Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/11/25
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]In a message dated 11/24/99 7:49:39 PM, ewelch@neteze.com writes: << Reasonable, except for the showing the owner before hand. That's contrary to good journalism practice. >> Sorry, Eric, but with the exception of "expose" journalism in which you admit you're out to burn someone, I think your "contrary to good journalism practice" comment is a load of, well, baseless convention. We at Rural Missouri -- the bastion of good journalism that it is -- routinely fax a copy of our stories to subjects before they appear as an accuracy check. I can't tell you how many times this has saved us from some really stupidly embarrassing mistake. What in the hallowed halls of journalism is wrong with ensuring accuracy? A guy invites you into his life long enough to do a story on him the least you can do is get it right. I realize you were talking about photos and I am talking about words but really they're not much different. When I fax someone a story, I sent them it in layout form -- with the photos in place. I have never ONCE hand anyone question the photos. Of course, I'm not out to hurt someone either. I do feature stories and occasional topic/issue stories and I always strive to be fair. If I were out to expose injustice I would probably get a colder reception but I would still offer the subjects the opportunity to set the record straight before the damage is done. Incidently, I learned this practice in News 306 class at MU. DId they teach you something different? Bob (hates inaccuracy) McEowen