Category Archives: Media

‘All The News Unfit To Print’

For a decade, as host of “Fox News Watch,” Eric Burns analyzed modern media.

Now the Westporter is doing the same for media heroes like Ben Franklin, Sam Adams and Mark Twain.  Just like today, he says, they screw up.

Eric BurnsHis new book, All the News Unfit to Print:  How Things Were…and How They Were Reported proves that journalists often get history wrong.

Over time those errors are magnified.   Our understanding of the past becomes distorted.

If you’re in Tribeca this Monday evening at 7, you can hear Eric talk about Unfit at the Barnes & Noble (97 Warren Street).  An added attraction:  C-SPAN is taping the presentation for “Book World.”

If — more likely — you spend nights in Westport, Eric will be at the Library the following Monday, May 18 (7:30 p.m.).

After hearing about so much news “unfit to print,” maybe it’s good that print journalism is dying.  After all, bloggers never make misteaks mistakes.

Inklings In The Vanguard

Newspapers across the country are scrambling to be relevant in the digital age.

Inklings already is.

Inklingsnews.com - Staples HSThe award-winning Staples paper took a giant step into cyberspace Friday.  Students launched a re-design of InklingsNews.com, a journalistically sharp and graphically handsome website that will make it — along with “06880” and WestportNow.com — a prime source for breaking Westport news, photos and features.

Since 1930 the student-run paper has covered the usual school stuff:  sports, new teachers, cafeteria food.  In recent years it’s been a bit edgier, examining topics like Adderall abuse, condoms and, most recently, God.  But printing twice monthly, its news was not always hot.

Inklings has been online for a few years, but only recently has the goal been a 24/7 news source.  A freshman — Logan Rosen — made  it happen.

His first re-design was good, but — in tune with  Staples’ spirit — Inklings wanted “great.”  Advisor Steve Rexford and staff were ready to pay a hefty sum to a company that creates professional-looking sites for school papers.

Logan said he could do better.

Using a free WordPress theme, he took just 3 weeks to create the new site.  It’s fast, user-friendly, even fun.  And very 21st-century.

Editor-in-chief Victor Hollenberg hopes to leverage Inklings’ large staff to cover every nook of the school, along with town issues.

Website editor Lexi Preiser wants InklingsNews to be “the go-to news source for Staples students.”  Her goal is to hear the buzz:  “Hey, did you read InklingsNews last night?”

Inklings is not finished.  Next year they plan to integrate the site with other school-based technology, including hallway TVs.  They may add video and other multimedia.

And — like good journalists in any medium — they hope to scoop the competition.  As in Westportnow.com.  And “06880.”

“News” News

For over 30 years the Westport News was the proud anchor of Brooks Corner, among downtown’s most prime real estate.

Current tenant Brooks Brothers has nothing to do with the corner’s name; it’s just a coincidence.  “Brooks” is B.V. Brooks, who founded the News.  It was, its motto clunkily declared, “A hometown newspaper in a town of homes.”

In the mid-1960s the News was a feisty tabloid upstart — David to the staid, gray Town Crier Goliath. 

The Westport News earned its chops early.  Fearless editor Jo Brosious led a spirited fight against United Illuminating — the public utility that hoped to buy Cockenoe Island for use as a  nuclear power plant.  Thanks to the paper, our shore today is pristine — and Westport is not Three Mile Island.

That crusade made the News indispensible.  For 3 decades it chronicled town life.  Its downtown location was geographically smart, and journalistically symbolic.  It pulsed with Westport’s beat, because it sat right there at its heart.

The move a few years ago to Sconset Square was symbolic too.  Brooks  Corner could command higher rents from 2nd-story office tenants (the paper had long since moved from its ground-floor space).  Though the News’ new newsroom was just a few steps away, the rickety staircase and shrinking staff lowered its profile, lessening its impact throughout town.

Last year the paper moved from Westport entirely.  No longer owned by B.V. Brooks — the “Brooks Community Newspaper” name is a final, vestigial nod to the local past — the News decamped to an antiseptic office building in Norwalk.  True, it was right over the Westport line — but the symbolism was again strong.  The “hometown newspaper” had left its “town of homes.”

Yesterday the News moved again.  Hopscotching Westport, it leaped over to Fairfield.  The paper now shares office space with the Fairfield Citizen, and is overseen by Citizen editor Frances Moore.  Two key staffers — editor Will Rowlands and lifestyle editor Carol King —  were among 44 Connecticut journalists whose positions were eliminated Friday by Hearst, the current owner.

Another 80 jobs are on the chopping block soon, according to reports.

A new chapter has begun in the Westport News’ long history.  For news lovers’ sakes — and the best, most informed interests of our town — let’s hope this story ends well.

