With a change in leadership at the PD's editorial helm, it is informative to question Molly's position, and the structure of her complaint within this light.
http://blog.cleveland.com/business/pd070516b.mp3
In the above interview with Susan Goldberg, the new editor of the Cleveland Plain Dealer, Goldberg shares her leadership vision. Goldberg's clarifications may qualify Molly's half-baked muck raking effort in this morning's paper.
According to Goldber:
"Here, the Cleveland Plain Dealer is going to be the watch-dog for this community. Nobody is going to do the kind of watch-dog reporting that the PD is going to do. So, no matter what platform you're gonna use to tell that story, your value is watch dog reporting, and you stick with that. You hold that tight and fast."
Ms. Goldberg will be proud, Molly. You're holding "tight and fast" as a "watch dog." remember.... "no matter what platform.....your value is watchdog reporting, and you stick with that"
In a sense, tabloids are the manic, irrational extreme of watchdog reporting. In the extreme, facts are fabricated to construct illusions of apocolpyse, social chaos, fatal charater flaws and general celebrity gossip.
The PD's quality and accoutability to the people of Cleveland is already running into the negative, and has been for years. Will the journalist of the PD, under the direction of the new editor lower the bar further, with Tabloid Irrationality?
Goldberg continues:
"There's good things. There's the kids succeeding in school. There's the volunteers making a difference in the community. We need as an industry to better reflect the fullness of poeples lives. I think we need to tell all parts of the story."
In this sense, Molly misses the mark completely. The Gala event is a wholly volunteer effort. Many of the good people of Lakewood who've pitched-in are active throughout the community, from boards of trustee's spanning multiple instutitions and organizations. Many others also dedicate a significant portion of their free time to serve the diverse insitutions constituting Lakewood's community fabric.
This was hard work, an effort not to be underplayed by the complaints of a few disgruntle employees, if there are even multiple agents colluding in descent.
Molly's article does no justice to this "part" of the story, prefering to focus of the "watch-dog" aspect, which she must "stick with" in order to meet the demands of emmergent Tabloid Irrationality.
Further, as an advocate for "platform-agnostic infromation industry" journalism, Goldberg's intention to compete with the world of community electonic sounding boards and basement dwelling bloggers also clarifies the relationship between Molly's fabricated story, the Lakewood Observer, and the Lakewood Public Library.
Here's the best definition of "platform-agnostic information industry" I could find. Goldberg has announced her intention to move the PD will in this direction.
http://writeslikeshetalks.blogspot.com/ ... enter.html
[i]“An interesting concept he discussed was multi-plat-fornication or being platform agnostic …. A fan watches a program on TV, then logs online to get extra footage and insider info, then blogs about it, shares the experience with friends and makes new friends who have a common interest, downloads a photo to a cell phone, and loads additional content into an ipod. On air, online, on-the-go. They strive to push their content everywhere their viewers are. They want to be on every platform possible since their viewers are using all types of technology in a social context.â€Â