[identity profile] bombardiette.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] davis_square
A couple of days ago, I posted this entry regarding the Somerville Journal. This morning, when I checked my e-mail and read through the comments still trickling in, I noted that one had been received from [livejournal.com profile] somjournal asking that such criticisms be e-mailed to somerville @ cnc dot com.

So, I jotted down my grievance and collected as many of your comments as I could find/remember and, as best I could, told the Somerville Journal that they need serious help.

The e-mail was sent today during my lunch at 2:15 pm. I still haven't heard anything back.

Not sure I articulated very well, but I do know I did better than their reporters seem to.



Somerville Journal Staff and Editors,



I recently made a public post to an online community forum (The Davis Square community on Live Journal) regarding an article written by Mr. S.H. Bagley on the 20th of November. The article was titled, Pero: Civilians Should Honor Veteran’s Day.



My primary concern, as veteran and member of The Dilboy Post, was the incorrect statement that the city of Somerville hosted the Veteran’s Day events at The Dilboy Post. This matter was brought to my attention while preparing for a shift at The Post when the commander, Mr. Hardy, who was reading a hard copy of the Journal, spotted the article and went upstairs to call the Journal straight away to correct this mis-statement. I told Mr. Hardy then that I would post a correction to a well known and frequented online community as well.



My original post, admittedly, was what might be termed sarcastic, however, the number of comments that it elicited was, at last count yesterday, around 55 (and has since gone up by a few) – and nearly every commenter had something critical to say about the state of The Somerville Journal as a news source. Today, I received a comment from a user named “somjournal” directing us to this e-mail address for future concerns. I decided that the best course of action would be to highlight our concerns collectively using this avenue.



First, the original post was, as indicated, prompted by a poorly written, factually incorrect article (link here: http://www.wickedlocal.com/somerville/homepage/x224442050 ). This article is really more of a collection of quotes attributed to Alderman Pero, speaking out about the lack of participation in Veteran’s Day affairs in Somerville although participation by whom is not really made clear. I find it hard to believe, however, that Mr. Bagley didn’t ask clarifying questions when faced with statements such as, “the few of us that were present at Dilboy Post were speaking to one another.” Few of who? The Dilboy hosts the Marine Corps Birthday/Veteran’s Day party on the 10th of November annually and never is there a better showing of members, politicians, servicemembers and friends (civilian even!) than on that day. And of course, one would believe that those gathered at a celebration such as this would, in fact, be speaking to each other. It’s a common occurrence at celebratory gatherings.



Bagley himself asserts that the city hosted this event which is completely incorrect. While I am unaware of where the funding came from this year, whether it was Post funds or privately funded by a member who does this each year, I can assure you, the city didn’t spend a dime.



Several commenters noted that Mr. Bagley’s articles are routinely this bad. Statements trail off, sentences lead to nowhere and articles themselves seem to end after only an introduction. One commenter to my post noted, “Was that the article written by an 8th grader?” On reading through letters to wickedlocal.com, I found more than one that were long statements of correction by the person or persons quoted or featured as subjects or subject matter experts in Mr. Bagley’s articles. These letters noted that they were mis-quoted or taken completely out of context and not at all representative of what the interviewee actually discussed with Mr. Bagley. And in reference to the Veteran’s Day article, if Mr. Bagley was going to write an article on non-participation in the city, why was his only source of information one Alderman? Why didn’t he take the Alderman’s statements and contact others who attended and, most importantly, the hosts of the events themselves – The Post? What I noticed in connection with all of this too was that there appeared to be no apology from the editor (common in many papers when confronted with letters like this) and no articles of correction or even statements of correction on the following day. This led me to ask, if a reporter completely skews the facts and mis-quotes or mis-reports something altogether, is it on the public to ensure that a letter is written to notify everyone that the paper made a mistake???



Other concerns brought up besides Mr. Bagley’s history of infamously poor reporting and spelling skills was the apparent lack of editorial oversight – a subject that, when broached by a few commenters, I couldn’t have agreed with more. It’s bad enough that the journalists for this paper seem to be wholly unskilled, but the editor seems to approve any piece that crosses her desk so that she can take the time to pursue more ridiculous fluff pieces (a short piece on ties was commented on) rather than ensure that real news is reported correctly.



