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Last rites on the Rocky Mountain News's Twittering

Why is the media business in such terrible shape? Experts and pundits of every description have puzzled over this question for years, but I've finally learned the answer: me. Or at least, people like me — misguided, backward, stuck-in-the-dark-ages Luddites who fear new technology rather than see it as the cure for all that ails the industry.

That's one way to interpret recent comments made by Rocky Mountain News editor/publisher/president John Temple in regard to Twitter, a micro-blogging method that allows users to post brief observations or comments — maximum length: 140 characters — in real time, which newspapers and other media outlets have raced to embrace. However, the Rocky's efforts recently suffered a blow after the paper assigned staffer Berny Morson to Twitter the September 10 funeral of three-year-old Marten Kudlis, killed when Francis Hernandez, an illegal immigrant with a lengthy arrest record, crashed into a Baskin-Robbins outlet in Aurora. Here's a sampling of Morson's posts, which seemed to have been delivered by a golf commentator accustomed to whispering at greenside while players lined up putts:

9:46 AM: people again are sobbing. rabbi again asks god to give marten everlasting life.

9:48 AM: pallbearers carry out coffin followed by mourners.

10:18 AM: coffin lowered into ground.

10:20 AM: rabbi recites the main hebrew prayer of death.

10:22 AM: earth being placed on coffin.

Online commentators at such websites as SportsJournalists.com attacked these updates with special vehemence. Some even demanded that those involved in making the assignment be fired — and Temple acknowledged in a September 13 column on the topic that the staccato prose hadn't met the Rocky's standards. But he also defended the decision to Twitter the service. "To claim there is something inherently wrong with the idea is to make too sweeping a judgment," he wrote. "We must learn to use the new tools at our disposal. Yes, there are going to be times when we make mistakes, just as we do in our newspaper. But that doesn't mean we shouldn't try something. It means we need to learn to do it well."

During a subsequent interview with Temple, I took issue with this thesis, suggesting that while Twittering was a perfectly fine way to cover many stories, it might not be the most appropriate technique for reporting on an interment. To put it mildly, Temple wasn't persuaded.

"I think it's absurd to say you shouldn't Twitter a funeral, absolutely absurd," he announced. "That's like saying you shouldn't write stories about journalism. To me, it's just ignorant. It has no relationship to the reality of reporting. People hunger for information. They want information about live events, and there can be times when it's totally appropriate for some people to want information from a funeral." For example, he said, "I can imagine someone wanting to read a play-by-play of the pope's funeral." As if there were no difference between a funeral for the head of the Catholic Church and a farewell to a previously anonymous toddler.

"You're free to think what you like," Temple continued, "but your thinking is indicative of the stultified, deadly minds that are destroying American news organizations."

My reply? "That's a lot to heap on me, John, but I've got big shoulders."

The Rocky first got the Twittering bug during the lead-up to the Democratic National Convention — and a good many of the paper's scribes assigned to blanket the DNC wound up using the technique effectively. Even so, the unedited nature of the posts, and the staff's modest familiarity with texting techniques, resulted in some unintentionally amusing items. Take, for instance, these two spelling-challenged celebrity sightings submitted by correspondent Tobie Orr on August 25:

4:37 p.m.: Zooey dechanel...wearing a little blue sailor dress and black tights. At la Rumba.

4:45 p.m.: Ellen berstyn walked in has a dune linen long jacket and pants, just ate a mini crab cake.

For what it's worth, that's Zooey Deschanel and Ellen Burstyn. But these botches were minor compared to the posting of a word that was spelled correctly: "fucker." When I asked about the snafu, Temple didn't identify the reporter — insiders say he was a staffer with another E.W. Scripps paper imported to help with DNC coverage — but noted that "he thought he was text-messaging a friend, but instead, he sent it to our Twitter account." Had this happened on a blog or in a comment on the Rocky's website, it would have been a simple matter to remove the offending word. But because Twitter is a live feed, techies at the paper had to scramble to figure out what to do. They eventually settled on an effective, if time-consuming, fix: having other Twittering Rocky reporters send as many updates as possible until "fucker" was pushed off users' screens. (Word has it that when one staffer was asked to text something, he responded by texting the word "something.") In the end, Temple added, only one reader complained about the appearance of the profanity, which he likened to "a person blurting out a swear word on TV." In his view, it was "another lesson learned."

