Friday, December 18, 2015

HoHoHo

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Tinseltime

Semester’s over; the students are stacked on the sofa with care. 

The white-coated guys from St. Mumbles Home for the Terminally Verbose have trundled the WORD off to a rain-soaked rock for the holidays. 

So that’s it for me, too, Gentle Reader. Time to deck the halls and a-wassailing go. Have a lovely holiday, a safe and happy new year, and we’ll see who escapes again in January to trouble a troubled world.

—Ted Pease, WORDmeister and Professor of Interesting Stuff, Christmas 2015

Editorial Comment: HoHoHo.


PeezPix by Ted Pease

Stella Elf








Get TODAY'S WORD ON JOURNALISM in your email every weekday morning during WORD season. This is a free “service” sent to the 2,000,000 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, Trinidad, California.
(Be)Friend The WORD

“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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Thursday, December 17, 2015

Post-Mortem

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‘Post-Fact’


http://abcnews.go.com/topics/news/elections/presidential-debates.htm?mediatype=Image
“Tonight’s debate will present another opportunity to test the theory that politically appealing fictions grab more voters than facts do. And news organizations are ramping up their fact-checking operations in anticipation of nights like tonight — though whether they are really responding to popular demand or trying to make facts matter against the prevailing odds may be a harder question to answer.

“‘There seems to be a trend story that . . . facts don’t matter and the electorate isn’t interested in facts,’ said Eugene Kiely, the director of one of the oldest fact-checking websites, FactCheck.org.”

“‘As long as politicians open their mouths we have a job,’ he said.”

—Hadas Gold, reporter, “Fact-checking the candidates in a ‘post-fact’ world,” Politico.com, Dec. 15, 2015 
 

Editorial Comment: Don’t let the facts get in the way of a good campaign.


PeezPix by Ted Pease

Plaza Sunset, Arcata, California








Get TODAY'S WORD ON JOURNALISM in your email every weekday morning during WORD season. This is a free “service” sent to the 2,000,000 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, Trinidad, California.
(Be)Friend The WORD

“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, December 16, 2015

News from Florida

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Primal Ooze
[T]he human race is actually de-evolving, . . . we are moving backward on the evolutionary scale. If you picked the headlines from the five largest newspapers in Florida every day, you could make a very solid case that the human race was slipping backward into the primal ooze.” 


Carl Hiaasen, writer and Miami Herald columnist, “Carl Hiaasen on Human Weirdness,” Smithsonian Magazine, 2010

Editorial Comment: Let’s not even mention, say, Iowa.




PeezPix by Ted Pease

Hammond Multiplex











Get TODAY'S WORD ON JOURNALISM in your email every weekday morning during WORD season. This is a free “service” sent to the 2,000,000 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, Trinidad, California.
(Be)Friend The WORD

“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, December 15, 2015

Trolling

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. . . for a Sentence


“The act of fishing, particularly fly-fishing, is similar to the act of writing. The masochistic urge to wake in the predawn hours and stumble with loaded thermos toward an icy cold stream to catch something you ultimately let go is not dissimilar to the quirky yearnings that guide a writing life. 

“Both activities draw adherents who crave and breathe solitude. Both fly-fishing and writing abound with foible and reward. Both offer fissures of clarity amid the ambiguity of everyday life. Both can give you hand cramps.” 

—Holly Morris, writer, editor, producer and fisherwoman, “Fumbling After Grace: Fishing & Writing,” The New York Times, 1997 


Editorial Comment: And there’s all that clean-up.



PeezPix by Ted Pease

Waiting for Inspiration








Get TODAY'S WORD ON JOURNALISM in your email every weekday morning during WORD season. This is a free “service” sent to the 2,000,000 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, Trinidad, California.
(Be)Friend The WORD

“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, December 14, 2015

Neutral Reportage

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Staff Memo
https://twitter.com/BuzzFeedBen/status/674417675813019648/photo/1?ref_src=twsrc^tfw
“We’ve gotten a question or two about how to talk about Donald Trump in social media — and whether calling him, say, a liar and a racist violates our policy asking . . . you not to be political partisans. . . .”

“It is . . . entirely fair to call him a mendacious racist, as the politics team and others have reported . . . BuzzFeed News’s reporting is rooted in facts, not opinion; these are facts. . . .”

“There are, of course, other good reasons not to engage in US Twitter’s political troll wars and I’d generally advise against it, but there’s nothing partisan about accurately describing Donald Trump.” 

