Monthly Archive for May, 2008

Changes in Saturday lifestyles sections

To our readers:

On Saturday, you’ll notice a difference in The Herald-Leader. Two
lifestyles sections – Inside/Out and Faith + Values – have become one.

No longer will we be publishing separate sections for home
and garden information and religion and values news.

What was a six-page and a four-page section will now become
a 10-page section. Inside/Out content will begin on page 1. Faith + Values
content begins on page 10.

The change has more to do with the production of the
newspaper than the content. We hope you’ll like what you see.

- Sally Scherer, lifestyles editor

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TV Book Is Changing

Starting May 18, the TV Book will have 16 pages, instead of 20.
The biggest change combines weekday listings for 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. to two facing pages and condenses movie listings by merging them with Night Owl listings, which cover highlights of movies and specials from 1 a.m. to 6 a.m.
Also, you can always access complete local TV listings on kentucky.com.
In the next few months, the Herald-Leader hopes to make available a monthly TV magazine to subscribers who request it for a nominal fee. The glossy magazine of more than 200 pages would include features, profiles, daily grids, local programming, puzzles and additional listings for sports, movies, specials and late-night programming.
Stay tuned for details.
In the meantime, if you want to discuss the current TV Book or the possibility of this new monthly TV magazine, please contact Tom Isaac at (859) 231-3475.

Linda Austin
Editor

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Attacks on reporter Jerry Tipton unwarranted

I have received several calls and e-mails today from folks upset at Herald-Leader basketball writer Jerry Tipton.071011tiptonsds004

First, let me say that Jerry Tipton is one of the most respected college basketball writers in America, with a demonstrated record of excellence in reporting and writing on the University of Kentucky basketball team. He has covered UK basketball since the 1981-82 season and is a member of the U. S. Basketball Writers Association Hall of Fame. He is knowledgeable, thorough and aggressive, as journalists should be, but also a fair reporter committed to telling all sides of a story.

In this instance, it appears that certain misinformation or misunderstandings are being spread about interviews Jerry conducted with the parents of two UK recruits. I have listened to the podcasts that appear to be sparking this misinformation. I have also reviewed Jerry’s interviews with those parents. I went through Jerry’s notes of his conversation with Robyn Curry, mother of recruit Vinny Zollo, question by question. I listened to the tape of Jerry’s approximately 30-minute interview with Howard Avery, father of recruit Michael Avery. In both cases, Jerry’s interviews with the parents were conducted in an appropriate and professional fashion.

It is important to understand that Jerry does not work for the University of Kentucky, nor is he a recruiter for the university. His job is to report the news, and sometimes that includes asking tough, serious — but fair — questions of newsmakers. That is what occurred in these cases.

In both cases, Jerry asked parents about the phenomenon of players committing as early as the eighth or ninth grade. Given the context of the recruiting frenzy that surrounds top prospects, this is an obvious question to pose to young recruits’ parents. With Mr. Avery, Jerry asked about the injuries UK suffered last season that some have linked to Coach Billy Gillispie’s tough practices. This is not a new issue, and it’s one that has been written about and commented on extensively in the press, the Internet and elsewhere. After Ms. Curry mentioned her concerns about the methods of her son’s high school coach, Jerry asked her about Coach Gillispie’s widely reported “tough love” style of coaching. Again, both are logical questions to ask of a recent recruit to the university.

In each case, Jerry also discussed with the parents – and his stories reflected – the reasons for their sons’ commitment to UK, what they liked about the university and the coach, and why they chose to commit so early. In other words, they discussed many issues about committing to UK – many of those would be characterized as positive issues; some were more critical. It’s important to cover both to produce a balanced report that puts news in the appropriate context.

Jerry did not ask about any rumors alluded to in the podcasts, nor did he comment on Lexington as a place to live. Unprompted, Ms. Curry mentioned that she had heard things about Coach Gillispie. As Jerry reported in his story, “When asked to elaborate, she said, ‘I didn’t hear directly. But I heard he [Gillispie] was arrogant. I saw none of that. He was very down to earth.’” I reviewed a later conversation that Jerry had with Ms. Curry, who confirmed that Jerry did not speak in a negative manner about Lexington. Jerry also called back Mr. Avery, who acknowledged that the injury question made him uncomfortable but that it was not Mr. Avery’s place to pass judgment on whether it was appropriate.

In both cases, Jerry’s questions to the parents stuck to what occurs on the basketball court, and what happens when young men are recruited to play high-profile sports. Again, these questions are entirely appropriate, as were the stories published after those interviews. Read the stories here and here.

We welcome reader comments and hope that you continue to bring any concerns, issues or compliments to our attention regarding our reporting on UK basketball or other subjects.

Linda Austin
Editor

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Another horse is fatally injured; should you see it?

For the second time in a week, photos of a horse fatally injured in a sporting event have presented themselves for publication. And as before, again after much discussion, I have decided to share them with you.

On Saturday, Eight Belles collapsed with two broken ankles after finishing second in the Kentucky Derby and was euthanized on the spot.0506a1eightbelles
The previous Saturday, two horses fell while jumping on the cross-country course at the Rolex Kentucky Three-Day Event and were put down.

While the initial response was more negative, readers who have contacted me in recent days have generally been supportive of the decision to publish the photos of the accidents at Rolex.

Horse lover Jack Martin of Lexington wrote: “The safety of the sport is a clear and present issue. Perhaps seeing the horror on the front page will somehow cause an outcry that will create a mandate to make it safer.”

Comments such as Martin’s influenced my choice to publish photos of the breakdown of Eight Belles. Her death follows the ultimately fatal injury of Kentucky Derby winner Barbaro in the Preakness almost two years ago. Early results from an ongoing survey for The Jockey Club found that about 2 horses die for every 1,000 starts on dirt tracks and about 1.5 die per 1,000 starts on synthetic tracks.

Some readers commented that they didn’t need to see the images to know that equine sports can be dangerous. Action News 36 photographer Lauren Ashe wrote: “I feel, as a fellow photojournalist and horse enthusiast, that showing a picture of an animal fatally injuring itself is about the same as showing a picture of a bullet entering someone’s head. What exactly does printing this accomplish?”

Ashe’s comment reminded me of Eddie Adams’ photo of a South Vietnamese colonel executing a Communist Viet Cong prisoner. The picture, which shows the exact moment the bullet enters the prisoner’s head, earned Adams a Pulitzer Prize in 1969 and is credited with helping turn American public opinion against the Vietnam War.

As the saying goes, a picture is worth a thousand words, and images can move people more readily than words alone. So, again on the front page Tuesday, there are photos of horses injured at sporting events. More graphic photos of Eight Belles are inside the paper and in a slide show online; both carry a warning that the content may be upsetting.

As before, I invite your comments on the publication of these images.

Linda Austin
Editor

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