Mug Shot Mania

Admit it:  Your favorite part of the Westport News is the Police Reports.

There are run-of-the-mill busts, for DUI and pot.  There are bar fights, road rage fights, fights over who’s a better fighter.  And there are truly cringe-inducing arrests, which we find so hard to read we read them several times.

It’s the same all over the country.  Perhaps the only way to save the sclerotic newspaper industry is to eliminate everything except police news.  Who needs Pulitzers when you’ve got schadenfreude?

But with a special website, Florida’s St. Petersburg Times has elevated police reports to an art form.

The site — admit it, you already clicked the link — shows actual mug shots of people arrested within the past 24 hours in a 3-county area.  Clicking a photo gives important information like height, weight and the actual crime — er, alleged crime.  A notice on the home page explains: “Those appearing here have not been convicted…and are presumed innocent. Do not rely on this site to determine any person’s actual criminal record.”

Of course not!  Putting their mugs on a site called Mugshots Tampa Bay is strictly — what, amusement?  For research purposes only?

Speaking of research, you can consult Mugshots Tampa Bay’s handy graph to determine criminal statistics — I mean, alleged criminal statistics — over the past 60 days.  For example, during the past 2 months 50 folks arrested weighed under 100 pounds — and 94 weighed over 300.  Who knew?

Despite its evident popularity in greater Tampa Bay — and here too, judging by all of you who already checked out the link (and clicked on auxiliary news stories, like “During Traffic Stop, 20-year-old Explains His Vices”) — I don’t think we could replicate that site in Westport.

Our mug shots would have much better lighting.

New To The Neighborhood

Last Friday, the Rockwell family met several thousand of their new Westport neighbors.

The young couple and their two children were featured — in four color photos — on the front page of the Westport News’ Real Estate section. “New to the Neighborhood” the headline blared.  “Sense of community, schools and scenery draw family to town” the sub-head burbled.

At first I thought the Rockwells’ shout-out came because they were the first people in months to buy a house here (or anywhere in the country). But as I read further — about the family’s choice of Westport over the rest of the tri-state region, based on their initial criteria of “a good commute, excellent school system, reasonable taxes and wonderful town amenities,” then nailed down by Westport’s greenery (thanks, Google Earth!), two train stations, Longshore and beach — I realized this was a 2009 version of an old newspaper tradition.

Back in the 1950s and ’60s the Westport Town Crier ran a regular Page 1 feature: “New Folks in Town.”  Befitting its folksy title, each week the column welcomed 2 or 3 new families here.

Reading the “New Folks” stories several decades later opens an intriguing window on post-war, baby boom Westport.  Many families moved here from New York City, Long Island and New Jersey; some came from the Midwest.  (The Rockwells relocated from London; wife Aini previously lived in Asia.)

The new fathers worked for Union Carbide, IBM — solid companies like that.  (Alan Rockwell is a partner with an international law firm.)

The mothers, of course, did not work outside the home.  (Not that anyone used the term “working outside the home.”  These women were “homemakers.”)

The families — and they were always intact; no single men or women, same-sex couples; not even divorced people — looked forward to Westport life.  Little League, sailing, the YMCA, PTA, the Garden Club  — over and over, the New Folks in Town were eager to join in.

A generation or two later, the Town Crier column still resonates.  Many of the newcomers’ names are familiar.  They stayed, grew roots, raised families, got more involved in Westport than they ever imagined.  They ran for the RTM and Planning and Zoning Commission; they led fights for and against education budgets; they opened local businesses.

Others stayed a year or two, then vanished without a trace.  They made no impact here at all.  No “Folks Leaving Town” column chronicled their departure.

Reading “New Folks in Town,” now that many are “Old Folks in Town” (or “in Florida”), it’s easy to see a Stepford sameness to their arrivals.  They came bearing similar suburban hopes and dreams.  They were young, optimistic; their lives seemed poised to soar, and Westport would be the launching pad.

Some found what they were looking for here.  Others did not, or could not.  In their first appearance in the local paper, no one could tell which new folks would wind up where.

So:  Welcome to Westport, Alan, Aini, Tyler and Finnegan Rockwell.  We hope our town is all you wish it to be.  We hope you’ll get involved in our lives, in ways you expect and ways you can’t yet imagine.

We promise to check in a few decades from now, and see how you’re doing.

Staples’ Quiz Kids

Take “GE College Bowl” and “Jeopardy“; mix in Cablevision 12 news anchor Tom Appleby, and what do you get? “The Challenge,” a low-rent but surprisingly compelling high school quiz show.

Last weekend, Staples participated in Round 2.  If you were otherwise occupied on Saturday or Sunday night, here’s what you missed.

