new
news is good news
an interview with barbara blake of
the asheville citizen-times
by julie savage parker
They
say "No news is good news." They might also say: No newsthat
appears in mass mediais good news. It is, by and large, all bad
news. Bad news sells headlines; bad news gets people to tune into the
evening news. Or does it?
A
WNC weekly (that shall remain nameless), like many other forms of media,
is so addicted to bad news for its headlines, it creates bad news out
of whole cloth if no genuine bad news exists. For example, the headline
for one issue roared "SHOOTING IN ____ COUNTY"! The small
print explained a film was being shot in the county. Another headline
from the same rag spoke of a terrorist attack at the new I-26 highway
Visitor's Center. The terrorist attack? Someone had expressed himself
with a can of spray paint.
In
a world where it seems all major media organizations seem to think "If
it ain't bad news, it ain't news!", the Asheville Citizen-Times
is taking steps to shift that paradigm. Bob Gabordi, Executive Editor,
not long ago assembled the gang at the Citizen-Times and gave everyone
new marching orderssomething being called Real Life, Real News.
Barbara Blakea veteran reporter at the Asheville Citizen-Timesgave
an example by way of explanation. She spoke of the recent trial in Asheville
where a woman stood accused of killing her abusive husband. In the past,
she explained, reporters would have sat glued to the courtroom, waiting
for the verdict, waiting to scoop the competition, waiting for The Big
Headline. The shift now is that instead, AC-T reporters are more likely
be hanging out with women at the domestic violence shelter, talking
with the folks at Helpmate and Our Voice (formerly the Rape Crisis Center).
They
are turning their attention from the tip of the iceberg, it seems, to
all that lies below, realizing the story is not just this one woman,
but it is the story of many women and men and children whose daily lives
are the stuff of nightmares. And the story is not just the nightmare,
but what exists to make it better. As Paul Harvey would say, they are
now looking in depth at 'the rest of the story'.
Making
it better is of vital importance to Barbara Blake. She has covered just
about 'all the news that's fit to print' in this area, having been a
reporter at the Citizen-Times for the last 30 years. She arrived at
the door of AC-T in December of 1974, an Literature major with a minor
in secondary education, fresh out of college (having taken an extra
semester to prepare for teaching) looking for something to keep her
busy for six months until she could start her career in the classroom.
There was an opening doing obituaries, as someone was leaving for a
six-month medical leave of absence. She started what she thought would
be a temporary stint at the paper. At the end of the six months, there
was an opening for a general assignment reporter. She took it, and has
never looked back.
The
early days (back when it was The Citizen and The Times, morning and
evening papers) were a romp with a crowd of all young and mostly unmarried
reporters. With the boundless energy of youth, they worked hard, then
left the office together and played harduntil the wee hours of
the morning, often ending up at Barbara's place for a game of Trivial
Pursuit, perhaps, before getting a few hours sleep and arriving back
for their afternoon shift.
She
found this life way more fun than she ever imagined teaching English
to be.
In the twenty-nine years since, Barbara Blake has covered most beats,
including local, county, and some state government. She covered the
entertainment beat for a while, and did a piece on the Doobie Brothers
they are still talking about in the newsroom. Her experience with what's
what in this area is both wide and deep.
A
little over a year ago, she opted for a beat called Good News. Good
News? She's out to celebrate regular people doing good stuff in this
community. "The paper as a whole is moving from the courtroom and
the boardroom to the classroom and the backyard", she explained.
They are shifting their focus to more and more local coverage. They
are moving from a mentality of "We got it first " to "What
does it mean?"
"Somewhere
deep inside me I am a social worker." she explained. "I want
to make things get better." Where was the crusty, cynical reporter
I half expected to find?
When she attended last spring's gala fund raiser for the non-profit
Little Pearls,* she focused her attention on how deeply moved the audience
was by what they were seeing: the man with a tear rolling down his cheek,
the woman with her hands over her heart. (The beautiful work of the
women who created Little Pearls is more Good News that is evidence that
the times, they are indeed a-changing.)
She
continued: "I have tremendous respect for the power we have raise
to awareness in order to make things better. What we do can make such
a difference in a positive or negative way. We can't slack off because,
well, I'm tired today. No matter who I'm writing aboutto them,
their family, their organization, it is a big deal. I take that so seriously"
Not
only AC-T, but its parent company Gannett is cutting through layers
and down to the people, asking what does it mean to our readers and
why should anybody care? They are conducting focus groups to learn what
is important to their readers, to better be responsive to their needs.
Not wanting to be "destroyers of community" or "extinguishers
of hope", they are breaking into brainstorming teams Gannett-wide,
to learn to serve the public in the most responsible fashion. This,
indeed, is Good News.
Julie Savage
Parker
is (with Sandi Tomlin-Sutker) publisher and editor of Western North
Carolina Woman, whose goal, too, is to be the bearer of Good News.
[ julie@wnc-woman.com;828-689-2988
]
Some quotes about The News:
Are
we supposed to be boosters or promoters? What are we supposed to be?
Not destroyers of community; not extinguishers of hope. We need to think
about our impact. We tend to say we dont have one; we just pass
along the news. Readers say otherwise.
- Geneva
Overholser (Washington Post Ombudsman, July 20; about the impact her
newspaper has on its city)
Throughout
my career I have covered much pain and suffering. I feel what I have
been doing lacks balance. It is not enough, in fact it is too easy,
to show just the bad things in the world. People are inundated with
images of violence and grief. So much so that many dont want to
see it any more and they close their minds and hearts. I have found...that
people are thirsting for images of goodness in order to maintain their
hope in a difficult world. Sometimes, the measure of our work as journalists
is not the professional recognition of colleagues, but rather the mark
we make in the hearts of readers who see our work.
-Gerald Herbert Photojournalist; in a news photo exhibit in NY
If
news is not really news unless it is bad news, it may be difficult to
claim we are an informed nation.
-Norman Cousins (Editor of Saturday Review)
I
think the press, including t.v. journalism, has an ethical responsibility,
a sacred responsibility, a service mission.... to make good news just
as entertaining (as weve made sexy the violence).
-Marianne Williamson
Every
thought we think changes our biochemistry. Your hormones are all effected
by your thoughts. Pay attention to things that bring you joy. Walk away
from negativity. When I read the newspaper, I look for the good news.
-Dr. Christiane Northup-Oprah show, 1999
I
think there needs to be a change of consciousness with the news...to
try to seek a higher ground. Why cant it be more representative
of the way the world really is? Or is news designed just to bring bad
news? I think we dont know what the bombardment of the crime and
violence does to our minds-I think were in denial about it.
-Oprah Winfrey, September, 1997
And finally
brothers, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever
is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirableif anything
is excellent or praiseworthythink about these things.
-Paul's letter to the Philippians 3:8