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January 20, 2006
I’m not exactly sure what the title ‘executive editor’ entails
at the Washington Post, but Jim Brady is it.
Jim lost his cool
and shut down the reader comments feature on post.blog, a blog
the paper says is ‘dedicated to sharing news by and
about The Post and washingtonpost.com.’
Note to Jim: Panic is not dedication.
Admittedly, it’s an edgy world out there as various
forms of media struggle to find their stride in the Internet
environment. But Jim’s an AOL veteran, having left the
Post for that supposedly Internet-savvy company, returning a
couple years ago to the WP.
AOL has had its own problems, but
we can assume that being stunned into submission over a weekend
by 700 e-mails was not one of them.
The flap (and a small one it is) was caused by a posting on
an item about Washington Post ombudsman Deborah Howell's recent
column concerning the Abramoff scandal: Getting the Story
on Jack Abramoff. Her mention of the fact that Abramoff has spread
his
largesse among Democrats and Republicans alike (if not equally)
touched off a deluge of ‘personal attacks, profanity and
hate speech,’ according to Brady.
With the editorial equivalent of a trembly lip, Brady wrote
about the comment closing as follows:
"Transparency and
reasoned debate are crucial parts of the Web culture, and
it's a disappointment to us that we have not been able to maintain
a civil conversation, especially about issues that people
feel
strongly (and differently) about. We're not giving up on
the concept of having a healthy public dialogue with our readers,
but this experience shows that we need to think more carefully
about how we do it."
Well, Jim, I don’t quite know how to tell you this without
hurting your already offended sensitivities, but interactive
web sites have been taking this in stride for years now. It’s
usually called ‘rules for posting’ and is enforced
by moderators. Bloggers who don’t accept such prescripts
are warned, their posting not accepted and, if they persist,
they're blocked from the site.
Not a lot of ‘careful thinking’ required, just some
WP intern staff to use their judgment and keep the ball somewhere
inside the foul lines. They don’t cost much and, if a newspaper
the size and prestige of the Washington Post decides to have an interactive blog (which is a great, if not very inventive,
idea), then it ought to be able to hold the line against a few
screamers.
The world is going digital, Jim. Seven hundred postings is what
you want to have, it proves you’ve found a hot-button
issue and newspapers kill for hot issues. The newspaper
business is not in danger from ‘personal attacks, profanity
and hate speech,’ but it is in great risk of irrelevancy,
as news continues to be fed to us too quickly for print runs.
The Net is a weird-ball place, full of fun, information, thoughtful
insight and deranged idiots. But it’s where the newspapering
business is going and the kitchen hasn’t even begun
to get hot.
Get out of the Archives and read what Jim's writing
today |