Journalism and Blogs

Eric Zorn has a lengthy discussion of how news organizations should approach journalists’ blogs and I think it is an excellent take on the issue.

The thing left out is that journalism is changing and changing very fast. Blogs aren’t the future of news reporting, but they may well become the future of news analysis and perhaps most importantly for news organizations, the future of tying readers to your paper or web site.

Having distinctive voices showcased is the way to tie in readers to newspapers especially. The reader letter/calls columns sort of did that in the past, but now there is a far more direct and efficient way of communicating. This is the huge mistake with the Red Eye. Instead of tieing it into the on-line version with a reciprocal relationship, the Red Eye is primarily a paper only.

The oddest thing is the Trib now has a columnist with a reciprocal relationship between print and electronic versions, but he is a part of the flagship. The Red Eye should have all of its columnists blogging and the entertainment reporting should be tied into on-line extras with every story.

That said, I’m a bit less optimistic about most reporters blogging. First, it takes time and many probably have families and the like. Second, it won’t work for everyone. Some people don’t have a writing voice that is distinctive and easy to connect with for the reader. Columnists naturally have this–or at least many do. Reading Eric Zorn’s work is like reading conversation with a friend. Royko was certainly like that and Kass is like that. Mary Schmich has that quality too. Steve Chapman does in a very different way–he’s a wonky friend. Don Wycliff certainly is conversational as Bruce Dold was before him. John McCarron and Carol Marin are more wonky friends. At the Sun-Times Debra Pickett is the most obvious personal voice along with Mark Brown.

In contrast, Novak, Steve Neal and Clarence Page are more traditional writers who offer up arguments and not the same personal relationship. Blogging wouldn’t work for them. Hell, television doesn’t work for Novak.

The point being that for a blog to work, it has to be a conversation and too much editing would get in the way of that. However, a trusted reporter/columnist already knows the rules of what they can easily say and what they can’t. If they aren’t sure, they can hold that back. I do that even on this tiny blog.

School Funding Problems Brewing

Phil Kadner seems to be the only way taking up the issue substantively in the press. He has had three recent columns that deal with it including one that addresses a new effort by State Senator Maggie Crotty and Lt. Governor Pat Quinn. It could be that the press just ignores Quinn’s missives, but my guess is that the topic is too confusing to write simple pieces about.

State Sen. Maggie Crotty (D-Oak Forest) and Lt. Gov. Patrick Quinn plan to barnstorm the state this fall to gain support for a plan that would increase the Illinois income tax on people earning more than $250,000 a year.

Money raised from the tax would be divided equally, with half going to public schools and half into a property tax rebate fund that would be distributed equally to every homeowner in the state.

As a political necessity, this might be needed. Attempts to funnel the money to only poor districts is unlikely to pass, but passing the money around might help. More important, is that the state doesn’t live up to its obligations to be the primary source of funds for schools

The Chicago mayor, joined by some of his suburban counterparts, demanded Wednesday that the state fulfill its obligation under the Illinois Constitution as "the primary" source of public school funding.

The state currently supplies only 33 percent of the money used to fund public education

As Kadner puts it,

If he was serious about this school funding business, he wouldn’t be holding news conferences, he’d be talking to the governor.

There are some tough choices to make for politicians in Illinois concerning how to fund Illinois schools and everyone is ignoring it. This is nothing new, but sooner or later it will have to change. A comprehensive school reform package that encourages consolidation in some districts and property tax relief.

Senator Meeks is suggesting everything, but the school consolidation bit, which is off the radar other than in rural areas.

Mel Reynolds Come Back?

Kristen McQueary reports that Mel Reynolds is contemplating a comeback by challenging Jackson Jr. for his Congressional seat.

Reynolds is still angry that he was mistreated and held to a higher standard because he is black when he was investigated and convicted for sleeping with a teenage campaign worker.

He is right, he was treated far worse because he wasn’t uber-connected as Rostenkowski was, but that only means that Rosty shouldn’t be showered with praise, not that Reynolds deserves better treatment. He slept with a teenage campaign worker. Regardless of whether prosecutors snicker about such crimes or not, it was wrong.

Meet and Greet Lunch for David Gill in the 15th

"Rx: Prescription for Our Future– Lunch with Dr. David Gill" Congressional Candidate, IL 15th District

Sunday, October 5, 2003
Noon- 3PM
At Elks Lodge- Clinton, IL

$10 Adults, $5 Children under 10 (ages 3 & under free)… pork BBQ and many side dishes

50/50 Raffle, Bake Sale, Guest speakers and much more!

