In Case You Missed It: Chris Colfer, Dustin Lance Black

Even if you didn’t watch Sunday’s Golden Globes, you probably saw Chris Colfer’s acceptance speech via Facebook or Twitter. The speech reminded me of another speech by an openly gay award recipient.

In case you missed it, here’s what “Glee” star Chris Colfer said:

His anti-bullying message resonates painfully in the wake of the recent suicides. His speech made me think of the 2009 Oscar acceptance speech by Dustin Lance Black, who won for his screenplay for “Milk,” about the assassination of openly gay politician Harvey Milk.

Black said,

When I was 13 years old, my beautiful mother and my father moved me from a conservative Mormon home in San Antonio, Texas to California and I heard the story of Harvey Milk. And it gave me hope. It gave me the hope to live my life, it gave me the hope to one day live my life openly as who I am and that maybe even I could fall in love and one day get married.

I want to thank my mom who has always loved me for who I am, even when there was pressure not to. But most of all, if Harvey had not been taken from us 30 years ago, I think he’d want me to say to all of the gay and lesbian kids out there tonight who have been told that they are less than by their churches or by the government or by their families that you are beautiful, wonderful creatures of value and that no matter what anyone tells you, God does love you and that very soon, I promise you, you will have equal rights, federally, across this great nation of ours. Thank you, thank you, and thank you God for giving us Harvey Milk.

Here’s the video of that speech:

Martin Luther King Jr. Pages, part 2

Two more offerings…

Nicole Bogdas of The Des Moines Register sent me some PDFs of how her paper covered Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday, a federal holiday. Pages designed by Nicole, photos by John Gaps III.

Here’s the front page:

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Here’s a closer look at that package:

Like many cities, Des Moines has a street named after King. Staff photographer John Gaps III went out and captured life along that street, talking with residents, community leaders and business owners. Among the people he talked to were a Somali grocery store owner and a Buddhist priest.

A look at the inside pages:

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Great photos by John Gaps III. I appreciated this side box about him:

Thanks, Nicole, for sharing this work. To see how the Des Moines Register played this package online, go here.

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The Orange County Register
Santa Ana, Calif.

This interactive timeline features audio of King’s famous “I have a dream” speech. To see the interactive, go here. The credit lists Lenin Aviles, Chantal Lamers, Michael Doss, Susan L. Jacobs and Pam Eisenberg. Good work by all of them.

Martin Luther King Jr. Pages, part 1

As I do more often these days, I perused Newseum’s front page offerings. Today, I wanted to see how newspapers played Martin Luther King Jr. Additionally, today was the day after the Golden Globes, which played a big part in today’s front pages.

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The Huntsville Times
Huntsville, Ala.

Reporter Mike Marshall talked with Mervyn Warren, provost and senior vice president of Oakwood University, about the common links between the histories of the Civil War and the civil rights movement. To read the full story, go here.

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The Record
Stockton, Calif.

The (Stockton) Record talked with local people about their dreams. To read the vignettes, go here.

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The Telegraph
Macon, Ga.

The Telegraph of Macon, Ga., asked readers, “Is Martin Luther King Day still relevant in 2011? Why or why not?” To see what they said, go here.

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The Miami Herald
Miami, Fla.

Howard Cohen talked with community leaders about how South Florida figures in the evolution of race relations. To read that story, go here.

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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago, Ill.

The Sun-Times cover story explains how former Indiana congresswoman Katie Beatrice Hall worked to get Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday recognized as a national holiday. To read that story, go here.

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Omaha World-Herald
Omaha, Neb.

Jonathon Braden talked with scholars about King’s legacy, and what his words mean today, especially in the wake of events like the shooting of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-Ariz. To read the story, go here.

How Pope John Paul II beatification was covered, part 1

Friday, the Vatican announced that Pope Benedict XVI set May 1 as the date for Pope John Paul II’s beatification. In other words, that’s when JPII will be recognized as a saint. Two things are worth noting:

  1. This is the first time a pope beatifies his his immediate predecessor.
  2. This beatification will be the fastest on record. Previously, that honor went to Mother Teresa.

I checked Newseum to see how newspapers covered this announcement. I’m not surprised that I could only find a handful of newspapers that played it on the front page. It will be a bigger deal when it actually happens, but I wanted to see who played it on the front page, and how. Of course, the four I could find were all in non-English, so it was tough to completely appreciate the coverage. Especially because Google Translate may or may not have led me astray…

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Peru.21
Lima, Peru

According to Google Translate, that headline means, “Road to sainthood.”

