Raking Muck in the Third Millenium

I used to have a sign over my desk in a newspaper office long ago, in Gothic script it read Rake Some Muck Today. In today's world, raking muck is something of a lost art. I may not be able to singlehandedly bring it back, but this is a start.

29 May 2015

What's Wrong with Learning About Science

     I first wrote about people knowing more about pseudo-science than real science back in 1986.

     I think, back then, I figured it was some sort of temporary phenomenon. But no.

     Creationism is back with a vengeance. You would have thought that ended in the 1920s. But even today people want it taught in schools, right next to evolution as an acceptable "theory." Evolution is a scientific-backed theory. Creationism is a myth with variations in every major religion.

     Then there are the anti-vaxxers. Sure, it's smart to consult with your pediatrician about vaccines. It's smart to talk to your pediatrician about everything. What is not smart is believing a former model and a discredited medical study rather than many studies that have not been discredited.

     And the folks who -- even as they are being blown away by a super hurricane -- claim climate change is a hoax perpetrated by a clandestine green conspiracy. Trust me on this, the Bolshevik Tree Huggers aren't organized enough to form a conspiracy of this magnitude. Or any magnitude.

     When I was a kid, science was cool. Mostly because of the space program. Where I grew up we were surrounded by space. The Naval Air Research Testing Station at Lake Denmark was where the early titan rockets were developed. Aircraft Radio Corporation was site of the first instruments-only airplane flight. Reaction Motors was where the adventurous employees used prototype Jet Packs to jump over the perimeter fence.

     Sure, the space program lost its glamor as it lost its funding, but what about other exciting aspects of science?

     Medicine? Medical science can now determine the predisposition for devastating diseases like Tay-Sachs or Huntington's. Long-term survival rates for cancers that not long ago were a death sentence. Yet I hear people claim Big Pharma is withholding cures for cancer.

     The Cosmos? I'm forever seeing Facebook posts about Mercury being in retrograde and that somehow causing bad luck. But what about the actual wonder of a star-studded sky? Oh, right, the paranoid among us want to put lights everywhere so we can't see the sky.

     It makes me want to start a campaign to have People magazine name Neil DeGrasse Tyson 2016 Sexiest Man Alive.

      Brains are sexy.

22 May 2015

I Am Sally Draper

     Spoiler alert:  I'm not gonna post a spoiler.

     I will say I was satisfied with the final Mad Men episode. I know some people were disappointed, but some people will always be disappointed. 

     I caught a little of the marathon during the week before the finale and enjoyed many of the comments from viewers, especially from the woman who saw the show as Sally Draper's story. It wasn't until she put it in words that I realized that's exactly the way I saw it. 

     Sally was the character I could relate to. I wasn't a grown-up in the 60s. I didn't know what the workplace looked like. I remember my father wearing a suit and a fedora to work and my mother a housedress around the house. I saw the era and the show through the same eyes as Sally. 

     I noticed all the things that have changed:  the smoking mostly, but also the drinks cart in the offices. Sure, I worked places where there was always a bottle of whiskey under the darkroom sink. And somebody always had a bottle of bourbon in the lower right-hand desk drawer. But that was for emergencies, not everyday consumption. I loved watching the clothes go from shirtwaists to miniskirts. And the men's hair creep below their collars. I am still nostalgic for when men wore their hair longer. It just looked better. 

     I also noticed the things that haven't changed all that much. There is still a glass ceiling and there are still people (men) who are clueless about it. One of my favorite moments of the show was when Peggy pointed out to her relentlessly liberal boyfriend during one of his rants about his support of  "the Negroes" that "I can't do those things, either." Classic moment.

     Watching Sally grow up and figure out the grownups around her was a constant reminder of my own place in that era. I didn't see some of the more shocking things she saw, but I did discover the people who were running the world were seriously flawed. Sally's story helped us remember it was the WWII/Korea generation that created the Baby Boomers.

     Between bringing in the real events and the real products of the times and presenting Sally's view, Mad Men succeeded as both a history lesson and a cautionary tale.  
     

11 May 2015

The Swamps of Jersey




I just finished reading a good mystery.
Not that there’s a shortage of good mysteries, but this one was written by a friend (so, take this blog any way you want) and it’s set in New Jersey.
I can’t say I’m fond of the title, The Swamps of Jersey. I mean, sure it has as many meanings as you want it to have, but many things are swampy in New Jersey, so I probably wouldn’t have used that as a title.
But, title aside, it is a fine mystery.
It starts a little slow, but the same can be said for a lot of books. And, since I know the author, Michael Stephen Daigle, is a fine writer, I was highly motivated to persevere.
It’s the kind of book where the setting is almost a character. Like Trenton is for Janet Evanovich, although it’s not funny like her books. In this case, it was obvious to me almost from the very beginning that Ironton, the fictional town, is Dover, a very real town. But the time Mike used some Dover street names, like Baker and Blackwell, I already had mental pictures of many of the settings.
I was born in Dover and Dover was the place you went shopping when I was a kid.  My mother shopped at the Acme Market. I bought my first LPs in Woolworth’s basement.  We bought fabric for all my school clothes in Newberry’s. Every girl I knew got her first bra from Annie Fink. And all the kids got their good winter coats from Crown Friedland. Our fathers got their suits from The Quality Shop. We saw all the Disney movies at The Baker Theater. I also learned all the swear words I ever learned from the ladies room wall at the Baker.
Dover was the center of the universe.
Then the Rockaway Townsquare Mall was built. How, we weren’t quite sure. I remember fishing with my dad in McKeel Brook right where the J C Penney store is now. . .But, built it was and Dover started going downhill. It soon became the town described by Mike in the book.
I’m not going to go into all the political and social reasons for Dover’s decline and the decline of every other downtown. Some of those reasons are part and parcel of the story in The Swamps of Jersey.
Being a New Jersey story, it involves political corruption. Being a story written by an old newspaperman (and I know Mike won’t take offense at that) it deals with musty files and budgets and a somewhat curmudgeonly cop and a quite curmudgeonly reporter.
All in all, a good read.


