
3 minute read
Opinion/Streetalk
from Aug. 28, 2014
ThiS ModeRn WoRld by tom tomorrow
Hard work, poor news What’s your favorite special event?
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If the contretemps over Washoe Schools Superintendent Pedro Martinez has done nothing else, it has gotten area television stations back to covering the school board.
Until recent events, it was a rare school board meeting when television cameras were present. And when something sexy did get them into the board meeting room, they were starting from zero. By missing all those other meetings, they brought no body of knowledge or institutional memory to the story of the day.
The television stations will be covering the school board when there is conflict, but otherwise it will be a rare occasion when they show up. Part of the reason for this is that television hates BOPSAT stories, stories that feature a “bunch of people sitting around talking.” They say they cover legislatures or city councils or school board by going out and showing how the actions of those bodies affect real people. But because they don’t put in the time at the meetings, the “real people” pieces are routinely inaccurate.
This will surprise readers, but this is not the fault of television reporters, not, at least, in this market. There was a time when the television stations here had three newscasts (5:30, 6:30 and 11) and enough staffers to handle the workload. Their ownership had a more local orientation and considerable respect for the mission of news.
Today, there is a newscast every time we turn around. Unfortunately, the current absentee owners have not even come close to increasing the staffing levels according to the demands made by those increased newscasts. Over those same decades, the population of the Truckee Meadows grew by leaps and bounds 123 percent from 1980 to 2010). So the existing workers were loaded down with more and more work, and the newscasts became more and more shallow. News beats were discontinued because covering them responsibly would have eaten up too much time. Live shots on pedestrian, banal stories filled time but provided little information compared to thoughtfully produced, well crafted taped and packaged reports. As the size of the staffs effectively shrank with growing population and increased duties, journalists had to produce numerous versions of the same stories for different newscasts, slicing the material thinner and thinner for each newscast. And as recession-driven cuts reduced the actual numbers of staffers, the stations found ways to cover stories without actual reporters or photographers. How many times have we seen short, barebones “reports” read by studio anchors with computer generated maps to show locations as the only video?
Six months from now, things will be back to normal at the school board and on other beats around the valley. Each story will be covered like a traffic accident—today’s information, no background or depth, no familiarity with the real issues. The journalists will probably be different, since the workload grinds up so many and drives them to find other markets or careers. And whatever sexy story pulls a reporter and photographer into the school board meeting, those journalists once again will probably have to come up to speed on who those people sitting around the table are, and learn the issue before them then and there instead of bringing any level of knowledge into the room with them.
It’s a problem caused elsewhere, so don’t blame the locals. That’s the level of responsibility to the public today’s television station owners feel. Ω
Asked at Sparks Post Office, 750 Fourth St.
Trudy Hayes
Retiree Oh, gosh—Hot August Nights, because it goes back to the old days. I like the ’50s, the ’60s, the old cars—I used to own one.
Lamcrne Kozlowski
Retiree I don’t like the special events in the area. I don’t like all the people, I don’t like the crowds. … I hate to say that because I know they bring a lot of money into the economy, but I just avoid them like the plague. … I teach classes downtown, and you have to go way around to get anyplace. I’m an old Sparks girl. I’ve been here a long time. I live about a block and a half away, and I really like the peace and quiet. Rod Pray
Tree trimmer Street Vibrations. I like the motorcycles, the music, all the people coming to town, the motorcycles.
Vivian Albitre
Commercial mail loader Oh, I think it’s Hot August Nights. It’s the nostalgia of my dad having his car, and I would do Hot August Nights with him for years until he passed away.
Jesse Raev
Shipping worker The Rib Cook-Off—excellent food, the festivities. I mean, the atmosphere, it’s great.