News Cut

News Cut: May 6, 2009 Archive

MN Daily update

Posted at 6:41 AM on May 6, 2009 by Bob Collins (0 Comments)
Filed under: Media

The leadership of the Minnesota Daily, the newspaper of the University of Minnesota, today responded to an "open letter" from two of its editors yesterday that criticized the awarding of some bonuses at the paper.


The OP bonuses are part of the established compensation package for the president, editor-in-chief and business manager - an agreed-upon contract for paying and evaluating those employees through the year.

As such, the OP bonuses are not perks. When the bonuses were first introduced, in fact, OP pay rates were actually reduced throughout the year. The bonuses were intended so the board could "reinstate" those pay cuts if performance merited them.

Read the full response.

Comment on this post

Five at 8: May 6, 2009

Posted at 7:48 AM on May 6, 2009 by Bob Collins

  • There are times in our lives when we're faced with making a deal with the devil. Vikings fans: This is one of those times. So, here. You're going to need this. The official Brett Favre Web site. Sports Illustrated suggests the reports of Favre's feud with the Pa...Pac....Packers.... is overblown. Around here we're debating whether it's possible to go from enemy to idol. In Milwaukee, can someone go from idol to enemy?

    (Psst to Vikings: You could've had Matt Cassel for next to nothing.)

  • Son of the bridge to nowhere? The New York Times tracks stimulus spending and stops at a bridge in Akron, on which officials are going to use stimulus money to build a fence. It's partly to get home values to reverse a decline. People are jumping off the bridge and falling on the neighborhood below.

    It does raise the question of whether a fence is really the way to get to the actual problem.

  • Is it time for a gay Supreme Court justice? We may find out, Slate is reporting.

  • What's in your office. How about a stranger that you think is a legit member of your I.T. workforce? The BBC has a fascinating story about how social engineering is being used to rip off your firm's secrets. The weakest link in any company? People.

  • Let's think about the ramifications for this before we do something stupid here. Scientists have unveiled a race car that can be powered by chocolate, or at least chocolate "waste." One fairly envisions Hershey bars hitting $4 due to the high demand for chocolate energy in China and India. And what about the dogs?

    Speaking of chocolate and dogs, here's a list of outdoor threats to your pooch.

  • Bonus. Video smackdown. Dr. John Hallberg demonstrates masks vs. cute goats with Mary Lucia.

    WHAT WE'RE DOING

    Midmorning (9-11 a.m.) - Kerri Miller is back. First hour: What good are economists? I've opined here before on the subject. If they're so smart, why are they so often wrong?

    Another great topic in the second hour:the moral strain of flu. Do you keep your kids home when they're sick? Or do you send them off to school because keeping them home is a pain in the neck? Do you go to work when you're sick?

    Midday (11-1): Last night, Tom Crann hosted a session with broadcast news legend Roger Mudd. Tom promised me yesterday he'd ask about the day Mudd walked out on CBS when they gave Walter Cronkite's gig to Dan Rather. The session will be broadcast in the second hour. In the first hour, Minnesota House Speaker Margaret Anderson Kelliher and Senate Majority Leader Larry Pogemiller talk about the waning legislative session. I may live blog it here.

    Talk of the Nation (1-3): Political editor Ken Rudin in the first hour. The job market for college grads and the difficulty of finding internships in the second hour. MPR's Tim Post did that story last week.

    All Things Considered (3-6:30): More on the flu from MPR's Tim Nelson. Also: Where are Pakistan's nukes?

    WEDNESDAY! WEDNESDAY! WEDNESDAY!

    Join me here this evening at 7 for the News Cut live blogging of a session in the UBS Forum about severe weather. Cathy Wurzer talks to Paul Huttner, Craig Edwards, Mark Seeley and special guest meteorologist Paul Douglas about tornadoes, floods, straight line winds and other public safety threats that come with warm weather. We'll discuss how accurately storms can be predicted, how storms are formed and how to protect yourself and your property.

    And, we'll prove it's possible to talk about the weather without needing to stand outside in the backyard garden.

  • Live-blogging: The Legislature's final days

    Posted at 10:44 AM on May 6, 2009 by Bob Collins (5 Comments)
    Filed under: Politics

    Senator Larry Pogemillers Senate Majority Leader, and Rep. Margaret Anderson Kelliher, Speaker of the Minnesota House are on Midday with Gary Eichten. The Legislature is down to its last few days and the annual stand-off with the governor is brewing.

    Why not join in and discuss what you hear? Listen here.


    Comment on this post

    Hunger strikes

    Posted at 1:34 PM on May 6, 2009 by Bob Collins (1 Comments)

    One hunger strike is over; one more is underway.

    Journalist Roxana Saberi, the Concordia grad who is currently jailed in Iran, has ended her hunger strike.

    "Roxana called last night to inform me that she has ended her hunger strike," her father Reza Saberi told The Associated Press. "I'm relieved that she has done so to avoid a deterioration of her health."

    She started the hunger strike on April 21, vowing to continue until she was freed. Her action did not change a thing, from all indications.

    Hers is not the only hunger strike underway. Actress Mia Farrow is in the 10th day of her hunger strike to protest the lack of coverage of Darfur.

    It must be working. She got on Larry King.

    She's already said she'll end her hunger strike after 21 days.

    Comment on this post

    Are journalists class clowns on swine flu coverage?

    Posted at 3:27 PM on May 6, 2009 by Bob Collins (10 Comments)
    Filed under: Health, Media

    mask_reportersw_getty.jpg

    One of the harshest criticisms about coverage of the swine flu comes today from a journalist. Stacey Woelfel, the chair of the Radio Television News Directors Association, calls journalists "class clowns" for their coverage.