An editor worth her salt would have rejected the article above and so many others cited without a second thought.



Fact checking and lack of follow through was also addressed. Examples given were the piece on the Winter Hill Star Market closing with no mention of why (or even that the question had been asked and the store owners refused to answer) along with several other community pieces that would only say, “XX happened” and leave off without further explanation as to why, when, how, etcetera.



And as far as the wickedlocal.com website is concerned, two questions that merit an answer from your staff were raised:

1. Why in the world would you replace a tab titled “People” (easy to read, understand, comprehend) with a tab titled “Celebrations” and then post stories like the recent one about Army PFC Kantrell being DEPLOYED? When I deployed, as much as I believed in what I was doing, I didn’t celebrate. I celebrated when I RETURNED. The tab, “Celebrations” is a ridiculous section title to begin with but really…posting information and articles such as this under that section heading just completely defies logic.

2. Why in the world would you have a big, bold link to Somerville Staff Blogs on the site only to have it lead to the following message: Somerville - Don't hit that headline link! That won't get you anywhere. What you want to be doing is reading the Somerville Journal staff blog. That will get you somewhere.

Why don’t you just fix the link instead of leaving a ridiculous message like this up for over two months now???



I believe that the bottom line is this: While user somjournal cited a lack of coverage in the Somerville area by reporters when responding to my post, your readers only see a lack of quality, newsworthy news or care paid at all to this paper. I see a paper more interested in saving money (apparently) at the expense of its very reason for existence – quality, local news reporting.



One commenter to my post noted that the journalistic quality of this paper is only as good (really, worse) than the average Live Journal blog post. It was pointed out that “blogging” has become a substitute for reporting today and that mentality is actually being carried over into publications such as this. While certain bloggers have found their niche in the world of news and made an impact on public opinion, this hardly implies that newspapers should follow suit. The number of bloggers out there is phenomenal and very few ever make a blip on the radar. Blogging is a poor replacement or substitute for reporting and it shouldn’t be encouraged by your editors any longer.



We all hope that you’ll take these comments seriously and address the problems that plague your paper because sadly, I believe that this e-mail is better written, more factual and more informative than any article we’ve read in a long time in The Somerville Journal, even though it did take more than 30 seconds to read (also unlike most of your articles today).



Regards,

Ms. Needham

Date: 2007-12-04 11:29 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] srakkt.livejournal.com
Well done. It's unclear to me what sort of changes this will put into motion, but we can hope for something. It really begins and ends with their editor, who I hope will take all of this to heart and start kicking some asses into gear.

Date: 2007-12-05 02:54 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] ron_newman
Tuesday is a deadline day for the Journal, so the editor may have put it aside until she has more time to look at it later in the week.

Date: 2007-12-05 03:18 am (UTC)
ifotismeni: (Default)
From: [personal profile] ifotismeni
yea, i doubt they have the technical complexity to have an automated response for emails. seriously it's probably like 5 people working out of a small office with no heat.

Date: 2007-12-05 03:22 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] ron_newman
I've never gotten an automated reply when I've sent mail to somerville@cnc.com. Sometimes I get a personal reply from Kat Powers. I hope that the OP does, too.

The Journal office is in the Harvard Vanguard medical building, so they probably do have heat ;-)

Date: 2007-12-05 03:26 am (UTC)
ifotismeni: (Default)
From: [personal profile] ifotismeni
generally reporters don't reply to emails sent to them as they don't have time. but they do read everything that comes to them.

hahah, glad to see they've got at least the basic amenities!

Date: 2007-12-05 03:28 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] ron_newman
One thing not clear from the letter is whether [livejournal.com profile] hellgirl13 wants it to be published. The editor surely would want to check this, at least.

Date: 2007-12-05 10:30 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] icecreamempress.livejournal.com
It is? I thought it was across the street from the Store 24.

Date: 2007-12-05 11:02 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] ron_newman
No, you are thinking of the Somerville News office.

Date: 2008-07-11 10:31 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] winniewifas.livejournal.com
I have received an acknowledgment of receipt of the ticket (automated), and imagine that, at this stage I must wait until next week.

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