The April Fool's Joke That Wasn't

Came in this morning to find my laptop continually trying to boot from the network. This was odd, but I thought somebody might be trying to pull an April Fool's prank on me. So I checked out the BIOS and found out that the machine wasn't recognizing the hard drive. I shut the machine down and pulled the drive - didn't seem overheated or anything like that. So I put it back in.

Rebooted the machine and heard this godawful noise ("GRRRRRRRRNT!"). Yep, the hard drive went on April Fool's Day.

And, of course, there's some recent e-mail and files that weren't backed up to the server yet. So I went over to a recovery place this morning. They're promising to call me back by 3 PM with a status update.

Meanwhile, I'm working here at the office on a spare machine, getting my e-mail through a pain-in-the-ass web interface and trying to remember what exactly I needed to do today at 2PM. (I think I had an appointment scheduled, but I'm not sure.)

Technology sucks.

Deplorable Law Enforcement Tactics

Somebody is going to die in the woods. As I've been talking to some of my fellow Long Island ATV riders, I've been hearing some very disturbing stories. (Yes, I know it is illegal on Long Island to ride ATVs on public lands. Put that aside for a second.) Riding acquaintances have told me that the latest tactic employed by law enforcement to catch illegal ATV riders involves staging situations in which a fellow rider or outdoor enthusiast appears to be injured. When the ATV rider stops to help, law enforcement officers emerge from hiding places in the woods, surround and capture the illegal rider.

Other than increased effectiveness in cracking down on illegal ATV riding, what else will this new approach bring about? Well, the word is starting to get out that riders shouldn't stop to help anybody, unless they're prepared to pay hefty fines. And that sucks.

Lots of people use local trails for a variety of activities, including hiking, mountain biking, paintball and all sorts of other outdoor sports. And everybody knows of somebody who has been hurt out in the middle of the woods. It's expected (nay, a moral imperative) for ATV riders to stop to help anyone in distress. Personally, I'd rather stop and get a fine than take off and wonder if I left someone who was legitimately hurt all alone in the woods.

But many riders don't feel the way I do. These days, many of them won't stop to help anyone anymore, out of fear of having their quad impounded by the DEC and getting hefty fines on top of the impound fee.

If law enforcement continues these tactics, we're going to have an incident. Someone will be hiking and take an errant hunter's bullet, or someone will break a leg mountain biking - something like that. And an ATV rider who could have stopped to help will instead take off in the opposite direction. All because law enforcement wants to use a dirty trick to catch more illegal ATV riders.

What's worse? Illegal riding or someone dying alone in the woods? It appears law enforcement doesn't know the obvious answer to that question.

Who Is To Blame? The Government or Lazy Reporters?

More propaganda coming from the Bush administration... To me, there are two issues here. First and foremost, there's a big difference between a video news release and a pre-produced segment that appears to be editorial. The former tends to run on stations with some editing and input. The latter does not. We need to ask ourselves whether or not the government should be in the business of producing propaganda that is likely to run unedited on TV stations, with the appearance of a hard news story.

The second issue deals with the laziness of the MSM. From my journalism days, I remember the dynamic at work here. Early on in my training (B.A. in Journalism and Mass Communications from Washington & Lee University), I was exposed to the process that makes it easy for such things to infiltrate legitimate news reporting. And the structures within news departments continue to allow for it. In one journalism class, each student was assigned a beat. Regardless of what was happening on that beat, student reporters were responsible for 3-5 stories per week within that beat. I remember being assigned to the "Community" beat during weeks when very little of importance was going on and it was difficult to find 3-5 things to write about in a week. At the same time, I also remember being assigned to "Cops and Courts" when there was a major murder trial going on, plus all the arrests, court actions and whatnot that are typical of a college town. On Cops and Courts, there was never a lack of things to write about and working that beat often entailed making big decisions about what was newsworthy and what wasn't. I followed that big murder trial for weeks and wrote a huge story when the verdict was delivered, which soaked up much of my available time and made it very difficult to write about other goings-on during that time.

The point is, the dynamics involved in allocating a reporter's time and the limits on time that reporters can spend on stories is something that can be taken advantage of. Often, both in my training and in working for real-life newspapers, what was written during the week and what eventually runs in the paper are two very different things. Sometimes stories need to be bumped for whatever reason (need more fact-checking, additional reporting needed, etc.) and sometimes space needs to be filled. Sometimes, in allocating a reporter's time, something gets ignored that ought to merit a story. When there's space to fill or there's something that escaped attention, news releases come in handy.

There were many times during my training where I'd have two larger stories an hour before deadline and needed something quickly, which is when news releases came in handy. You could take a news release and gather all the relevant facts, make a couple phone calls and have a quickie story ready for publication that requires little effort. Sometimes "little effort" appeals to a reporter on deadline who needs to fill some space.

The dynamic isn't much different in broadcast. The time constraints are more stringent, and your subject matter is limited to whatever footage you might have, which may even make the problem worse. And then along comes this 90 seconds of produced footage from the government on something topical and relevant. The temptation must be overwhelming at times.

I don't want to excuse the mainstream news media here, but in an age of "better, faster, cheaper" I can see how some of these pre-produced news releases end up on the air. Shame on lazy reporters and editors for running them, but sometimes one is limited by what one can accomplish with limited reporting resources and whatnot. Reporters and editors surely shoulder much of the blame here.

The Bush administration shows remarkable knowledge of the workings of the press and how to get propaganda on the air. The big question, of course, is whether taxpayer dollars should be used in an attempt to blur the line between advertising/PR and editorial. I'd suggest that any video news releases should conform to a standard wherein stock footage is provided and talking points disseminated, but nothing that could be used to lend the appearance of a legit news reporter actually having produced the segment.

One other thing to consider here, which is that television is largely a linear medium, meaning that folks can tune in at various points during a segment and completely miss any warnings (should there be any) that content comes from the government and wasn't produced by the station or network. The only way to solve this problem would be to provide a persistant video message that indicates the source and runs throughout the segment. Not that I've ever seen any warnings, persistent or otherwise, that a video segment was produced by the Department of Agriculture or Defense or whatever...

One thing's for sure. The system isn't working here. There's a breakdown in the news filters we all depend on, and there's also a breakdown in the ethics of the current administration with regard to passing off propaganda as legit news content. This problem can exist only in situations where both of these things are broken. Fix one or the other and the problem goes away.

Okay. This sucks.

I've triple-checked everything in the installation of MT-Keystrokes. No idea what's wrong, but comments are still coming in faster than I can delete them. (And no, I didn't forget to rebuild the site after modifying the templates to call the script.) The only thing I can think of is that I've missed a form somewhere on one of the templates. I've looked and looked, but I can't find anything. So, unfortunately, it's time to give up on MT-Keystrokes. I'm going to try MT-Moderate out for a while.