Monday, June 30, 2008

You may be wondering what this is...




Allegedly, this is the front page of the Orlando Sentinel. The newspaper's title says it is the Orlando Sentinel. It arrived at the time and place of the Sentinel. It's even owned by the company as the Sentinel. But this paper is not the Sentinel.

The Orlando Sentinel doesn't chop the Local & State section out of its Monday paper- which is arguably the most important issue. The paper I grew up reading doesn't have its sections color coded as if its entire readership is a gang of five year olds. The paper my family subscribed to valued its veteran journalists and didn't dismantle its editorial board. So, I have no idea what publication was delivered to my house and do not know who subscribed to it.

I know my family would never subscribe to the publication we received this morning, I know this because we are a newspaper family. 

For 22 years, my father wrote for the Orlando Sentinel, for 22 years he could not imagine working in any other field. My father never won any journalism awards nor did he apply for any, but he helped call attention to some issues. He maybe even helped get a few laws changed. His columns never ceased to be thought provoking, whether it provoked clear thinking or death threats. My father left the newspaper business a few years ago. About 2 years ago, he could tell that things were going to turn  rotten. At the time, most of the family thought he was leaving because he didn't like his boss, but within months we found he narrowly escaped unemployment. The Orlando Sentinel was downsizing.

Apparently, in newspaper speak (or even better their parent company : Tribune Speak) downsizing meant plucking apart the Editorial Board (as well as the newsroom). Quickly laid off were numerous family friends, quickly descending was the quality of the paper. 

My thoughts regarding the quality of the paper could be seen as bitter, if not for the fact reader subscriptions were in fact dropping. For some readers the columns that disappeared might have been their reason for reading or maybe even the sign that the Orlando Sentinel still cared about breaking news. I've always had the principle instilled in me: that journalism existed to watch out for the people. My father believes a city without a local paper is a crooked politician or businessman's dream. My mother tells me journalism is essential to democracy. In fact, the definition of a sentinel is a lookout, a person employed to keep watch for some anticipated event. 

I find it hard to believe that a local newspaper that has ads on its front page and replaced 'Local and State' with 'The Law and You' is looking out for anything. And with more of the Orlando Sentinel's knowledgeable veterans being shown the door, I doubt anyone will get a chance to watch anything more than their own back. 

Still, I believe something can be done about the quality of the paper, I believe that something can wake up the management and the owner (Sam Zell, by way of the Tribune). That last line of defense is the reader. As readers we are being fed small blurbs of news/ psuedo-news  instead of a newspaper and for the same price as actual journalism. If you enjoy being treated like a child (or perhaps illiterate) by your city's paper, continue reading the Orlando Sentinel. If you feel that local politics and Molly Ringwald hold virtually the same importance, please continue reading the Sentinel. But if you find the Orlando Sentinel unreadable, trite and a downright mess, I urge you to pull your subscription.

Money is what the management at the Orlando Sentinel can hear.

Go ahead, call up that number to unsubscribe and let them know you've had enough.


7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Follow the money. The new ownership doesn't care if "older" readers drop subscriptions. It wants "young" readers to satisfy advertisers. The only thing that will stop the bloodletting -- if indeed anything can stop it -- is a lack of new, young subscribers.

Here's my question. Does Sentinel management honestly believe that young readers will abandon the internet to pick up a content-free paper that looks like a middle-school blog? Does Zell?

Anonymous said...

I find it amusing that you spend so much time criticizing the Slantinel (although I believe such criticism is highly deserved), yet your own blog is exceptionally difficult to read, with its blue text on black background. I had to highlight the whole page just to read what you have to say.

At least the Slantinel posts with black text on white background. You might want to consider a change.

rknil said...

http://www.wenalway.com/forum/index.php?topic=60.0

You sound like my kind of person.

And don't pay much attention to the people who criticize your site. My own is simplistic, and so the naysayers criticize that. Content is what really matters.

Anonymous said...

what I find alarming is that you hide behind a fake name and do not put your identity out there. no one at the sentinel is allowed to do that, so why should someone that is being critical in a public forum be allowed to do the same.

you're allowed your opinion, but you are not allowed to hide. man up and put your name out there.

the sentinel had the guts to redesign...do you have the guts to put a face/name with your rants?

Anonymous said...

I'm glad someone is saying what those of us stuck here can't say. :D

If you work at the Sentinel for longer than a couple of years, it's pretty obvious who this blogger is related to.

Anonymous said...

Kai: I love you! You tell it!

I spent 22 years at the Sentinel working alongside your father, and I can vouch that he made a tremendous difference in many, many lives. I was surprised to see he didn't win awards; I thought I was the only one! We both cared passionately about our work and every day we went in there determined to make a difference. Thank YOU for honoring that.

Pretty early on in your life it became clear you had a keen mind and were full of questions. I remember once you asked something and your father had to say "I don't know" and you responded "Why don't you don't know?" :)

You just keep asking why don't you don't know, and I'll keep reading!

Hugs to your mom and dad,
Nancy Imperiale (and hugs from my husband Will, too. Your dad was one of his first bosses at the paper and Will treasured your dad!)

Anonymous said...

You, sir, are a curmudgeon personified.