—Ben Smith, editor, Buzzfeed, in staff memo on appropriate use of social media, in Eric Wemple, “Neutral journalism model is straining under pressure from Donald Trump, tense times,” The Washington Post, Dec. 9, 2015 


Editorial Comment: The Donald has sent the press into a tizzy. Along with the rest of sentient beings.

This deserves a brief treatise on the role of the press: “Neutral reporting” sounds like it should be a good thing. But it’s often not: “balancing” ridiculous claims does no one any good, and news consumers understandably wonder sometimes if reporters are co-opted or just stupid when they carefully get sources on all “sides to discuss thoughtfully whether up may really be down. Sometimes, as Einstein might have observed, a braying ass is just a braying ass.


PeezPix by Ted Pease

Stella Rain Watch











Get TODAY'S WORD ON JOURNALISM in your email every weekday morning during WORD season. This is a free “service” sent to the 2,000,000 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, Trinidad, California.
(Be)Friend The WORD

“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, December 11, 2015

What Research Shows

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Note: It’s much more fun to listen to Cleese say this than to read it. So if you can, click here and watch him on YouTube. Read along and see if you move your lips.

Stupid Season



https://youtu.be/wvVPdyYeaQU
“I think the problem with people like this is that they are so stupid that they have no idea how stupid they are. 

“You see, if you’re very, very stupid, how can you possibly realize that you’re very, very stupid? You’d have to be relatively intelligent to realize how stupid you are. 

“There’s a wonderful bit of research by a guy called David Dunning at Cornell, who’s a friend of mine, I’m proud to say, who’s pointed out that in order to know how good you are at something requires exactly the same skills as it does to be good at that thing in the first place. Which means that if you’re absolutely no good at something at all, then you lack exactly the skills that you need to know that you’re absolutely no good at it. 

“And this explains not just Hollywood, but almost the entirety of Fox News.”

—John Cleese, citizen-philosopher and minister of Silly Walks, “John Cleese on Stupidity,” YouTube, 2014 (Thanks to alert WORDsters Barry Kort, Ann Berry and many others who apparently monitor stupid issues.)


Editorial Comment: There are so many applications of this wisdom on stupidity that it’s hard to know where to start.


PeezPix by Ted Pease

After Yesterday’s Rain, Arcata, California







Get TODAY'S WORD ON JOURNALISM in your email every weekday morning during WORD season. This is a free “service” sent to the 2,000,000 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, Trinidad, California.
(Be)Friend The WORD

“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, December 10, 2015

8 Million Stories

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Finding the Flower

“[W]e have gone from a scarcity-based information economy to a glut information economy. In the old days, finding the thing that you needed was like finding the flower in the desert — you’d have to go out into the desert and find the flower. And now, it’s like finding the flower in the jungle — or worse, finding the flower in the flower gardens.” 


—Neil Gaiman, English science fiction author, “Neil Gaiman on How Stories Last,” Brainpickings, June 2015 

Editorial Comment: 8 million stories in the naked city


PeezPix by Ted Pease

The Burying Ground







Get TODAY'S WORD ON JOURNALISM in your email every weekday morning during WORD season. This is a free “service” sent to the 2,000,000 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, Trinidad, California.
(Be)Friend The WORD

“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, December 9, 2015

Inside Information

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More Reporting, Less Reading


“[A]verage Americans are suspicious of how their tax dollars are being spent and observe Washington insiders operating at ever-greater levels of power and secrecy. The irony is that policy journalism in Washington is thriving. It’s just not being written for you, and you’re probably never going to read it.” 

—John Heltman, trade-press journalist, “Why the Public Can’t Read the Press,” The Atlantic, 2015 

“The New York Times editorial…it ought to be in the dictionary under ‘O,’ for ‘out of touch,'” - See more at: https://www.thewrap.com/ted-cruz-new-york-times-front-page-gun-editorial/#sthash.sGTUXyV1.dpuf
“The New York Times editorial…it ought to be in the dictionary under ‘O,’ for ‘out of touch,'” - See more at: https://www.thewrap.com/ted-cruz-new-york-times-front-page-gun-editorial/#sthash.sGTUXyV1.dpuf
“The New York Times editorial…it ought to be in the dictionary under ‘O,’ for ‘out of touch,'” - See more at: https://www.thewrap.com/ted-cruz-new-york-times-front-page-gun-editorial/#sthash.sGTUXyV1.dpuf

Editorial Comment: Our tax dollars at work.


PeezPix by Ted Pease

The Buoys of Christmas



 








Get TODAY'S WORD ON JOURNALISM in your email every weekday morning during WORD season. This is a free “service” sent to the 2,000,000 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, Trinidad, California.
(Be)Friend The WORD

“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
.