Saturday, August 15, 2009

Courier scooped again -- or just ignoring the story?

It seems there's some illegal election chicanery going on in everybody's home town. Funny we aren't reading about it in the Courier, innit?

Update, Tuesday: Three days later, Jason Soifer turns in a story that seems to assume everyone's already hip to it, and on reading it I'm left with the impression that the Courier thinks push-polling is OK.

5 comments:

Mia said...

Yes, I would concur that this is considerably important local news. Thanks!

Anonymous said...

Scooped? Maybe. What the public does not know is eNews constantly posts press releases without any changes or further investigation. Should the Courier print every piece of information it gets without checking it? No.

Steven Ayres said...

It looks to me that the Courier frequently publishes unchecked press releases at least as often. That practice by eNews is no better than the Courier's. The point is that the story is there and it deserves some kind of coverage.

Anonymous said...

So, Steven, when the Courier checks the facts, rather than just printing the press release, it discovers that an individual can do this legally. Tho unlikely a single person, it is possible. Good journalism, tho late, is still good journalism.

Steven Ayres said...

Finding out that it's possible to do something awful legally is good journalism. Making that the center of the story is propaganda.