Readers' Representative Journal

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ethics and standards

Category: August 2008

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'For Better or for Worse,' the Mobius strip

August 28, 2008 |  5:56 pm

For_better_or_for_worse Last fall she said she would weave old plot with new. Earlier this month her thinking had shifted, with a story in Calendar reporting that come Sept. 1, the comic strip "For Better or for Worse" would begin at the beginning, retelling the story that its creator, Lynn Johnston, started 29 years ago. While the story will be the same, some of the comics will be redrawn. Johnston says eventually the comic strip will be a 50-50 mix of old and new drawings.

(A story in today's Calendar reprinted from the Washington Post muses on the popularity, and anti-popularity, of the strip whose characters -- referred to as "the most boring people in Canada" -- aged in real time.)

The features editor who oversees the comic strips, Sherry Stern, says readers will have a say on the future of FBOFW in the Times. "For the next five weeks, The Times will run 'For Better or for Worse' daily and Sunday, so people can see it for themselves. After that we’ll let readers sample three new  comics. When we last sampled comics (during 'Doonesbury’s' vacation), we heard from hundreds of comics fans. We again welcome comments.

"Once all four comics have run and readers have had a chance to share their thoughts, we’ll make a selection," Stern said.

Comments are welcome at comics (at) latimes.com or by leaving a message at the readers' representative line, at 877-554-4000.

Update: Several readers' recent comments about this topic have been attached to earlier postings on this journal about comics, one in March and the other in June.

Panel from "For Better or for Worse" by Lynn Johnston, Universal Press Syndicate


Sharon Bernstein rejoins Business as an assignment editor

August 26, 2008 |  5:56 pm

Business Editor Sallie Hofmeister's announcement to staff:

Sharon Bernstein, who joined the paper in 1989, is returning to Business after seven years as a reporter and editor for the California section. Sharon will be an assignment editor, overseeing real estate and regional economics coverage as well as The Sunday Business (Personal Finance and Real Estate) section, working in partnership with Web Deputy and real estate maven Annette Haddad.

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Racial identification: descriptions in full

August 26, 2008 |  5:34 pm

Thursday's report in The Times on a series of armed robberies along Melrose Avenue said, "All three of the robbers have been described as men in their early to late 20s, ranging from 5 feet 6 to 6 feet tall and weighing 150 to 200 pounds."

At least a dozen readers sent a question along the lines of what reader Howard Douglas asked: "Why tell us the gender, age, height and weight of the suspects without telling us their ethnicity? Perhaps writers for The Times are forbidden from giving complete descriptions of suspects. I've reported crimes to the police, and one the first questions is, 'Was he white, black, hispanic or Asian?' Is The Times afraid to repeat that information? Sounds a bit wimpy to me. In the future, give us the whole description or none of it. Example: 'Some people robbed a bank today...' "

That, more or less, is actually how it's supposed to work. The information was originally included by reporter Andrew Blankstein, who had the handout from the local police and the group Melrose Action Neighborhood Watch. It said, "All three suspects have been described as African American males ranging in height of 5'6" - 6'0" tall, 150 –200 pounds – in their early to late 20s."

Says senior copy chief Mark McGonigle, "This was caused by a misunderstanding of our policy on using racial identification. The copy editor took out the racial description supplied by the reporter, thinking that there were not enough other descriptive elements to leave it in. In fact, the policy states that it's all or nothing: Either there's enough information to make for a meaningful description, which should include race, or there's not enough of a description and all the elements of the description should be taken out of the story. I've talked to the copy editor and slot on the story to make sure they understand the policy."

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Headlines not intended for the light of day

August 25, 2008 |  5:42 pm

Obama_biden A few online sites over the last few days have discovered stories that The Times never published in print or online.

These were articles written ahead of time, as happens on those rare occasions when news could go one of several very specific ways.

Just after 10 p.m. Aug. 22, The Times posted the news that Barack Obama, the Democratic Party nominee to be, had picked Sen. Joe Biden as his running mate. As that article had it, "The news broke after a full day of intense media speculation that included stakeouts at the homes of the top three contenders." The two other candidates being referred to were Indiana Sen. Evan Bayh and Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine. Times editors had done what they could to be prepared in case Obama went in either of those directions.

Enter the world of search engines. As a result of those automated animals that comb the Internet for new news, at least one website boasted a world of other L.A. Times headlines that seemed to indicate a hypothetical universe in which Obama had picked someone else -- Rep. Chet Edwards or Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton or Gov. Kathleen Sebelius or Gov. Bill Richardson.

