iceberg;3184207 said:
i know all too well what you mean, hos. i so greatly miss those who reported the news, not try to stir it up. the JFE's and anyone making the story about them turn me off the local media so bad i don't even pay too much attention to it anymore.
luska - i LOVED reading his work back when we actually had newspapers.
where we diverge hos is i'll give full respect to people like this and of course brad sham for his coming in here to clear things up. but i can never respect the tabloid journalist who hides behind catch phrases and cliches, lobs in some insults any 4th grader would be proud of and call is journalism.
JFE comes to mind. i just won't read her crap cause it's "coach cupcake" and well, jones sucks.
it's like someone let a CBZ troll loose on the media.
i'm glad to see brad get some love in here for his work and hopefully others will realize that reporting and writing isn't only for the national enquierer crowd but there are many of us who just miss good news reporting.
Great post Iceberg!
I grew up in L.A. so I didn't get to read much from the local Dallas writers but we had more than our share of great ones in SoCal back in the day, Jim Murray comes to mind.
I miss the days when sports journalism was about covering the game itself not the tabloid journalism we see today where the mediots dig for every scrap of dirt and go out of their way to create controversy whenever possible. It also seems that BSPN leads the way in making the story about the mediot as often as they can.
I remember reading an article in 1973 about Johnny Unitas, who had been one of my childhood heroes, and was now with the Chargers. Unlike the crap that's spewed out today, the writer didn't treat Unitas with disdain even though his skills had obviously eroded from the heights they had been at when he was younger. He focused on how Unitas was a mentor to a young Dan Fouts and how much Fouts could learn from "The Master".
Today's mediots seem to look for every opportunity to find the chink in a person's armor, to destroy the aura of greatness, to pervert a previously untarnished image. No one needed to point out that Johnny wasn't the player he had been so the writer did his best to keep a positive spin on what was obviously a difficult situation for Unitas.
That's what I miss, the days when writes were on the player's side and not simply shills for the tabloid media machine that sucks the life out of everyone they can.
This is another thing I hate about today's mediots, this all-or-nothing pendulum swing from one extreme to the other and back again. Romo comes in for an immobile Bledsoe and he's a hero! He bobbles the snap on a FG try and he's a goat. The team struggles late in the season and he's a chump and the sooner the Cowboys can replace him the better. Oh wait, he's having a great season, he's a hero again!
I posted an excerpt from Teddy Roosevelt's "Man In The Arena" speech a few weeks ago. It speaks directly to today's mediots:
http://cowboyszone.com/forums/showthread.php?t=170910&highlight=arena
It is refreshing to see that there are still a few folks in the media like Brad Sham who actually care how they are perceived and have integrity in how they do their jobs.
