Monthly Archive for March, 2007

Elect your UK coach here

Who says people won’t vote?  They will — at least when it involves an online poll about who should be the next UK basketball coach.

Since Tubby Smith announced his departure last Thursday afternoon, we’ve been asking readers to choose their favorite from among nine likely suspects and “other.”  As of Wednesday afternoon, nearly 27,000 people had voted, giving Florida’s Billy Donovan the lead with a 41 percent margin.  He’s trailed by Louisville’s Rick Pitino, who has 17 percent of the vote even though he has taken himself out of the running.

What are online polls like this worth?  Nothing, beyond entertainment value.  They’re unscientific. But they are fun and interesting. (By the way, our system doesn’t allow for too much ballot-box stuffing. Only one vote per computer will be registered.)

So cast your vote today.  And do it again for real in May and November, when we’ll be electing public officials.

Tom Eblen
Managing Editor

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More on Tubby Smith reaction

It wasn’t just the Herald-Leader’s opinion columns about Tubby Smith’s departure that got readers worked up. 

There has been an undercurrent of racial tension surrounding the UK basketball program since Adolph Rupp was coach, and it surfaced when Tubby Smith became UK’s first African-American coach in 1997. So it seemed logical to ask some local African-American leaders what they thought his departure might mean for race relations.

A story by reporter Delano Massey on Friday, which quoted several prominent African-Americans, prompted about 100 e-mails and several phone calls from readers, most of whom thought the story was inappropriate or "irresponsible."   

Part of a newspaper’s job is to ask uncomfortable questions, and seek out a diverse group of news sources.  Many white people - and perhaps some blacks - would prefer that we not discuss such an impolite subject.  But if we didn’t, we wouldn’t be doing our job.

Tom Eblen
Managing Editor

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Tubby Smith’s departure: No shortage of opinions

When a hot story comes along – and no Kentucky story is hotter than the first UK basketball coaching change in a decade – the Herald-Leader becomes as much a
forum for debate as a source of news.

Cheryl Truman – Herald-Leader books editor, feature writer
and former local issues columnist – took a Louisville Slugger to the hornet’s
nest Saturday in a commentary column. She wrote that rabid UK fans should be ashamed. “We drove away UK basketball coach Tubby Smith, a decent guy and generally successful coach,
because he didn’t give us what we’re sure is our Kentucky birthright: Absolute dominance of American men’s college basketball. If we
brought as much passion to improving education as we brought to Tubby-bashing,
we’d be Silicon Valley.”

In response, Truman received about 400 e-mails and 50
voicemails from readers. About 40 percent supported her view, while the other
60 percent disagreed – many in quite disagreeable language.  The column also accounted for about 300
comments on kentucky.com’s UK sports discussion board – nearly all of them critical. Interestingly, of the 50 voicemails she
received, about 70 percent agreed with her.

The Opinion Page staff has received many letters to the
editor about her column, both pro and con, and will print a selection later
this week. 

Sports columnists John Clay and Mark Story – no strangers to criticism from readers – also got several hundred emails and voicemails, most
disagreeing with their columns. 

Mark said Monday afternoon that he had received 184 emails about
Smith since Thursday. “Much of that has
been from people castigating me because they believe me in particular and the
Herald-Leader in general have not been hard enough on Tubby’s alleged failings,”
Mark said. “Another sizable amount of e-mail has been speculating about who
should replace Tubby. And about 45 of the e-mails came in response to my Sunday
column in which I opined that to succeed as a men’s basketball coach at Kentucky,
one pretty much has to be a jerk. Most of the replies to that column suggested
I was a jerk for writing such a thing. Not coincidentally, the last time I had
this heavy an e-mail volume was in the days after the hiring of Rich Brooks,
which included the controversy over how Mitch Barnhart handled that coaching
search.”

John said: “The tone towards me has been negative,
especially the column taking up for Tubby when he left. And most of those are
from regular e-mailers who have been campaigning for Tubby’s ouster.” 

Opinion columns are meant to spark discussion and
debate – and, in cases like these they obviously succeed. Of course, some readers just don’t understand
how a newspaper could publish opinions with which they disagree. They cancel their subscription, call for a
boycott or make personal attacks. It’s
as if they want a newspaper so boring that everyone will agree with every
opinion published. 

Over all, though, I think readers appreciate the
opportunities we give them in print and online to voice their opinions and
agree or disagree with what our writers – and their fellow readers –  have to say. It’s one of the things that makes
life interesting, and it makes the Herald-Leader and kentucky.com important
parts of Kentucky life.

Tom Eblen
Managing Editor

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Making Faith and Values more local

Through the years, we’ve heard from more than a few Central Kentucky religious leaders and readers interested in faith issues that they’d like to see more local content in the Herald-Leader’s Faith and Values section. Well, we’ve heard your pleas — and hopefully you’ve noticed an uptick in the “local” part of Faith and Values.

Risa Brim Richardson, who edits Faith and Values, has made some changes in an effort to strengthen local content in the section, which focuses on faith and spirituality issues. “My goal is to make the section the area’s primary source of information about local congregations of all sizes and denominations,” Risa says. Here are some details on the changes in Faith and Values:

  • We’ve lifted some of the previous restrictions on the Bulletin items, now called Faith Notes. Now, churches, synagogues, mosques and other groups can send us information about anything on their calendars, with the exception of regularly scheduled, weekly services.To make it easier to send items directly to the section staff, we have created a new email address, hlfaith@herald-leader.com. That is also where churches should send information about Vacation Bible Schools for the annual listing, to run on June 2.
  • The section will continue to run religion stories with a national scope, including wire stories, but whenever possible will include information about local organizations or people to make the issues and trends more relevant to readers in Central Kentucky.
  • Our goal is to have a local or localized centerpiece each week or at least three times a month.
  • The section has introduced a new local guest column series. Area ministers, religious leaders and seminary students can submit columns on the issues and trends covered in Faith and Values centerpieces. In other cases, panelists may be asked to submit columns about events and issues covered in other news sections. Spirituality is an issue of great interest and importance in this part of the country, and Central Kentucky boasts some thoughtful and well-respected experts and spiritual leaders. This new guest column allows the Herald-Leader to tap that expertise and share a variety of viewpoints with readers.

While we’ve made some changes, popular Faith and Values features, such as columns by Paul Prather and Rich Copley, will continue.

To make story suggestions for Faith and Values or to register for the guest column series, email Faith and Values Editor Risa Brim Richardson. To submit items for Faith Notes, send email to hlfaith@herald-leader.com.

Peter Baniak
Metro Editor

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Canned letters can’t compete with real thing

Just about every other blog, think tank or political organization encourages its supporters to write local newspapers about some important issue or another.

Fine.

But they go too far when they write the letter and then urge you to put your name on it and send it.

Or, they provide a selection of paragraphs that you can combine to create a letter, as if you were working a jigsaw puzzle.

That tactic creates a letter-writing campaign that gives a distorted impression of grass-roots support for an issue. Astroturf is what it’s called in the news business. And it comes from groups of all political persuasions.

While it may appear to be a helpful service for the time-strapped, the strategy allows people to pass off someone else’s words as their own. That’s cheating.

Vanessa Gallman
Editorial Page Editor

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