Dan Gaines, managing editor for operations for latimes.com, explained the problem in an e-mail note: "Because of a technical glitch, these stories were placed on a server that could be indexed by search engines and were live on the Web for a few hours on Saturday. The stories were never featured on latimes.com, but a few bloggers found the stories in search. We know how it happened and have fixed the problem."

Notes National Editor Scott Kraft, "It is probably somewhat surprising to readers that we often do advance stories on things that haven't happened and might not happen. Why? The simple reason is that we want to give readers the most thorough story possible -- and as fast as possible.

"We do advance obituaries on major figures because, after all, they will one day die and we want to have the most complete, nuanced story possible -- the kind of story of a person's life that cannot be written on deadline ... "

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Ombudsmen columns

August 25, 2008 | 12:03 pm

Below are links to some of the past week's columns by ombudsmen, readers' representatives and editors around the nation. More columns and information about ombudsmen in the U.S. and around the world can be found at the Organization of News Ombudsmen website (which has a permanent link on the right side of this page).

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Donna Frazier becomes executive editor of Image

August 25, 2008 | 12:02 pm

Associate Editor Leo Wolinsky's memo to staff:

I’m happy to announce that Donna Frazier has joined the Image staff as its executive editor.  In this newly created position, Donna will share responsibility for the section with Booth Moore, its founding editor and fashion critic.

This is part of an effort to add more firepower to the section and continue to expand its coverage to a variety of areas that fall under the topic of self-image—from fashion to personal relationships; from the psychology of self to the concept of inner beauty.

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Millie Quan named senior features editor

August 20, 2008 |  4:14 pm

Associate Editor Leo Wolinsky's staff memo:

I’m very pleased to announce that Millie Quan will join the features staff in the new position of senior features editor.

In this post, Millie will take charge of a team of writers whose goal will be to broaden the kinds of coverage that appears in our sections as well as get more feature work into Column 1 and on Page 1. Millie will help select the team and also work with the editors of each of our sections to develop more front page offerings.

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Staff changes on the National desk

August 20, 2008 |  4:07 pm

Editor Russ Stanton's announcement to the newsroom:

Scott Kraft, Senior Editor

National Editor Scott Kraft, who has directed many of our top stories and nurtured some of our most gifted writers for the last 11 years, will be taking on a new assignment in mid-November after running one more major story -- the 2008 presidential campaign.

Scott will become a senior editor and roving correspondent, working with writers to continue our storytelling tradition and returning to his first love: writing national and foreign enterprise pieces.

During Scott's tenure, the National staff won four Pulitzer Prizes -- two in feature writing Barry Siegel's 2002 portrait of a man tried for negligence in the death of his son and J.R. Moehringer's poetic recounting of Gee's Bend in 1997); one for national reporting (Kevin Sack and Alan Miller's investigation of the Harrier jet in 2002)and one for investigative reporting (David Willman's 2000 investigation into FDA approval of seven drugs suspected of causing the deaths of more than 1,000 patients). Scott has directed our coverage of many major stories, including 9/11, Columbine, the Clinton impeachment, the 2000 Florida recount, Katrina, the space shuttle crash and the Virginia Tech massacre. He also co-directed coverage of the U.S. invasion of Iraq.

Scott became an editor after a distinguished career as a national and foreign correspondent, with postings in Chicago, Nairobi, Johannesburg and Paris. Among the major stories he covered were the release of Nelson Mandela from prison, the first democratic elections in South Africa, the ill-fated American military mission in Somalia and the assassination of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin.

He has written more than 100 Column Ones for the paper, and his piece on the AIDS epidemic in Zimbabwe won the Sigma Delta Chi Award for Foreign Correspondence in 1992.

As an editor, Scott has been skilled at persuading disparate staffs to work in harmony as well as helping individual writers produce their best work. Because of his talent and dedication, our reputation for first-class national and foreign coverage remains secure. We look forward to his help in building the next generation of writers and editors who can strengthen that tradition.

Roger Smith, National Editor

Roger Smith, senior projects editor since 1998, will become national editor on Nov. 10, the week after the general election. 