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Dziennik Polski
Krakow, Poland

According to Google Translate, that headline says, “John Paul II: Holy.” But after just translating a few headlines, I don’t know how much I trust Google Translate. The subhead on the red banner beneath that headline apparently says, “Already from today you can get to write on the diocesan pilgrimage to Rome.”

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Kurier Poranny
Bialystok, Poland

What Google says it says: “Joint struggle for the construction of eight to Warsaw.” I don’t even know what that means.

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El Nuevo Día
San Juan, Puerto Rico

Google seems to get Spanish, as it says this means, “One step from being a saint.”

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These were the only four newspapers I noticed with a prominent placement of this story on the front page. When the actual beatification takes place, I’ll check again to see how it’s covered.

Snowpocalypse bingo!

I have long loved Erica Smith of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and stltoday.com, so anytime she posts something, I’m on top of it.

My hometown of St. Louis was hit by a lot of snow Monday night and Tuesday morning, resulting in days off school and horrible commutes. So, Erica put together this snowpocalypse Bingo card using words used by meteorologists. If you’re watching TV and a meteorologist uses that term, you get to cross that off.

The beauty of this is that you can regenerate the card as many times as you want, never getting the same one. Here’s a screen grab of the Bingo card I got:

The frozen Weatherbird is my favorite part.

How Alabama, Oregon papers covered BCS game

A look at how papers in Alabama and Oregon covered Monday night’s BCS National Championship game. Front pages from Newseum.

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The Anniston Star
Anniston, Ala.

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The Birmingham News
Birmingham, Ala.

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The Decatur Daily
Decatur, Ala.

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The Huntsville Times
Huntsville, Ala.

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Montgomery Advertiser
Montgomery, Ala.

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Press-Register
Mobile, Ala.

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The Register-Guard
Eugene, Ore.

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The Statesman Journal
Salem, Ore.

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The Oregonian
Portland, Ore.

Florida’s secession, 150 years later

On Jan. 10, 1861, Florida became the third state to declare itself sovereign from the U.S. Later, of course, the state joined the Confederate States of America.

Having lived in Florida for four and a half years, I was curious how papers covered this anniversary. On Newseum, I could only find two papers that played the story on A1, but I’m not surprised. Most papers used A1 for follow-ups on Saturday’s shooting of Gabrielle Giffords and the emerging details about Jared Lee Loughner. Additionally, there were papers who began (or continued) their series on Haiti, one year after the earthquake.

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Naples Daily News
Naples, Fla.

That guy in the photo is Fort Myers attorney Hank Hendry, whose great-great-grandfather, Capt. Francis Asbury Hendry, was a Confederate soldier. To read Ryan Mills’ story, go here.

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Florida Today
Melbourne, Fla.

Florida Today marked the anniversary to highlight the efforts of three freed slaves who became the first settlers of Melbourne. At first, I thought this was an odd angle to take, but after re-reading the story, it makes sense. Britt Kennerly writes:

Sparsely populated, residents of what’s now the Space Coast had little connection to the Civil War that raged three days shy of four years and claimed more than 600,000 lives.

But after the battles ended, freed slaves and soldiers who made their way to Brevard played crucial roles in mapping local history.

To read the rest of Britt Kennerly’s story, go here.

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The Florida Times-Union
Jacksonville, Fla.

My former paper, The Times-Union, played the story on B1. Reporter Kate Howard focused on the sensitive nature of the anniversary, talking to a variety of Floridians to get their perspective. To read her story and see Jon M. Fletcher‘s photos, go here.

In Case You Missed It: Steve Buckley’s coming-out party

Last week, Boston Herald sports columnist Steve Buckley wrote a touching column in which he announced he was gay. He tied his coming-out story to his mother, who initially discouraged him from annoucning his sexuality in his column, but who later encouraged him to write the column. She has since passed away, but Buckley said that he has had recent reasons to want to write the column.

He wrote:

I have read sobering stories about people who came undone, killing themselves after being outed. These tragic events helped guide me to the belief that if more people are able to be honest about who they are, ultimately fewer people will feel such devastating pressure.

It’s my hope that from now on I’ll be more involved. I’m not really sure what I mean by being “involved,” but this is a start: I’m gay.