Some Rocky supervisors got a different kind of clue from the Twittering of the Kudlis funeral. Sources reveal that the paper had planned to Twitter a second memorial service on September 10 — that of Patricia Guntharp, one of two women who also died in the Baskin-Robbins accident. According to an e-mail provided to Westword, a staffer "went to the editors during and after Marten's funeral and expressed concern" about Twittering another event of this type, particularly given the cringe-worthy updates coming in from Morson. Editors subsequently "realized it wasn't a good idea, and the person assigned to the 7 p.m. Twitter...was taken off it." The Rocky had planned to Twitter the funeral of murdered Adams County prosecutor Sean May the previous week, this insider added, only to be foiled when May's family declined to let reporters inside the service.

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  • Wenalway 09/26/2008 12:48:00 AM

    Time for bluntness: John Temple is a world-class doofus who's proving he has no business at a newspaper. Like many of the failed and failing pseudomanagers, he should have been pushed out the door a while back. He might claim he can somehow perform a task better than others, but through word and deed he's proving he should no longer have the opportunity to do so. John Temple should be fired. Every day that he isn't is another day of proof that newspapers have hopelessly lost their way. John Temple should be fired.

  • Matt Mendelsohn 09/25/2008 10:50:00 PM

    It's still gauche to me to be doing anything with a Blackberry at a funeral, but trickO makes good points, particularly that last sentence: "...under the mistaken notion....that it doesn't need the same standards of editing that the rest of the news report requires." If you look at what was reported as the burial site Twitter, you'll read: 10:18 AM: coffin lowered into ground. 10:20 AM: rabbi recites the main hebrew prayer of death. I'm not an authority to be sure, but I believe it would really be a Jewish prayer, read in Hebrew. Hebrew is the language, Judaism is the faith. Furthermore, calling it a "prayer of death" is perhaps mildly inaccurate. A Kaddish, or "Mourner's Kaddish," is a prayer of bereavement recited at funerals, but I've never specifically heard it referred to as a "prayer of death." Picky, maybe, but I think this goes to your point. These are things an editor could have looked at more carefully.

  • trickO' 09/25/2008 9:41:00 PM

    Hey, what is Twittering but a rather constant and unedited version (in extremely abbreviated bites) of what the Associated Press, Bloomberg, Reuters or any other news service, online or not, provides of running, live events? I think anything worth broadcasting live and worth covering in any sort of detail is worth Twittering, whether it's a funeral or a sports event, an election recount or a parade/protest/riot, a red-carpet celebrity ceremony or a man/woman-on-the-street real-time survey. Maybe one solution here would be for the reporter in the field to text-message Twitter-worthy details to an actual EDITOR first, who in turn would actually Twitter the subscribers. So you lose, what, maybe 30 seconds or so in the delivery time so the editor can check for spellings, tone, etc? What's the harm? News-media Twittering as it stands now is like the sloppy and unwise practice among some newspapers, TV and radio stations of sending raw, unedited copy onto their websites under the mistaken notion that if it's local-local-local-news-right-here-right-NOW! (read: otherwise unimportant) that it doesn't need the same standards of editing that the rest of the news report requires. Which, of course, is total BS.

  • Matt Mendelsohn 09/25/2008 7:05:00 PM

    John Temple's defense of Twittering at a funeral reminds me of the flap a few months back over a Tampa Tribune intern blogging about a staff meeting in which longtime employees were laid off. The folks who rushed to that intern's defense--just like Mr. Temple--painted a picture of old fogies afraid of technology versus young and energetic whiz kids who can see the future. (She knows how to blog! Hire her!) They missed the point then and Temple misses the point now: it's not a matter of technology, it's a matter of human decency. It's not in good taste to dish about one's colleagues being fired--especially when, as an intern, you've only been at the paper for three weeks and might not have the whole picture--and it's even more revolting to sit at the funeral of a child and be typing inane comments into a cell phone. Michael Roberts is absolutely right in calling out the RMN on this. Notes by themselves are just that: notes. Journalists are people who take those notes and turn them into cogent pieces of reporting. (If you want to see how accurate and valuable notes are--absent that pesky cogent reporting part--watch the scrolling feed of any news station after a school shooting: Gunman had a knife. Gunman had two automatic rifles. Gunman was student. Gunman was a middle-aged...) Mr. Temple can blame Luddite-ism all he wants for the demise of newspapers, but who does he blame for the demise of judgement, taste and decency? You got a mirror handy? I'd be curious to see if he'd embrace someone with a Blackberry tapping away at the funeral of one of his loved ones.

 
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