap in creditability
Now that Editor Tony Dodero has confessed who was responsible for the
absolutely tasteless cartoon that he ran in the Pilot last month
(“Drawing a few lines in the sand” April 4), we see that the
responsibility was spread among two editors and a freelancer. The
freelancer, I’m sure, knows what kind of dog food the editors will
eat and I’m sure caters to that particular taste. So don’t blame him,
he’s making a living.
There are two primary issues here: The inability or reluctance of
the editors to examine, deal with and write about the development
issues at hand, and secondly, the general supportive bias that the
Pilot has shown to developers.
It is certainly everyone’s right, including the Pilot’s and their
bosses in Chicago, to take a pro-development or anti-development
position in the paper, and to put forth their arguments for their
particular position and philosophy. That is a right guaranteed to all
of us by the Constitution, engaged in by many newspapers in America
and the Pilot has periodically done that. But certainly not in this
case.
It has been said many times over that the last refuge of a coward
is a personal attack and this is what the Pilot resorted to in its
tasteless cartoon, “Pain in the Arst.” Please, sit back and consider
what this has done to the credibility and image of the Pilot. Do you
for a moment think that the New York Times would resort to something
this tasteless? So why not stick to the issues, and get off personal
attacks and insulting cartoons? Your readers deserve better than
that.
As for the second point: the Pilot’s pro-development bias.
Dodero’s research indicates that there were 236 opinion pieces or
articles, some with comments by Greenlight leader Phil Arst, that
could be categorized as incendiary. True enough, but “incendiary” is
not personally directed or offensive. So much for equal time, or
equal space.
Dodero has expressed on numerous occasions, both in the paper and
in person, that editorially the Pilot represents the community. May I
remind him that in this particular instance the “Greenlight” sector
of the community represents 63% of the voters. If, in fact, the Pilot
truly represented the community, the editorials would favor the
Greenlight position 63% of the time. This I’m afraid has certainly
not been the case.
In support of his pro-development position, Dodero has also
expressed the need for more “jobs,” leading one to think that Newport
Beach is some remote corner of the Midwestern Rust Belt that is
collapsing under foreign competition and outsourcing, and is in
desperate need of more jobs to support our economy. We don’t need
more hotel workers, kitchen helpers, and other sundry help to drive
into Newport Beach on busy summer days, clog up the streets and
parking lots, although they would certainly create more jobs.
Newport Beach has also been dismissed by some council members as
having a lot of “retirees,” implying that people who have lived and
worked in Newport Beach for many years, contributed to the community,
built businesses and are now retired, should have no voice in
community affairs. Those are the same people who vote most often and
are trying desperately to preserve Newport Beach has a noncongested,
uncrowded, highly desirable place to live. Please respect that.
MICHAEL C. HIRSH
Corona del Mar
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.