Directions: Rt. 54 to 1520 E. South St. in Clinton
Sponsored by Friends of David Gill
www.davidgillforcongress.com

Hynes in the Gay Community

A quite critical column on Dan Hynes’ committment to Gay and Lesbian rights was written in the Chicago Free Press

The list of Democrats who ushered Hynes on his downstate meet-and-greet includes several anti-gay officials, including Poshard and state Sens. George Shadid (Peoria) and Gary Forby (D-Marion). These senators oppose Senate Bill 101, a law that seeks to discourage anti-gay discrimination in Illinois. Hynes chose state Sen. Vince Demuzio (D-Carlinville), another "no" vote on SB 101, as one of his campaign co-chairs.

Hynes has always voiced strong support for GLBT civil rights issues. But I can’t help but wonder this: If he’s influential enough among conservative downstate Democrats to win their support for his campaign, why is he unable to persuade them to vote for our anti-discrimination bill?

While I think the gay community has legitimate beefs with Blagojevich and legitimate policy problems with Poshard, the problem with this kind of politics is it creates a circular firing squad of the type in which the Republican Party in Illinois is participating. Policy disputes are fine, but guilt by association is a problem. Vince Demuzio isn’t my kind of Democrat, but without him, Democrats aren’t nearly as strong in Illinois as the currently are. And without a strong Democratic presence, gay rights won’t go anywhere in Illinois. The Republican Party is pulling the other way.

More fair is the following,

Following his announcement speech, Hynes told a reporter that "marriage is a union between a man and a woman." His campaign spokesperson Chris Mather later clarified for CFP that the comptroller would support a law to give same-sex couples the privileges and responsibilities of heterosexual marriage. In addition to supporting SB 101, Hynes also backs federal anti-discrimination legislation and other measures vital to GLBT civil rights advocates.

But Hynes has no legislative record to demonstrate the strength of his commitment. With his father’s help, he was elected to the statewide office of comptroller at the age of 29, without having held any prior elective office. Now at 35, he is the youngest candidate in the Senate race. His views on a host of issues remain largely untested.

There is no mention of the words "gay" or "lesbian" on Hynes’ campaign website. On the other hand, his opponent state Sen. Barack Obama (D-Chicago) proudly touts his role as a co-sponsor of SB 101 on the Internet. Candidate Blair Hull’s campaign passes out flyers featuring his support for a number of pro-GLBT policies, ranging from training educators in how to handle anti-gay discrimination in schools to legalizing same-sex civil unions.

Hynes needs to keep in mind that alienating an important section of the Democratic base can be a problem in the primary and the general. And often, in such cases as this, alienating activists happens from sins of ommission as much as anything. While the web site is still being rolled out, he has very little on the environment either.

Let’s Play 2: CUBS WIN!

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Democratic Cattle Call 9/26

1. Dan Hynes. At the head of the polls and still the nominal front runner. Has tons of organizational support with the Carpenter’s Union backing him this week. While union endorsements only go so far, and unions aren’t always as united as they may seem, 50,000 pieces of literature to union voters is nothing to squawk at.

2. Blair Hull. The money is paying off with 9 percent in the most recent poll. Creating name ID is the name of the game and he seems to be doing that while not creating huge negatives.

3. Barack Obama. A high profile state lege member shouldn’t be falling behind (even within the margin of error) a political neophyte, but he is close. Apparently not active in some neighborhoods in Chicago where he should be able to draw on an activist base.

4. Gery Chico. Still has cash and isn’t doing too badly in the polls. Still hasn’t cracked the Hispanic vote. If he can’t do that, he isn’t going anywhere.

5. Maria Pappas. New rule. To be in the top four, you have to be in the race.

6. Joyce Washington. Not bad in the poll, but still not getting any coverage or attention besides as a spoiler.

7. Nancy Skinner. Got beat in the poll. Gotta be on the radar to make a run for it.

8. Matt O’Shea. I’m quickly running out of snarky things to say here.

9. Frank Avila. I hope I have him in the right party. Bueller?

10. Estella Johnson-Hunt. I hope she has herself in the right universe.

11. Vic Roberts. Please, please let him in any debates. A quick measure of a candidate is if they can handle crackpots. Remember McCain handling Alan Keyes? He’d separate the talented from the empty suits. And when is that interview coming Eric Zorn?

FEC reports won’t be out for a couple weeks, but they could be very telling this time. Chico and Hynes have the most at stake. Chico goes low, money won’t follow. Hynes doesn’t outpace Obama and he looks weak.