BookStudyDigest

Sunday, 31 March 2024

Read: Byline

Cristi Hegranes is from Santa Fe, which means everything she does is spot on. This place produces only the most sophisticated of human being, and I'm not biased at all. I am a trusted source on this people. Trust me. Hegranes brings us "Byline: How …
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Read: Byline

Daniel Milnor

March 31

Cristi Hegranes is from Santa Fe, which means everything she does is spot on. This place produces only the most sophisticated of human being, and I'm not biased at all. I am a trusted source on this people. Trust me. Hegranes brings us "Byline: How Local Journalists Can Improve the Global News Industry and Change the World." Unconvinced? Watch a lot of Fox or MSNBC? Read the Times or the Post? But Hegranes doesn't just talk the talk, she walks the walk and has for many, many years.

Seventeen years ago, Hegranes founded Global Press to address the very issue of local journalism. This I find commendable, especially when you dig in to what that means and what it entailed. (All female reporting staff.) Me, I mostly spent the last seventeen years complaining about the media. It was much easier and I could do it from anywhere. This book not only brings stunning data in regard to "big media," but also brings data about what consumers want but can't get. Namely, international news from people who actually understand it. On the ground, local reporters.

The book also goes after the horrendous "parachute" practices of major media sources. She interviews reporters who practice this style of journalism, and discusses others who were eventually outed for their shoddy reporting. Journalism is a thankless job in many ways, and this too is covered in a chapter about salaries and the destruction caused by C19.

I love this book but I also was a photojournalism major and spent the first five years of my career in journalism. I loved my time but it truly is a train wreck of a business these days. There is one thing I did not read in this book that makes me wonder how Cristi feels. We now live in an era when a certain generation spend much of their time looking for things to be upset by. Over the past three years, I have routinely encountered those who say "Oh, you are white, you can't do stories in the Native American community." "You can't do stories in the African American community." My response is always, "Yes, I can." Do not for one second let some hipster snowflake tell you othewise. Hegranes herself points out that good journalism CAN come from parachute style reporting. Is it the best option? Maybe, mabye not, but a good reporter, regardless of skin, gender or language ability has the potential to make things right if given the time and resources.

If you are one of those people who say "it's all bad," or you are one of those people who think "your side" is right and the "other side," is wrong, well, you just aren't that bright. There is amazing reporting being done. And sure, big media knows there is profit in preaching to the choir. (Fox, MSNBC) If you are a "us vs them" person just know you have been radicalized, my friend. But this is perhaps the most important takeaway from this entire book. Page 167. "Anyone can read the news. But too few people have the skills to truly assess a piece of journalism." Ain't this the truth. Like Aaron Rogers claiming "He reads," and that "He did research," to come to his conspiracy soaked conclusions about Sandy Hook, or COVID or Jeffry Epstein, etc. Or my radicalized friends quoting things they read on Facebook not knowing they are being played for profit. This...is...not...news. And this is killing us. Get it, read it.

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