honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser

Archive for May, 2008

The ‘R’ word

Friday, May 23rd, 2008

Recruiting.

That’s a dirty word when it comes to high school athletics here, and probably on the Mainland.

The topic has bubbled to the forefront again with the news of Punahou being tabbed the No. 1 school for athletics by Sports Illustrated. (Punahou won 16 of 32 state tournament titles.)

Recruiting is against the league bylaws. The rule states that the prospective athlete must make the first contact. And we’d be naive to say it doesn’t happen or has never happened.

Let me tell you my philosophy: change the bylaws to allow recruiting and that way schools can admit they’re doing it, because I’m for it.

That’s right.

If recruiting gives a child an opportunity to become a better person, socially, academically and athletically, then what’s wrong with that?

What parent wouldn’t want the best for his/her child? Tell me a parent who would reject such an opportunity? Why is this a bad thing, as long as the child can keep up with the curriculum?

The byproduct of recruiting is that private schools might end up winning more than public schools. That’s just bragging rights resulting from a game.

But, if the bottom line is improving a child’s opportunities that could help him or her for the rest of his or her life, then that’s a good enough reason to allow recruiting.

What do you think?

We need to understand the communities we cover

Wednesday, May 21st, 2008

We have invited Ariel Abadilla, Philippine Consul General, to come to the Advertiser next week for a round-table discussion with us about coverage.
The discussion will be the first of what we hope are several this year with various leaders of Hawaii’s ethnic communities as we renew our commitment to establishing relationships and fostering greater understanding between the newspaper and the diverse communities that we serve. We have had a number of successful sessions of this nature in the past, where reporters, editors, photographers, and others were able to connect with new sources and gain broader perspective and appreciation for Hawaii’s various cultures.
As today’s Behind the Headlines guest blogger, I decided to share information about this upcoming session because I believe our efforts in the area of diversity are key to the quality of what we do. In my role as managing editor for content, this is something that I care about passionately. Within the industry, this newspaper has often been recognized for the diversity of its staff. Recruiting and retaining top-notch journalists of color — particularly those with Hawaii roots — will always be a top priority.

But understanding and respect for the communities that we cover is just as important as maintaining a diverse staff. Next week’s session, and others that are to come, is one way of achieving this goal. The quality of our reporting is enhanced when we have a deep understanding of what’s important to the community, culture, or people we’re writing about. To that end, we want feedback. While we can’t meet individually with everyone as we will next week with some members of the Filipino community, I’m always happy to hear from you through e-mail, by phone, and even snail mail. You can reach me at mmcfadde@honolulu.gannett.com, 808-535-2426, P.O. Box 3110, Honolulu, HI 96802.

And, of course, you can share your thoughts here.

Marsha McFadden/Managing Editor for Content.

You write the news

Monday, May 12th, 2008

The stories most often passed over by newspapers are the “small” stories about car washes, community cleanups, little league signups and school plays that are very important to the people involved, but not so much to the statewide readership.

These groups send in their press releases by email or fax to the newsroom in hopes that it will make it in print and draw hordes of people to their event.

We do place many of these types of events on page B-3 every day under the MyCommunities heading, but many more come in then we can possibly print.

As the community news editor at The Honolulu Advertiser, I’m in charge of running our myAdvertiser.com neighborhood Web sites, and I know how important this information is to residents.

To provide a venue for these type of stories, we have created the Get Published online tool. Get Published allows registered users to post their own stories and photos directly on a site covering their community.

We have seven myAdvertiser.com community Web sites: Honolulu (Waikiki to Makiki), Metro Honolulu (Downtown to Kalihi), East Oahu (Kaimuki to Hawaii Kai), Windward Oahu (Waimanalo to Kahuku), Cental Oahu (Mililani to the North Shore), Leeward Oahu (Aiea to Moanalua) and West Oahu (Ewa to Waianae).

As far as I know, we are the only news site in Hawaii that allows readers to directly publish their own stories online.

There is one caveat: we don’t allow advertising or opinion pieces on the sites. They are only for community news.

So, if you are planning a community event, a fundraiser or youth sports signups and want some free publicity, go to our Web site, look for myAdvertiser in the tool bar, click on that and find Get Published.

Then you write the news.

Putting the ‘new’ in ‘news’

Tuesday, May 6th, 2008

How important is it that a news story is new, that it just broke? Is the timeliness more important than, let’s say, how many people are affected?

As The Advertiser’s digital editor and today’s Behind the Headlines guest blogger, I thought I’d talk about the breaking news headlines we list on our home page.

I’m not talking about the really big stories, like last week’s coverage of the Aloha cargo division events. Those go in a special module at the top of the page. No discussion there. I’m talking about the daily breaking news that we run in a column in the top part of our home page.

We run the breaking news stories in that space in chronological order with the latest one first, by default. Many of our readers want it that way because it makes it easy to check in several times a day and scan the headlines to see what the latest news is.

But we didn’t always do it that way. When we first got serious about posting breaking stories around the clock, we weighed the impact of the stories and listed them with the heftier ones on top.

We heard from many readers who didn’t like that format because they would have to search for stories that were new. Sure, the story at the top of the heap might have been very important but they had already read it and they wanted something fresh.

That’s the reason why we decided to run the latest ones on top. (That and the fact that our boss, Senior Vice President/Editor Mark Platte, told us to do it.)

We know some of our readers disagree with this decision. They say we list stories that don’t qualify as breaking news in their opinion. These are readers who want us to make a news decision and keep the most important ones on top, even when other, less important events keep unfolding throughout the day.

Which type of reader are you? Would you rather see the very latest, or do you want us to weigh the importance?