Monthly Archive for December, 2006

Frank Anderson: 40 years of photojournalism

Friday brings to a close the 42-year career of staff
photographer Frank Anderson. Loyal readers of the Herald-Leader – and the
Lexington Herald and the Lexington Leader before the papers combined in 1983 –
will miss his contributions to their newspaper, whether or not they knew Frank
personally.

Frankmug
From the mundane to the dramatic, Frank’s pictures have
reflected the lives and the passions of Central Kentuckians for more than four
decades. He began learning his craft in the early 1960s as a darkroom
technician for the late Herald photographer E. Martin Jessee. Frank became a
full-time staff photographer in 1965.

Frank has covered every conceivable newspaper assignment,
from tea parties to presidential visits, “pets of the week” to NCAA Final
Fours, coal mine disasters – and 39 Kentucky Derbies.

Frank’s favorite area of coverage was thoroughbred horses.
He covered all aspects of the horse business, from breeding to racing to a top
female jockey battling cancer. In 2003, he won the Eclipse Award in
photography, thoroughbred racing’s highest honor.

Over the years, Frank never lost his competitive spirit as a
photographer; he always wanted that big lead photo on the front page. That
spirit is one thing we’ll miss about him around the photo department.

To many of us, Frank has been much more than a fellow staff
photographer. He’s been a mentor, a colleague and a good friend. His endless supply of jokes and outrageous
stories has kept us entertained for years. We wish him well in retirement, but
we’ll miss him greatly.

A gallery of Frank’s images and a story about him are in the
Free Time section of Thursday’s newspaper.  To view a multimedia presentation of Frank’s
career go to: http://www.heraldleaderphoto.com/multimedia/frank/retires.html

Ron Garrison
Visuals Editor

 

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Herald-Leader alum moves from Iraq to India

Tomlass
Some readers may remember Tom Lasseter, who began his career
as the Herald-Leader’s night cops reporter in Lexington and has been covering the war in Iraq for this newspaper and others in the McClatchy (formerly Knight Ridder) group since
2003. Well, Tom is moving to a new – and
we hope, safer – assignment as the McClatchy bureau chief in India. Here are the details.

Lasseter, a University of Georgia graduate from Atlanta,
did some fine work at the Herald-Leader. He and Mary Meehan reported on problems with code enforcement in low-income
rental housing in Lexington. Then,
as our correspondent in Hazard, he played a big role in the Prescription for
Pain series that inspired U.S. Rep. Hal Rogers to start the UNITE program to
fight prescription drug abuse in rural Kentucky.

Tom Eblen

Managing Editor

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Recognition for two photojournalists

One of the many strengths of the Herald-Leader newsroom is
its outstanding staff of photojournalists, led by Visuals Editor Ron
Garrison
. Two staff photographers have
been honored recently:

Janetworne_2
Janet Worne has received one of two full scholarships to attend
a week-long seminar, “Publishing the Photographic Book,” at the prestigious
Santa Fe Photography Workshops in New Mexico. The seminar will be taught by renowned
National Geographic photographer Sam Abell (who also happens to be a University of Kentucky graduate) and Leah
Bendavid-Val, editorial director of National Geographic photography books.

 

Cornmug
Mark
Cornelison
has been selected by Photo District News to represent Kentucky in its annual 50 States, 50 Photographers special issue. Photo District News is
an award-winning monthly magazine for professional photographers, covering
photography news and analysis, interviews and portfolios of the latest
photographic work. See last year’s 50
States, 50 Photographers issue.

You
can see more of Mark’s and Janet’s work at the Herald-Leader photo site.

Tom
Eblen

Managing
Editor

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New Online Feature: Video Commentaries

I hope you have noticed that over the past year Kentucky.com has continued grow and evolve as a way we provide readers with
up-to-date news and information. This year, Kentucky.com has already enjoyed a
record 90 million page views.

Pett1_1
Kentucky.com also offers us a way to give readers
information in formats that simply aren’t possible in print. In some cases,
that means posting the audio from an event, a press conference or a speech. It
other cases, it means posting legal documents that are simply too large to
publish in the newspaper. 

This week marks another milestone, as we move into video production. We’re starting with commentary from two of the most
familiar people on our staff – editorial cartoonist Joel Pett and sports
columnist Mark Story

Joel will post a video commentary on Mondays and Mark will have a commentary on Friday. Story1
Joel’s first commentary went up earlier this week, and Mark’s will be posted Friday. Of course, Mark and Joel  will continue to appear
in the daily newspaper. The video commentary is just one more way that
Kentucky.com allows our staff to provide readers with news, information,
commentary and analysis. 

The commentaries are made in our own studio by content
producer David Robinson. They are then edited and approved in the same way that
the cartoons and columns are when they appear in the newspaper. 

Let me know what you think of them.

Mike Johnson
Deputy Managing Editor

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15,000 Page Views, and Just Warming Up

Behind the Headlines hit a milestone Sunday afternoon  – it surpassed 15,000 page views.

When we started the blog earlier this year, the idea was to help
readers understand more about what Herald-Leader journalists do and why
and how they do it. Too often, I think,
people’s perceptions of how the Herald-Leader and kentucky.com work
are off-base – no doubt shaped by our many critics, from talk radio callers to partisan
bloggers.  They have a lot of opinions and assumptions, but few facts. 

The beauty of a blog is two-way
communication, and I’m hoping to get more of that from you during Behind the
Headlines’ next 15,000 page views. Comment
on what we write about.  Better yet,
ask us questions, challenge us and tell us what you would like to see more of –
and less of – in the newspaper and on kentucky.com.

Tom Eblen
Managing Editor

 

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Finding Santa on the radio

It’s one of the questions editors get asked frequently: Where does the newspaper get ideas for stories? My standard answer to this question: Everywhere. One fun thing about journalism is that you never know when a reader will call in with a great tip, or when a walk downtown at lunchtime will lead you to see something new or different you hadn’t noticed before. Reporters are constantly talking to sources and checking records in search of stories. But great stories don’t just come from reporters.

Santajack
Sunday’s front-page story and photo package on well-known radio host Jack Pattie’s transformation into Santa Claus is a great example. Herald-Leader Chief Photographer Charles Bertram happened to be listening to Pattie’s radio show a few months back when Pattie mentioned his quest to become Santa. Said Charles: "I just filed away the idea." When it got closer to Christmas, Charles decided to check in with Pattie to see if there might be a good story there. He dropped by the radio station a few weeks ago. "As soon as I saw him through the glass in the studio room, I knew it would be a neat story," Charles said. "Jack was very enthused about us doing it."

Charles began following Pattie to various activities, and then he brought the idea to editors, who tapped staff writer Delano Massey to put words with the photos. We decided to run the story and photo package on Sunday, the day after Lexington’s Christmas Parade (in which Pattie rode as Santa Claus). Charles also put together a multimedia show on "Santa Jack." The result is a charming look at a community icon transforming into an international one. And, as Charles notes, it’s the kind of upbeat, positive story that readers often say they’d like to see more of in the paper.

Peter Baniak
metro editor

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