Thursday, October 31, 2013

AP

. 
Brilliance


“There are only two forces that can carry light to all corners of the globe — the sun in the heavens and The Associated Press down here.”
 
Mark Twain (1835-1910), writer guy 
 (Ted Pease photo)

• Editorial Comment: And now there's MSNBC.

PeezPix by Ted Pease 

Bear Right







Original PeezPix archival prints, matted at sizes from 5x7" to 16x20" or larger, available for sale. ted.pease@gmail.com 

TODAY'S WORD ON JOURNALISM is a free “service” sent to the 1,800 or so misguided subscribers around the planet. If you have recovered from whatever led you to subscribe and don’t want it anymore, send “unsubscribe” to ted.pease@gmail.com. Or if you want to afflict someone else, send me the email address and watch the fun begin. (Disclaimer: I just quote ’em, I don’t necessarily endorse ’em. But all contain at least a kernel of insight. Don’t shoot the messenger.) 
 
Ted Pease, Professor of Interesting Stuff, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, and Humboldt State University, Arcata, California. ted.pease@gmail.com.
(Be)Friend Dr. Ted, Professor of Interesting Stuff

“Words are sacred. They deserve respect. If you get the right ones, in the right order, you can nudge the world a little.” —Tom Stoppard

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Wednesday, October 30, 2013

College Days

. 
Dear Student


“I am returning this otherwise good typing paper to you because someone has printed gibberish all over it and put your name at the top.” 

—Anonymous Professor



• Editorial Comment: Actually, the paper wasn’t all that good.





PeezPix by Ted Pease 

Bear Right







Original PeezPix archival prints, matted at sizes from 5x7" to 16x20" or larger, available for sale. ted.pease@gmail.com 

TODAY'S WORD ON JOURNALISM is a free “service” sent to the 1,800 or so misguided subscribers around the planet. If you have recovered from whatever led you to subscribe and don’t want it anymore, send “unsubscribe” to ted.pease@gmail.com. Or if you want to afflict someone else, send me the email address and watch the fun begin. (Disclaimer: I just quote ’em, I don’t necessarily endorse ’em. But all contain at least a kernel of insight. Don’t shoot the messenger.) 
 
Ted Pease, Professor of Interesting Stuff, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, and Humboldt State University, Arcata, California. ted.pease@gmail.com.
(Be)Friend Dr. Ted, Professor of Interesting Stuff

“Words are sacred. They deserve respect. If you get the right ones, in the right order, you can nudge the world a little.” —Tom Stoppard

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Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Academic Earnings

. 
For the Glory

“In 2006, I published my first article in an academic journal. . . I called my mother to tell her the news.
 
“‘Great,’ she said. ‘What are they paying you?’
 
“‘Nothing.’ 
 
In 2006, I published my first article in an academic journal, a lengthy analysis debunking the existence of an Uzbek terrorist organization. I called my mother to tell her the news.
“Great,” she said. “What are they paying you?”
“Nothing.”
- See more at: https://chroniclevitae.com/news/90-should-academics-write-for-free?cid=wb&utm_source=wb&utm_medium=en#sthash.s47em7zA.dpuf
“I had come to academia from journalism, which, at the time, paid people. Less than a decade ago, it was reasonable for journalists to expect that a corporation profiting off their labor would offer a modicum of compensation. Working for nothing—or nothing’s contemporary euphemism, ‘exposure’—was laughable.

“I explained to my mother that academic publishing was different. Writing for money could potentially compromise the objectivity of the research. Publishing was part of the academic’s job, allegedly reflected in his or her university salary. . . . 

“Seven years later, journalism has adopted the academic publishing model, only without the pretense of integrity.”
 
—Sarah Kendzior, Should Academics Write for Free?” The Chronicle of Higher Education, Oct. 25, 2013 (Thanks to alert recovering journalist and unpaid WORDster Mark Brunson)
 

• Editorial Comment: Vita hit.

PeezPix by Ted Pease 

Bear Right







Original PeezPix archival prints, matted at sizes from 5x7" to 16x20" or larger, available for sale. ted.pease@gmail.com 

TODAY'S WORD ON JOURNALISM is a free “service” sent to the 1,800 or so misguided subscribers around the planet. If you have recovered from whatever led you to subscribe and don’t want it anymore, send “unsubscribe” to ted.pease@gmail.com. Or if you want to afflict someone else, send me the email address and watch the fun begin. (Disclaimer: I just quote ’em, I don’t necessarily endorse ’em. But all contain at least a kernel of insight. Don’t shoot the messenger.) 
 
