KELO-TV just gave more prominent coverage to a four-day-old story about USD's new women's basketball coach than to the announcement of SDSU's new president. Some in the local media either lack good judgment or enjoy getting played like cheap fiddles.
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Re: News judgment
Originally posted by FeaRed View PostUSD didn't have their press conference until this morning and stations had all day to prepare stuff. Didn't the president news just break a couple of hours ago? And I'm assuming there wasn't a press conference yet.This space for lease.
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Originally posted by Jacked_Up View PostKELO-TV just gave more prominent coverage to a four-day-old story about USD's new women's basketball coach than to the announcement of SDSU's new president. Some in the local media either lack good judgment or enjoy getting played like cheap fiddles.
SDSU gets lots of attention from the TV stations.
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Originally posted by JackJD View PostI disagree. KELO's announcements leading up to the 6:00 pm news mentioned both stories but featured SDSU over USD (which I thought made sense because it was the announcement of the naming of a new President to the largest university in the state vs naming a new coach). But overall it didn't occur to me that there was anything incorrect about how both news items were handled.
SDSU gets lots of attention from the TV stations.-South Dakotan by birth, a Jackrabbit by choice.
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Maybe 100x. Without looking, I honestly can't tell you the name or origin of the new SDSU president but I know who USD's coach is and where she came from. I'm not alone. I took the time to read about one and not the other, and I'm a big SDSU fan. It is what it is.
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Originally posted by Jacked_Up View PostBased on a general scan of news coverage to date, I think my point is valid. New coaches have become more newsworthy than new presidents, even in South Dakota.
This may be the funniest smack thread ever!
Added:
I'll stick with my opinion stated earlier ("...it didn't occur to me that there was anything incorrect about how both news items were handled. SDSU gets lots of attention from the TV stations.") which, I guess, is not in disagreement with the opinions that media attention to new-coach hires may be greater than media attention to new-president hires. I chimed in on this thread because I'm not a big fan of criticizing the media in general about news selection. But, that's just me. Everyone can feel free to take your shots -- the media has big shoulders and they sometimes thrive on controversy.
Oh, and: Bison suck.Last edited by JackJD; 04-26-2016, 10:23 PM.
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I would not want to be the news guy at KELO who decides what airs and what does not. It is true that coaches are better known than presidents, because of playing a game on more than one occasion in a given week. They get exposure which can be both good and bad. I am sure Dr. Dunn, and is he really related to Harvey, will do a great job running SDSU. His No 1. worry is to get all the USDA funds to run the experiment station but maybe most of that can now be shifted to the new Dean of Agriculture. Also Coach P, will most certainly pick up where Amy left off. It's a slow day, and everyone in Fargo is sitting on the edge of their chairs wondering who will draft Carson Wentz. Its absolutely crazy to quote Carson.
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Putting "news judgment" in perspective, from Harvey Dunn himself: harveydunn.jpg Called School Day's End. Doubt these kids worried about who got top billing on KELO.
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Originally posted by NoVaJack View PostPutting "news judgment" in perspective, from Harvey Dunn himself: [ATTACH=CONFIG]787[/ATTACH] Called School Day's End. Doubt these kids worried about who got top billing on KELO.
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The Argus Leader ran the initial story about Dr. Dunn being appointed president of SDSU on an inside page. It got less coverage than rehashed news about new basketball coaches. A week later, after people noticed that Dr. Dunn is a tribal member, the story has become front page news. Maybe TV will follow suit and give him more attention. I thought the appointment of a new president at the state's largest university should have been bigger news all along. That's all.This space for lease.
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I quit reading newspapers when the local paper ran a front page story of a woman who's flowers were stolen from her yard and then three days worth of one of their editors dispute with a neighbor. This in a metro area of 187,000 people with a lot more bigger stories than flowers and disputes.
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Originally posted by Jacked_Up View PostThe Argus Leader ran the initial story about Dr. Dunn being appointed president of SDSU on an inside page. It got less coverage than rehashed news about new basketball coaches. A week later, after people noticed that Dr. Dunn is a tribal member, the story has become front page news. Maybe TV will follow suit and give him more attention. I thought the appointment of a new president at the state's largest university should have been bigger news all along. That's all.
That's why all the newspapers across the country are doing so marvellously well.
Flourishing, I hear.
(It is smack, right?)
(Yes, there are still some . . . far too few IMHO . . . true reporters and journalists whose focus is on truth-telling rather than difference-making. They are generally unpopular with their professional peers, from what I can tell.)
(And don't get me started on the odious, rampant, ESPN-inspired bent for dubbing mere beat reporters as "insiders." Makes my skin crawl, it does.)
Final thought: I've often thought it curious (and dangerous) that the news media is just about the only industry that regularly escapes spotlight-intense scrutiny on a regular basis. Mainly because they're the ones generally doing the scrutinizing.
But who watches the watchers?"I think we'll be OK"
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