As Newsday’s Neil Best pointed out, it the sports world more or less “shrugged,” though this is not to say there was no reaction. In a post for The Angle, Rob Anderson of The Boston Globe writes:

While the Herald has deleted some comments on Buckley’s coming-out column (presumably because they were offensive and/or antigay), there are still hundreds of positive notes. And on Twitter, where no one is moderating the comments, I can’t find even one negative reaction.

But there’s an even bigger announcement that has yet to come, Best says:

[T]here remains one barrier no one has yet been brave enough to cross: There has not been an active, male pro in a major American team sport to come out. That day surely is nearer than ever.

When that day happens, Buckley will be probably be pointed to as someone whose coming-out story allowed that to happen. Especially because Buckley’s been a journalist long enough to remember times when it might not have been wise to come out in the newsroom. Steve Almond wrote that Buckley’s announcement reminded him of a time when he worked with a transsexual in a newsroom that made jokes about her behind her back. Almond writes that the praise will continue for Buckley, but the Herald columnist will not be unscathed:

[T]he bottom line is that sports fans (and I count myself as one) are more homophobic than the population at large. In a sense, we have to be.

After all, we spend much of our lives watching the acrobatic heroics of other men — sweaty, outfitted in tight uniforms, sometimes even half-naked — and investing our sense of identity in their deeds.

This is the great unspoken truth of the modern sports industry: it’s predicated not only on allowing men to watch other men leap and grapple and pound into one another, but on making this voyeurism seem unassailably macho.

Thus, Almond says, sports fans might see Buckley “as a traitor to the fragile cause of American masculinity.” Hopefully, this won’t be the case.

Two possible futures for copy desks

Nick Jungman, Knight Visiting Editor in the Columbia Missourian newsroom and a visiting assistant professor in the Missouri School of Journalism, recently wrote of a new direction for the Missourian’s copy desk. In a nutshell, most of the newsroom’s copy desk now has no involvement with the print product, focusing instead on the website.

Jungman writes:

Instead, they’d become “interactive copy editors.” They would focus on getting stories to our website quickly and accurately, on finding ways to increase reader engagement with our work online, and on making sure the website is always putting its best possible foot forward. The work of a copy editor would be just beginning when an article published.

A small team of editors and designers, working separately, would manage all the details of the print edition, from story selection to final proofing, piggybacking as much as possible on the work of the interactive copy desk.

Among the interactive copy editors’ responsibilities:

Interactive copy editors are in charge of our social networks. They regularly use Twitter and Facebook. But we can be more creative and proactive in soliciting reader input for potential stories, rather than just the ones we’ve already posted.

Interactive copy editors also monitor the comment boards at the end of every article. They take down comments that violate our policies, and they jump in when the conversation demands a Missourian response. We think copy editors could do more in mediating conflicts among commenters and soliciting comments on stories that ought to be sparking them but aren’t.

I attended the Missouri School of Journalism, and also worked on the Missourian’s copy desk eight years ago, so I am especially interested in this project. I’d be interested in seeing how newsrooms would attempt this model.

Meanwhile, another recent story highlights a possibility for the future of copy desks:

The Winston-Salem Journal has eliminated 17 full-time positions and one part-time copy editor position as part of its transition to a consolidated editing center, in which the paper’s design, copy editing and headline writing are being done in Tampa, Fla., and Richmond, Va.

One of the 17 employees is moving to the Richmond editing center, and one has moved to a position in another department at the Journal. The other copy editors and designers, who left the Journal last week, received a severance package. A graphic artist and an assigning editor also were laid off in a separate cost-cutting move.

Of course, this was not a surprise. In April, Media General Inc., who owns the Journal, announced  that it would transition to “editing centers” by the end of 2010.

I can haz iPhone alarm?

I’m sure you’ve heard about the mishap with the iPhone alarms by now:

When a bug kept iPhone and iPod touch alarms from sounding on Jan. 1 and Jan. 2, Apple suggested that those having trouble should set recurring alarms, and that the alarms would fix themselves by Jan. 3, the first work day of 2011.

But users are still reporting problems with the alarms Monday morning. The term “iphone alarm problem” was trending high on Google as those who overslept stumbled to their computers to figure out what was wrong.

If this is the worst thing in 2011, I think we’ll be fine. More than fine.

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UPDATE

I just tested one of my alarms that’s set up to go off every day, and it worked. I also tested a one-time alarm that’s set up to never repeat, and it also worked. So, in Pat Garvin’s world, the alarms work once again.