Ted Pease, Professor of Interesting Stuff, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, and Humboldt State University, Arcata, California. ted.pease@gmail.com.
(Be)Friend Dr. Ted, Professor of Interesting Stuff

“Words are sacred. They deserve respect. If you get the right ones, in the right order, you can nudge the world a little.” —Tom Stoppard

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Friday, October 25, 2013

Think Again

. 
How Sure Are You?


“The trouble with the world is that the stupid are so confident while the intelligent are full of doubt.” 
 
—Bertrand Russell, (1872-1970), British philosopher, mathematician, historian and social critic
 

• Editorial Comment: On the other hand.....

PeezPix by Ted Pease 

Whitewater Grocery







Original PeezPix archival prints, matted at sizes from 5x7" to 16x20" or larger, available for sale. ted.pease@gmail.com 


TODAY'S WORD ON JOURNALISM is a free “service” sent to the 1,800 or so misguided subscribers around the planet. If you have recovered from whatever led you to subscribe and don’t want it anymore, send “unsubscribe” to ted.pease@gmail.com. Or if you want to afflict someone else, send me the email address and watch the fun begin. (Disclaimer: I just quote ’em, I don’t necessarily endorse ’em. But all contain at least a kernel of insight. Don’t shoot the messenger.) 
 
Ted Pease, Professor of Interesting Stuff, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, and Humboldt State University, Arcata, California. ted.pease@gmail.com.
(Be)Friend Dr. Ted, Professor of Interesting Stuff

“Words are sacred. They deserve respect. If you get the right ones, in the right order, you can nudge the world a little.” —Tom Stoppard

.

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Hot Air

. 
Measured Discourse


“When he [Man] ceased any longer to heed the words of the seers and prophets, Science lovingly brought forth the Radio Commentator.”


—Jean Giraudoux (1882-1944), French novelist, essayist, diplomat and playwright, in The Enchanted (1933)

• Editorial Comment: Pinheads.

PeezPix by Ted Pease 

Ivy League Outhouse






Original PeezPix archival prints, matted at sizes from 5x7" to 16x20" or larger, available for sale. ted.pease@gmail.com 


TODAY'S WORD ON JOURNALISM is a free “service” sent to the 1,800 or so misguided subscribers around the planet. If you have recovered from whatever led you to subscribe and don’t want it anymore, send “unsubscribe” to ted.pease@gmail.com. Or if you want to afflict someone else, send me the email address and watch the fun begin. (Disclaimer: I just quote ’em, I don’t necessarily endorse ’em. But all contain at least a kernel of insight. Don’t shoot the messenger.) 
 
Ted Pease, Professor of Interesting Stuff, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, and Humboldt State University, Arcata, California. ted.pease@gmail.com.
(Be)Friend Dr. Ted, Professor of Interesting Stuff

“Words are sacred. They deserve respect. If you get the right ones, in the right order, you can nudge the world a little.” —Tom Stoppard

.

Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Higher Education

. 
Stifle

“People are always asking me if the university stifles writers. I reply that it hasn’t stifled enough of them. There’s many a bestseller that could have been prevented by a good writing teacher.”

Flannery O’Connor (1925-1964), unstifled writer 

• Editorial Comment: Way ahead of you: Twitter pre-stifles them before they’re freshmen.

PeezPix by Ted Pease 

Ivy Outhouse






Original PeezPix archival prints, matted at sizes from 5x7" to 16x20" or larger, available for sale. ted.pease@gmail.com 


TODAY'S WORD ON JOURNALISM is a free “service” sent to the 1,800 or so misguided subscribers around the planet. If you have recovered from whatever led you to subscribe and don’t want it anymore, send “unsubscribe” to ted.pease@gmail.com. Or if you want to afflict someone else, send me the email address and watch the fun begin. (Disclaimer: I just quote ’em, I don’t necessarily endorse ’em. But all contain at least a kernel of insight. Don’t shoot the messenger.) 
 
Ted Pease, Professor of Interesting Stuff, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, and Humboldt State University, Arcata, California
To receive Today's Word on Journalism by email (FREE!), send "subscribe" to ted.pease@gmail.com.
 
(Be)Friend Dr. Ted, Professor of Interesting Stuff

“Words are sacred. They deserve respect. If you get the right ones, in the right order, you can nudge the world a little.” —Tom Stoppard

.

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Boom!

. 
Hear No Evil

“Even though he lives in Washington and works in government, he dumped his subscription to The Washington Post. He explained: ‘It was the treatment of almost any conservative issue. It was slanted and often nasty. And, you know, why should I get upset every morning?’ He added that The Post was ‘shrilly, shrilly liberal.’

“Just another guy in Washington who can’t stand hearing anything that doesn’t comport with his worldview? Well, this one happens to work on the United States Supreme Court.

