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"I do think that the quality which makes a man want to write and be read is essentially a desire for self-exposure and is masochistic. Like one of those guys who has a compulsion to take his thing out and show it on the street." - James Jones Monday, Jan 22
Howell Critiques Post's Edwards StoryFrom her internal Omblog: THE EDWARDS STORY More than a dozen readers, both inside the newsroom and outside, were troubled by the John Edwards story on Page today. So was I. Most complainers thought that the story either wasn't worth a story or wasn't worth fronting or both. It was interesting enough to make an item in In the Loop, but not Page 1. I kept looking for the graf that would tell me that the buyers had some history with Edwards, that they were big campaign contributors, that there was some quid pro quo. Nada. Bill Hamilton, the editor on the story, obviously disagreed. "If the mixture of Georgetown, real estate, a presidential candidate and a secret buyer who turns out to be under investigation for screwing a major union that that candidate is courting is not front page news in a Washington newspaper, then we just have different news judgment. "I think writing about the finances of presidential candidates is an important service that this newspaper needs to do more of. In this case, we went beyond what was clearly an attempt to shield the important details of a transaction that earned a presidential candidate more than $5 million. And that presidential candidate just happens to be a millionaire who is basing his campaign on a populist appeal to the common man. "Nowhere in the story did we say that Edwards did anything wrong. But it is a fact of life that a guy who is running for president has to be careful of major financial transactions in a way that normal people do not. In this case he did not take the time to even Google who was buying his house." See the rest of her omblog when you click below... Readers speak: David Hirsch of the District wrote. " I was hoping you could address why the story on John Edwards' home sale was front-page news. I read through it twice trying to see the point - to me it seemed as though the writer was looking for evidence of wrongdoing on Edwards' part, but couldn't find it. Without this evidence, the article could have served as a lesson in the difficulties politicians face when involved in a large financial transaction, but the article barely touched on this. "Since there seemed to be evidence of wrongdoing (or a broader discussion), the placement and tone of the story could still lead someone to infer that Edwards had done something unethical. Since all the article could do was leave this inference about someone who is running for president, I have to wonder what the point was, except to present a subtle smear on Edwards. Is that what was going on?" David Axelson wrote: "Can you please explain why the article on John Edwards selling his Georgetown home was considered front-page news, or why Edwards's name appeared in the headline? There's no allegation that Edwards did anything immoral, unethical, or illegal in the article. The only thing that ... link(ed) to Edwards was that the house was sold to people who chose to take title in the name of a LLC - and Edwards had nothing whatsoever to do with that decision. This looks like character assassination by insinuation, and I would have thought the Post was above that." Pat Flanagan of Tulsa wrote: "I am not a John Edwards supporter.However, I strongly object to this story about the sale of Edwards' home... It not only lacked substance, it was an obviously sleazy, deliberate smear one might expect to find in the New York Post but not in your fine newspaper. If the Washington Post is going to smear someone I expect them to do it with some class. "The majority of people who can afford a five million dollar house are probably not going to be loved by union workers. And, more to the point, if home sales to persons of dubious character were prohibited in Washington, the bottom would completely fall out of the housing market." David Siegler of Oakton, Va., called it "an interesting story. Kind of heavy on implication but no matter. Still, I wonder.. What is your cut-off for requiring public officials or candidates to conduct background checks on anyone with whom they might have a business relationship? Should a candidate know if someone he or she is dealing with has been, say, accused of child abuse, robbery, embezzlement, theft? Would it be news if a candidate, say, bought a pair of shoes from someone who had been sued? Is there a dollar value threshold? And why is this on the front page?"
BOLDER SKYLINES
KUDOS FOR FINKEL
TWO STORY LENGTHS
LINK EXPERIMENTS AT THE WEB SITE
CHERRY-PICKING: AN EXCHANGE OF LETTERS
A VOICE FROM NORWAY ON CONFIDENTIAL SOURCES From Gunnar Bodahl-Johansen of The Norwegian Institute of Journalism in Fredrikstad: "The Post stylebook says: "The Washington Post is committed to disclosing to its readers the sources of the information in its stories to the maximum possible extent. We want to make our reporting as transparent to the readers as possible so they may know how and where we got our information."
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