LBY3
The continuing adventures of Beau Yarbrough

How much do you know about the X-Men?

Wednesday, May 24, 2006, 20:36
Section: Geek

MSNBC wants to know.

Thanks for taking our quiz. You answered 85% of the questions correctly.

Mostly correct. You get a passing grade from the Xavier Institute.

It’s astonishing that women actually want to speak to me.



Potomac News kicks up a stir with Playboy story

Wednesday, May 24, 2006, 18:37
Section: Journalism

So, my former paper, the Potomac News, ran a story about a local girl appearing in the Girls of MySpace pictorial in Playboy. And the mention that young Brittany Fuchs (who by day works at Hooters) took off her clothes and was photographed for money has apparently caused something of a stir.

Folks from outside the DC metro area may not realize that Northern Virginia is, essentially, the DC suburbs and Woodbridge, where Fuchs is from, is closer, as the crow flies, to DC than Hesperia is to Los Angeles. I’m not sure if we’d have stirred up similar controversy if we’d run a comparable article in the Hesperia Star.

Had the opportunity presented itself, I think it’s probable that we would have covered it in much the way that Potomac News reporter Josh Eiserike did (Josh did not work there at the same time that I was there): Asking why, what was it like, what do your family and friends think. He wasn’t saying “hooray for 21-year-old boobies” or “shame, shame on your 21-year-old boobies,” he just was reporting that sometimes, boobies happen.

There are those — including Hesperia Star readers — who think that us reporting on news is tantamount to us endorsing the views of those we mention in the paper or, at least, we’re somehow legitimizing their point of view. Let me assure the readers of every newspaper, no journalist is endorsing murder, rape or arson when they publish accounts of them in the newspaper (well, some editors might, but they’re a different breed as a rule). That’s obvious, I know, but that attitude extends to other news as well. Newsworthiness, when it’s considered from a journalist worth a damn, is independent of what the individual journalist wants to believe the world is like or what they’d like the world to be like. I’ve interviewed people I find personally reprehensible and morally repugnant over the years, and they’re probably not who you’d guess.

Newsworthiness is determined by what the public ought to know about as much as what they want to know about. Brittany Fuchs’ story may not be one that the good people of Culpepper, Virginia (a fine town, if I may say so) all want to know about, but knowing it makes them better informed about what’s going on in the world today, the values of others in their region and even if they disagree with Brittany’s decision, they gain insight as to why someone would take off their clothes for publication in a major mens’ magazine, something most of us will never do.



Something’s afoot at the LA Daily News

Wednesday, May 24, 2006, 0:20
Section: Journalism

This is interesting:

The Los Angeles Daily News is seeking reporters for an innovative citizen journalism project that will produce online and print products. We’re looking for energetic journalists who can do it all. Jobs involve reporting and writing stories, basic photography, editing and organizing reader submissions, meeting with community groups and managing Web sites. Salary is based experience.

Apply via e-mail only. Send a cover letter, resume and six to 10 work samples to newsjobs@dailynews.com. Please put “community reporter” in the subject line.

My Magic 8-Ball says “blog-based online-only/mostly journalism to try and recapture the readers fleeing traditional print for the Internet.” (It’s a very special Magic 8-Ball.)



Sarcoidosis update: How hot are my eyeballs?

Tuesday, May 23, 2006, 17:36
Section: Life

Sure, my eyeballs feel like two eggs being hard-boiled. But they can’t really be that hot, right?

The test: Wet a paper towel and put it on my eyes for wonderful soothing relief. (Aaaaaah.)

Then, take off the paper towel and feel the now-dry spots where my eyes were. Holy crap, that really is hot.



World of Warcraft, the motion picture, on The Business

Tuesday, May 23, 2006, 13:51
Section: Arts & Entertainment,Geek

World of WarcraftWhat is, for my money, the best entertainment news magazine around, KCRW’s The Business, talked about the upcoming movie based on World of Warcraft in this week’s show. They interviewed my former boss of my boss, Blizzard Entertainment’s Paul Sams.

(The only non-gamer mistake made by the show that I heard: There’s no built-in voice support in WoW, but that’s pretty good by the standards of mainstream journalism.)

Check it out.


 








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Veritas odit moras.