Sunday, October 26, 2008

Listening to the newspaper...

One of the "not-all-that-secret" secrets of TV and radio news, especially local news, is how assignment editors and producers often find inspiration in the pages of local newspapers.

Most broadcasters don't have the staff, or the resources, to chase down difficult stories. Historically, that's been the domain of print journalists. After all, a newspaper reporter travels with a notebook, an MP3 recorder and maybe a laptop computer. A TV news reporter often brings along a half-million dollars worth of expensive electronic equipment. And the deregulation of radio has made news a rarity, except on all-news and Public Radio stations.

For years, my daily commute to and from Manhattan involved me juggling a copy of The New York Times, along with a briefcase and a beverage on an NJTranist bus or the Subway. But now that I'm working in central Jersey, I'm driving to and from work. That pretty much put an end to my Times addiction. And while there is always the on-line version of the paper, I treat it like most things on the Web... something to be scanned, quickly pondered, then abandoned for a new URL.

I always thought it was a bit of a cheat when NPR stations interviewed print reporters. Kind of like creating stories by talking to ourselves. But I must admit my opinion has changed, now that Public Radio stations like WNYC are my primary vehicle for in-depth news coverage.

Times reporters and editors show up with what I once considered alarming regularity. Now, I'm grateful to hear them. After all, it's a long ride from Exit 9 to 14C on the New Jersey Turnpike, and I appreciate the literate companionship...

Friday, October 10, 2008

Good-Bye Trenton, Hello Williamsburg

Once upon a time... up to last week, in fact... The New York Times had a section they called Metro, short for "Metropolitan." It was the paper's way of acknowledging that intelligent life (and subscribers) might exist outside of Manhattan. They even had a news bureau in Trenton, and a printing plant Edison, NJ. Now all three are history... the bureau, the printing plant and the section. Just like the proverbial "good old days," local news is relegated to the back end of the first section, under the banner New York.

In a way, it's not surprising. Hemorrhaging almost as much red ink as Wall Street, The Times... like the victim of a merger and acquisition deal gone bad, is trying to cut its way back to profitability. But its absence will be noted by some of us who reside on the west bank of the Hudson.

With about 40% of the newsroom staff of The Star-Ledger accepting buy-outs, and other papers struggling even after substantial downsizing, it looks like in-depth news coverage of the Garden State will likely become the near exclusive domain of the AP and New Jersey Network. We'll miss The Times distinctive, if at times dismissive, voice. Somehow, reading blogs on nj.com just isn't the same...