The jacket-and-tie-clad Wreckers — Naveen Murali, Dan Fishman, Victor Hollenberg and Josh Rosen — faced off against the polo-shirt-wearing, mixed-gender squad from Stratford’s Bunnell High.

Staples' team - Cablevision News 12's "Challenge"

In the opening round, Staples correctly answered questions like “how many votes does Washington, DC have in the electoral college?” (3 — I would have said 0). They identified the author of Coming of Age in Samoa as “Margaret Read,” then quickly corrected it to Margaret Mead — but Tom disallowed the answer.  C’mon — how many high school students can even locate Samoa on a map?

It didn’t matter. After the first round, Staples led 140-120.  Go blue-and-white!

The lightning round followed — each team had 60 seconds to answer up to 10 questions.  The Bunnell Bulldogs chose the “Fantasy Character” category. One of their girls was on a roll, identifying the likes of Gandolf, Oompa-Loompas and Merlin the Wizard.

Staples drew the category “Comedic Films.” Proving that very smart kids have time for movies (too much time?), they nailed 9 of 10 — including “A Prairie Home Companion,” “Madagascar,” even “Dr. Strangelove.”  But after two rounds their lead was still just 20 points: 185-165.

The next round included questions about colleges. Naveen knew that Tuskegee is in Alabama; no one from either school could place Oral Roberts in its correct state of Oklahoma.  But Staples correctly identified the iron-rich chemical substance in red blood cells that that unites with oxygen as “hemoglobin” (yay!), and instantly calculated the length of the radius if a circle has an area of 225 square centimeters (I forget).

After three rounds it was Staples 305, Bunnell 195.

Which brings us to the final round.  The scoring system is too complicated to describe; suffice it to say Our Boys knew that Gerald Ford’s widow is named Betty (“the clinic,” one said in a stage whisper); that Robert Gates led the CIA under the first President Bush, and that the space shuttle in the 2003 disaster was called Columbia.

Just like that, it was over.  We — I mean, Staples — annihilated Bunnell to win handily, 415-220.  They advance into the next bracket, but the pressure’s on.  Everyone wants a crack at the number one public high school in the state.  The Wreckers will have to bring their A — er, A+ — game.

Strategic Films At Home

After a career spent traveling the globe, Tom Seligson says “it’s a lot more fun to work in Westport.”

The former CBS News film producer has teamed up with his wife — digital, print and broadcast journalist Susan Farewell — and other Westport media types to form Strategic Filmworks. The full-service production company specializes in cinematic-quality films for websites and broadcast media. It targets travel, sports and fitness, medical, architectural and non-profit clients.

One of Strategic Filmworks’ first efforts is “Keeping America’s History Alive.”  Produced for the Westport Historical Society, it weaves together interviews, archival images and jaunty music.  The video’s prominence on the WHS website may lead to heightened interest, new members and– who knows? — a donation or three.

The company’s client roster is broad.  “They’re not all local — although that would be nice,” Seligson notes. “There is definitely a market for this here, and we’re glad to help.”

The WHS video highlights the impact of creative men and women on Westport’s history.  In the digital age, Strategic Frameworks proves a worthy successor to that heritage.

blog-strategic-filmworks-logo1

Yeah, yeah, I know…

In the early 1980s, when the first personal computers crashed on the scene, I could not imagine why any actual person would want one.  Within a year or so, I bought a Kaypro.

In the 1990s, when folks first started developing personal websites, I vowed never to follow the crowd.  It did not take long to cave.  For over a decade, I have been the proud owner/operator of danwoog.com.

So of course, after resisting blogging for several years — many generations, in tech-talk — I have now unleashed “06880” on the world.

What’s it all about? Beats me.

My vague idea is an adjunct to “Woog’s World” – my column that first appeared in the Westport News in 1986, on my way-cool Kaypro. I expect to write briefer, pithier, but no less scintillating, thoughts on what’s going on in my universe, and related galaxies. I expect every post to have some kind of Westport angle, but then again expectations are seldom reality. We expected George W. Bush to live up to his promise of “compassionate conservatism,” not that I am comparing myself to the man who James Buchanan is fighting to relinquish his spot as “Worst President Ever” to.

I will scour the town, from the Shores of Saugatuck to the Farms of Green’s, looking for interesting (or at least short) tidbits to comment on. But, like the judges on “American Idol,” I don’t expect to do all the work. This is your blog as much as mine. I welcome encourage plead for feedback from you, my soon-to-be-loyal readers. Kind words are cool, but so are disagreements. This is Westport, where every opinion is welcome  (even if it’s wrong).

So subscribe. Send ideas. Post comments. Give me some dirt to work with. And please pass the word about “06880” along to everyone you know.

Is this a great town or what?