“As Justice Antonin Scalia might say, ‘Boom!’ His interview with Jennifer Senior in New York magazine suggests that the tendency to limit one’s sources of information to avoid dissonance is not the province of a bunch of narrow-minded, politically obsessed characters who send mass e-mails from their mother’s basement.”

—David Carr, media writer, “It’s Not Just Politics. Our News Is Gerrymandered, Too,” The New York Times, Oct. 11, 2013

• Editorial Comment: As a press critic, Nino’s an originalist.

PeezPix by Ted Pease 

Ivy Outhouse






Original PeezPix archival prints, matted at sizes from 5x7" to 16x20" or larger, available for sale. ted.pease@gmail.com 


TODAY'S WORD ON JOURNALISM is a free “service” sent to the 1,800 or so misguided subscribers around the planet. If you have recovered from whatever led you to subscribe and don’t want it anymore, send “unsubscribe” to ted.pease@gmail.com. Or if you want to afflict someone else, send me the email address and watch the fun begin. (Disclaimer: I just quote ’em, I don’t necessarily endorse ’em. But all contain at least a kernel of insight. Don’t shoot the messenger.) 
 
Ted Pease, Professor of Interesting Stuff, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, and Humboldt State University, Arcata, California
To receive Today's Word on Journalism by email (FREE!), send "subscribe" to ted.pease@gmail.com.
 
(Be)Friend Dr. Ted, Professor of Interesting Stuff

“Words are sacred. They deserve respect. If you get the right ones, in the right order, you can nudge the world a little.” —Tom Stoppard

.

Monday, October 21, 2013

Pompous Asses

. 
Editorial Opinion

“[Y]ou guys have an obligation … to avoid pompously bad writing and the kind of dullness that comes from letting flatulent asses pontificate about things they know no more about than the next man, if as much.” 
—Raymond Chandler (1888-1959), mystery novelist and screenwriter, in a cranky letter to the editor of The Atlantic, 1944.





• Editorial Comment: Robust and wide-open debate is alive and well.







PeezPix by Ted Pease 

Summer’s End






Original PeezPix archival prints, matted at sizes from 5x7" to 16x20" or larger, available for sale. ted.pease@gmail.com 


TODAY'S WORD ON JOURNALISM is a free “service” sent to the 1,800 or so misguided subscribers around the planet. If you have recovered from whatever led you to subscribe and don’t want it anymore, send “unsubscribe” to ted.pease@gmail.com. Or if you want to afflict someone else, send me the email address and watch the fun begin. (Disclaimer: I just quote ’em, I don’t necessarily endorse ’em. But all contain at least a kernel of insight. Don’t shoot the messenger.) 
 
Ted Pease, Professor of Interesting Stuff, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, and Humboldt State University, Arcata, California
To receive Today's Word on Journalism by email (FREE!), send "subscribe" to ted.pease@gmail.com.
 
(Be)Friend Dr. Ted, Professor of Interesting Stuff

“Words are sacred. They deserve respect. If you get the right ones, in the right order, you can nudge the world a little.” —Tom Stoppard

.

Friday, October 18, 2013

Scrawls

. 
Perils of Typesetting


“Don’t be too harsh to these poems until they’re typed. I always think typescript lends some sort of certainty: at least, if the things are bad then, they appear to be bad with conviction.” 

—Dylan Thomas (1914-1953), in letter to fellow Welsh poet Vernon Watkins, 1938 (Portrait by Augustus John) 






• Editorial Comment: I use handwriting for almost nothing but grocery lists. Which, by this theory, explains my uncertainty at the market. 




PeezPix by Ted Pease 

Morning Mist





Original PeezPix archival prints, matted at sizes from 5x7" to 16x20" or larger, available for sale. ted.pease@gmail.com 

TODAY'S WORD ON JOURNALISM is a free “service” sent to the 1,800 or so misguided subscribers around the planet. If you have recovered from whatever led you to subscribe and don’t want it anymore, send “unsubscribe” to ted.pease@gmail.com. Or if you want to afflict someone else, send me the email address and watch the fun begin. (Disclaimer: I just quote ’em, I don’t necessarily endorse ’em. But all contain at least a kernel of insight. Don’t shoot the messenger.) 
 
Ted Pease, Professor of Interesting Stuff, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, and Humboldt State University, Arcata, California
To receive Today's Word on Journalism by email (FREE!), send "subscribe" to ted.pease@gmail.com.
 
(Be)Friend Dr. Ted, Professor of Interesting Stuff

“Words are sacred. They deserve respect. If you get the right ones, in the right order, you can nudge the world a little.” —Tom Stoppard

.

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Be Happier

. 
Opinion Leader

“I do not take a single newspaper, nor read one a month, and I feel myself infinitely the happier for it.”

—Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826), Founding Father, principal author of the Declaration of Independence and the 3rd U.S. president, had a love-hate relationship with the press. 

• Editorial Comment: A perspective apparently shared by more and more Americans.

 

PeezPix by Ted Pease 


Roots





Original PeezPix archival prints, matted at sizes from 5x7" to 16x20" or larger, available for sale. ted.pease@gmail.com 

TODAY'S WORD ON JOURNALISM is a free “service” sent to the 1,800 or so misguided subscribers around the planet. If you have recovered from whatever led you to subscribe and don’t want it anymore, send “unsubscribe” to ted.pease@gmail.com. Or if you want to afflict someone else, send me the email address and watch the fun begin. (Disclaimer: I just quote ’em, I don’t necessarily endorse ’em. But all contain at least a kernel of insight. Don’t shoot the messenger.) 
 
Ted Pease, Professor of Interesting Stuff, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, and Humboldt State University, Arcata, California
To receive Today's Word on Journalism by email (FREE!), send "subscribe" to ted.pease@gmail.com.
 
(Be)Friend Dr. Ted, Professor of Interesting Stuff

“Words are sacred. They deserve respect. If you get the right ones, in the right order, you can nudge the world a little.” —Tom Stoppard

.

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

We Have Twits

. 
Who Needs Journalists?

“‘Why do we need journalism when we have social media’ is the rallying cry of those who have a perspective to share. If you have something to say — a cool link you saw or a photo or a review of a restaurant — you go on Facebook and Twitter and Yelp and say it. Why do you need journalists to tell you about links or how good restaurants are when you have social media? 

“The short answer is: you don’t. The long answer is: You need journalists when you want an independent perspective. And that perspective — particularly for decision-makers — is essential.” 

—Philip Bump, How Twitter is Ruining America,” The Atlantic, Oct. 10, 2013 

• Editorial Comment: Be careful what you ask for . . .

 

PeezPix by Ted Pease 

Dinghy Rack





Original PeezPix archival prints, matted at sizes from 5x7" to 16x20" or larger, available for sale. ted.pease@gmail.com 

TODAY'S WORD ON JOURNALISM is a free “service” sent to the 1,800 or so misguided subscribers around the planet. If you have recovered from whatever led you to subscribe and don’t want it anymore, send “unsubscribe” to ted.pease@gmail.com. Or if you want to afflict someone else, send me the email address and watch the fun begin. (Disclaimer: I just quote ’em, I don’t necessarily endorse ’em. But all contain at least a kernel of insight. Don’t shoot the messenger.) 
 
Ted Pease, Professor of Interesting Stuff, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, and Humboldt State University, Arcata, California
To receive Today's Word on Journalism by email (FREE!), send "subscribe" to ted.pease@gmail.com.
 
(Be)Friend Dr. Ted, Professor of Interesting Stuff

“Words are sacred. They deserve respect. If you get the right ones, in the right order, you can nudge the world a little.” —Tom Stoppard

.

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Wit, Wisecracks . . .

. 
. . . and Inspiration


“I might repeat to myself slowly and soothingly a list of quotations beautiful from minds profound — if I can remember any of the damn things.”

—Dorothy Parker (1893-1967), writer, Algonquin denizen & famed wisecracker (Image: A 1938 book party at the Algonquin Hotel: seated, left to right, Fritz Foord, Wolcott Gibbs, Frank Case and Dorothy Parker; standing, Alan Campbell, St. Clair McKelway, Russell Maloney and James Thurber. CondeNast)


• Editorial Comment: Oh, never mind...

 

 

PeezPix by Ted Pease
 
Dinghy Rack





Original PeezPix archival prints, matted at sizes from 5x7" to 16x20" or larger, available for sale. ted.pease@gmail.com 

TODAY'S WORD ON JOURNALISM is a free “service” sent to the 1,800 or so misguided subscribers around the planet. If you have recovered from whatever led you to subscribe and don’t want it anymore, send “unsubscribe” to ted.pease@gmail.com. Or if you want to afflict someone else, send me the email address and watch the fun begin. (Disclaimer: I just quote ’em, I don’t necessarily endorse ’em. But all contain at least a kernel of insight. Don’t shoot the messenger.) 
 
Ted Pease, Professor of Interesting Stuff, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, and Humboldt State University, Arcata, California
To receive Today's Word on Journalism by email (FREE!), send "subscribe" to ted.pease@gmail.com.
 
(Be)Friend Dr. Ted, Professor of Interesting Stuff

“Words are sacred. They deserve respect. If you get the right ones, in the right order, you can nudge the world a little.” —Tom Stoppard

.