    Now, let me get it on the record here that I think there is some news value to this story. Any time there is a communicable disease on the loose that can make the sufferer uncomfortable for a time, it's worth a report or two. Since death is rare (there's only been one in the entire United States so far), it's not like this is as serious as a major foodborne illness like Hepatitis A. Remember the outbreak in Pennsylvania in 2003 when a Chi Chi's served some bad green onions. Six hundred fifty people got sick and four people died--all from one bad batch of green onions in one city. Compare that to the 226 cases and 1 death we have as I write this. The green onion/hepatitis story was a big one about a threat than anyone could face in the grocery store or restaurant. The swine flu story just isn't. Note this sentence from the CDC website on the swine flu: "It is expected that most people will recover without needing medical care." That's right. If you get swine flu, you probably don't even have to go to the doctor to get it looked at. It's a virus. It has to run its course. Only those in special at-risk categories even need to worry about it. So why all the coverage?

    Why all the coverage? It could be, perhaps, because the characteristics of the flu that Woelfel describes as fact, have only appeared to be fact in the last day or so, and that quite often coverage of the flu involved relaying the comments of the experts who were trying to figure out what was going on.

    While Woelfel says "the swine flu story just isn't," no responsible journalist could make that declaration a week ago when the nature of the strain hadn't even been determined yet. It was only Tuesday that officials announced, for example, the flu is not as bad as first thought. So saying the story was worth only one or two mentions stretches credibility somewhat.

    Woelfel says death is rare. Last week, the people who were telling us the flu story is not a story because 36,000 people die from the flu each year, this week are saying it's not a story because death is rare. You can't have it both ways.

    To be clear, there's been some really terrible coverage. But critics are being sweeping in their condemnation by not naming specific journalists or news organizations they allege are being unethical in their coverage, painting all journalists with a broad brush. Most ethical journalists -- and that's the majority -- have done nothing more than what good journalists do: tell you what is known and what isn't.

    On National Public Radio's Morning Edition on Tuesday, Gary Schwitzer, the University of Minnesota School of Journalism and Mass Communications professor who writes the Health News Blog (and who called my attention to the RTNDA article via his blog), said "When you start fear mongering in all of your messages on air and on your Web site, I don't think we're serving the public in the best way." No argument there.

    The story on NPR also criticized CNN reporter John Roberts, for asking the question:

    "Is this the killer virus that we've all been hearing about. Is it just a threat? Is it like 1986 when we had a small outbreak, or is it like 1918 when 20 million people died worldwide?"

    With the benefit of a week since the story broke, that might be low-hanging fruit for media critics, but it ignores an important point: There's nothing wrong with asking a question if the answer to it is something we want -- if not, need -- to know. What offended sensibilities was any following speculation that pretended to have an answer different than the one the experts were offering.

    While I give CNN a pass on the question, it's hard to argue with criticism of the network. When I asked him about what TV outlets he considered "class clowns" Schwitzer cited CNN's "Bracing For the Worst" and "Outbreak of Fear" graphics. Good examples.

    But when you ask critics who level allegations on an entire industry for specifics -- in this case the media -- they almost always cite CNN or Fox or a major TV network. The problem with that, as I mentioned yesterday, is that there's much more to journalism than CNN or Fox or a major TV network, a fact that usually surprises people who work at CNN, Fox, or a major TV network.

    "If only RTNDA and its chairman and its website and its terrific code of ethics seemed to make any difference with its members!" Schwitzer wrote on his blog post today. He comes by his expertise honestly, he once headed CNN's medical unit.

    But he hasn't watched any of the coverage with which he disagrees, he confirmed for me in an e-mail this afternoon. "I still haven't watched one minute of TV coverage. All the examples I gave you were things I read about from newspaper TV columnists across the country like Howard Kurtz, James Rainey, David Zurawik, Al Tompkins and others. I have no reason to question the accuracy of their accounts of the specific instances they've written about."

    It's a pity all of them have chosen to ignore some of the solid reporting on the story.

    (Photo: Getty Images)


    update 9:13 p.m. - The RTNDA chair who said TV reporters are "class clowns" and who said the flu story is a story that isn't, is news director of KOMU TV in Columbia, Missouri. Let's check and see what the top story on the station's Web site is this evening:

    swine_flu_kmou.jpg

    Comment on this post

    Live-blogging: Severe weather season forum

    Posted at 5:45 PM on May 6, 2009 by Bob Collins (1 Comments)
    Filed under: Weather

    How appropriate that a few severe weather warnings are up for the "flyover country" this evening, for we are partaking in one of our most beloved traditions: talking about Minnesota weather.

    MPR's Cathy Wurzer is hosting a discussion in the UBS Forum with meteorologists Paul Huttner, Craig Edwards, Mark Seeley about tornadoes, floods, straight-line winds and other public safety threats that come with warm weather. We'll discuss how accurately storms can be predicted, how storms are formed and how to protect yourself and your property.

    And I am live-blogging the event. Follow along, ask a question, maybe even make some Hot Dish. The forum will be broadcast on the radio during Midday on Thursday.

    Comment on this post

    May 2009
    S M T W T F S
              1 2
    3 4 5 6 7 8 9
    10 11 12 13 14 15 16
    17 18 19 20 21 22 23
    24 25 26 27 28 29 30
    31            


    Master Archive

    MPR News
    Radio

    Listen Now

    Other Radio Streams from MPR

    Classical MPR
    Radio Heartland

    Services

    Become a Sponsor