Monday, April 27, 2020

The Words of Others Speak Volumes

Mr. Jim Sack, is well known in the circles of City politics, media and the community in general.

Below is a Facebook post from Mr. Sack who has graciously allowed the Maven to repost it here:

Fort Wayne is a media desert.
What's left of the once celebrated Journal-Gazette is a skeleton of a few brave writers bailing to save their sinking ship.
The TV stations hire young adults with little or no experience to deliver the news and information Jefferson once said was fundamental to an informed electorate and a healthy democracy.
The public radio station is rip and read journalism, drawing on the dwindling source of information in the Journal, supplementing it with short, superficial reports from around the state.
The commercial radio stations are owned by arch conservatives who think Trump is brilliant, and want you to think so, too.
A friend in Berlin, a brilliant man, help point all this out to me. He saw the FW story of the pretty young mechanic at a certain Honda dealerships who was fired for using her private time to supplement her income. Fort Wayne is a media desert where the news rooms are the vassals of the sales department. Mack Berry, a once splendid reporter, at a variety of stations, including WPTA, would testify that if you cross a sponsor, say a certain Honda dealership, regardless of the truth, you lose your job. He is not alone in the history of Fort Wayne news.
Sales is what the C-Suite at the JG and distant owners of our local TVs slums think about first. News is merely the bait in the water to get you to watch their cavalcade of used car hucksters, or the perky mattress hustlers, or some other tasteless loudmouth touting their flimsy wares. The stations are not here to examine critical matters before our community, just to sell you soap or cars or cardboard furniture, and to send the profits to the home office.
As for the JG, it is so close to death that the C-Suite fears angering anyone, thus informing anyone. The few real JG reporters and writers look increasingly like the last stand, abandoned by their management like a Spad tailspinning toward the trenches. But, at least those journalists try, and try valiantly, but the same can't be said of the TVs reporters who serve up thin gruel for news, nor for the radios who are in the active business of selling lies.
For Wayne is a media dessert where good reporters have gone to work in PR. It is a shame. We depend on the paper and the TVs to better understand what is happening, good and bad, in our community. They are failing us miserably.

Thursday, April 23, 2020

Ignorance, Arrogance, or just a Lonely Journalist?

The usual and predictable flow of questions and answers during Governor Eric Holcomb's press briefing ground to a halt Wednesday (4/22). When it was her turn at the virtual microphone, a person identified by the Governor's office as Kathy Tretter, editor of Ferdinand News/Spencer County Leader used the state-wide broadcast to complain that she felt she (and other journalists) were considered "non-essential" workers. 

Governor Holcomb, recovered nicely from the unexpected "comment" and in his folksy manner, consoled MS Tretter saying that he appreciated the media and that they were, indeed, essential workers. 


No one really knows if Ms Tretter was attempting humor, trying to garner sympathy, or suddenly felt a need to update her Match.com profile to garner more responses.

What is clear, is that these daily briefings from the Governor and his team do provide needed information to the public. 

However, the most annoying parts of these briefings, aside from Dr. Box beginning each answer with the words "that's a really good question", are the antics of these so-called journalists. 



Wednesday, April 22, 2020

Indiana's Nursing Home Lobby and the Journal-Gazette


A good story by Nikki Kelly and the Journal-Gazette. Good in that it's well-sourced and well-written.

What is lacking is an explanation as to why the State of Indiana has changed policy and now seems to be shielding nursing homes from public scrutiny. Usually, this would be regarded as an investigative reporter's dream story to chase.

But the Maven wonders why the Journal-Gazette has not pressed Governor Holcomb, state health regulators, or any member of the Indiana legislature as to why Indiana's nursing home industry and their well-funded lobbying group(s) appear to be protected by the State of Indiana and, seemingly, are now immune from public scrutiny and accountability.

Further, the impression that the normally aggressive Journal-Gazette and their capable and experienced reporters seem to be stopping short on this story begs the question, why? The Maven will not make any cynical suggestions that the ownership of the J-G is "in bed" with the nursing home lobby. That would be inappropriate.

Tuesday, April 7, 2020

A Couple of Questions...

Just a couple of questions...

The Maven read the story, but has no idea what the "No Incident" in the headline means. 


Anyone got a clue? Bueller? Bueller?


As Lt.  Colombo might say..."just one more thing"...

The fracas at the Southgate Burger King drive-thru on Sunday. Was it a "shooting" or a "stabbing"? It appears that the local media isn't quite sure. Usually, the Maven would favor the story from the J-G, however, this story shows an update made at 8:20pm. Compare the update time to the WPTA ABC21 story, further below.



As for WPTA ABC21, their output is always suspect, given their penchant for style over substance, as memorialized by their former female anchor boasting that facts don't matter when their newscasts "save lives". 


Was it a shooting? Was it a stabbing?