Roger has been in charge of Column One stories from Metro, Business, Calendar and Sports for the last seven years. During that time he also handled several notable projects for the paper, including the 2002 Pulitzer Prize-winning series on the flaws in the Harrier jet, and David Willman’s Pulitzer-winning story in 2000 on seven deadly drugs approved by the FDA.   

He is well acquainted with National. He was deputy national editor from 1990 to 1998 and directed the national political desks in 1988 and 1992. He joined National as an assistant editor in 1984.

Roger was one of the first editors to embrace the drive to improve our website; he's been attending the weekly planning meetings at latimes.com for more than a year and has helped boost Web add-ons for Column One and other projects he's handled. His impressive journalistic accomplishments notwithstanding, Roger is best known for his relentlessly upbeat and courteous disposition -- if he's had a bad day in his 31 years at The Times, it has gone undetected. 

He joined the paper in 1977 as a business reporter, and moved to Metro as a general assignment writer two years later before becoming an assistant metro editor in 1981. On his first day running the morning shift, the MGM Grand Hotel in Las Vegas caught fire, and Roger learned what flooding the zone with reporters was all about.

He was a writer for BusinessWeek in Los Angeles and Washington, D.C., before coming to The Times. He graduated from USC with a degree in journalism.

Roger will report to Managing Editor Davan Maharaj.

Ashley Dunn, Deputy Editor, National

Ashley Dunn, science editor since 2002, is joining the national staff as deputy editor, effective immediately.

Over the past six years, Ashley has overseen the build-up of our Science report, supervising a staff of five reporters whose coverage included groundbreaking stories on global warming, genetics, bird flu and space, including the "Butterfly on Bullet" series on the Columbia shuttle disaster that was a Pulitzer finalist in 2004. During his stint in Science, he also ate cloned beef, learned to spell Staphylococcus, broke a piece of space shuttle foam and determined that the Jet Propulsion Laboratory is really in La Canada Flintridge.

Ashley joined The Times in 1986 as a suburban reporter in the San Gabriel Valley and then moved to Metro, participating in coverage of the Los Angeles riots, the Loma Prieta earthquake, and the Reginald Denny trial among other stories. He later joined the New York Times as a Metro reporter and was part of the crew that launched the newspaper’s website, writing the technology column, “Mind and Machine.”

After being beaten down by cold winters and long bus commutes, he returned to the Los Angeles Times as a business reporter and later became deputy editor of Tech Times, a weekly section on personal technology.

He previously worked as an intern at the South China Morning Post in Hong Kong and as a reporter at the Danbury News-Times in Connecticut and the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. He has a bachelor’s degree in English from UC Berkeley, but over the years has come to know much more about home plumbing, Porsche maintenance and computer repair.


Bruce Wallace named Foreign Editor

August 20, 2008 |  3:27 pm

Editor Russ Stanton's announcement to staff:

Bruce Wallace, our Tokyo bureau chief since 2004, will become our new Foreign Editor, effective immediately.

Bruce was based in Japan, but during the last four years he has been a kinetic firefighter, parachuting from hotspot to hotspot. He made two lengthy trips to Iraq, embedding with Marines and a British Army unit. He has reported from Afghanistan, including Kandahar in the violent south. In 2006, he joined our coverage of the Israeli-Hezbollah war in Lebanon. In Asia, he reported from India, Pakistan and North Korea.

Continue reading »

Food section story wins Missouri Lifestyle Journalism award

August 20, 2008 |  2:52 pm

Associate Editor Leo Wolinsky's note to staff:

Congratulations go out to Corie Brown, who was named winner of the Missouri Lifestyle Journalism award in the food and nutrition category for her story, “A Scorching Future: Global warming is altering the world wine map.” Corie, who recently left the paper, was cited for “groundbreaking” work that analyzes the threat of climate change to the fragile wine industry, which is critical to the economy and the reputation of California as a world-class wine producer.  The prestigious awards are given in 15 categories by the Missouri School of Journalism.

The Times also received mention in other categories:

Regularly Scheduled Feature Supplement -- West Magazine, 2nd place.

General Excellence Class V --The Los Angeles Times, 2nd place.

Consumer Affairs -- "Driving With Rented Risks," by Alan C. Miller and Myron Levin, finalists; and "So You Think Your 401(k) Money Is Safe," by Kathy M. Kristof, finalist.

Myhre Series/Special Sections -- "Between Two Families," by Sonia Nazario, finalist.

Fashion and Design -- "Marvel or monster?" by Bettijane Levine and Craig Nakano, finalists.



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