Mike Daigle speaking at a Society of Professional Journalists event

09 May 2015

Ginger Baker





                When I was a teenager, if someone said the word “heroin,” the word association was “Ginger Baker.”
                That was before we knew Clapton did it too.
                Heroin was something exotic, out of our field of knowledge. We knew weed. We thought we knew weed, it was probably heavily cut with oregano. We knew beer. Well, we knew Gennessee Cream Ale because it was cheap.
                By college, we knew heroin was closer. And by closer, I mean a guy I dated was returning a pysch book to a friend and was greeted at the apartment door by the NYPD. He ended up handcuffed to a girl wearing a towel and a mechanic who rang the wrong doorbell. The cops dragged Eric into the living room and asked him if he knew his friend was selling pot. He figured if he acted stupid the cops would get pissed so he said yes. Then they pointed to some glassine envelopes on the coffee table. Eric said something to the effect of “Holy S___, is that H?” The police knew he couldn’t possibly fake that degree of shock and let him go, preserving in the process his fellowship to grad school at Tulane.
                Remember, this was New York City, weed was not a concern, even for the police.
                When I discovered a few years ago that my kids actually knew someone who used heroin, I was as floored as Eric when he saw the envelopes on the table. 
                This is East Bumbleputtz. Kids drink Sam Adams and smoke ganja.
                But now it really hits home. I know someone who overdosed.
                This was a young man who, were I asked his drug of choice, I would have said Jack Daniels. My son said perhaps an occasional joint. They worked together a few summers.
                A guy we didn’t know at all, obviously.
                Some people said his new girlfriend, who I hadn’t met, used drugs.
                So the question became why would he become involved with someone who used drugs. He had a good job, a loving family. Why would he become enticed into drugs?
                Of course, we’ll never know. There must be an allure that I don’t get. Caffeine is my drug of choice.
                And maybe it doesn’t matter. It is just so very sad.
                Especially for his daughter who will always remember the last words she said to him were in anger.
                This is not a blog with answers.

07 May 2015

My First Ethics Column


You can't say we didn't have fun in the old days


                The first column (an Iron Age term for blog) I ever wrote on ethics ran on May 13, 1986.
                I had just returned from an SPJ Regional Conference, my first, and wrote a few “inside baseball” columns in our weekly newspaper.
                The May 13th column covered the topic of journalism ethics. Most of what I wrote was exactly what I would write today. The biggest difference was I was writing on an early desktop computer networked into the production department. I think they were made by Texas Instruments and were probably outdated when we got them.
                The modernization of technology is only one reason SPJ updated its ethics code in 1996 and again in 2014. Another change has been in the day to day job of being a reporter.
                When I started as a “reporter” I edited recipes, ran a contest called the “Puzzlegraph” worked in the darkroom, filled in on the stat camera (if you have to ask, don’t) rad ad proofs to Mr. Goldberg at Cohen’s of Washington and answered the phone. Even took classifieds if necessary. When I worked nights, any call that came within 15 minutes of when the bars closed was answered “the Yankees in seven.” That probably covered it.
                I also covered meetings and police beat and took photos of cub scout blue and gold dinners and the first day of trout season.
                In a way I feel sorry for rookies today. They spend so much time sitting in front of a computer screen. Papers are so understaffed the reporters aren’t given the time to hang around the cop shop, to drink lousy coffee and schmooze. We may have had to be very careful not to get too close to the cops, but at least we got answers from them.
                Today, I probably would think more about taking those proofs to Mr. Goldberg at the dress shop. Not that I ever really spoke to Mr. Goldberg. I just handed him the proofs and waited while he looked them over. He always initialed them and handed them back without a comment.
                And, in those days, the ad department carried cameras and took photos of the accidents they came across. And, they passed along tips they heard while seeing their accounts. That was in the days when Main Streets still had shops and the ad reps did a lot of walking and a lot of running into people.
                These weeklies may have had staffs so small you needed two departments to get free eggrolls with your Chinese restaurant order (again, if you have to ask, don’t), but we all worked together. We were in the same office in one of the towns we covered. And we were all producing the same product.
                What does that have to do with ethics? Just that there was the feeling that all the departments were on the same page, ethics-wise. Sure, occasionally, the ad department would have liked a favor, but they understood why it couldn’t happen.
                Today, I’m not even sure people in different departments speak to each other.