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Reporter fired for reporting

Discussion in 'Journalism topics only' started by PaperClip529, Jun 18, 2021.

  1. Tarheel316

    Tarheel316 Well-Known Member

    Some guy with the San Francisco Chronicle pulled that for a Giants game. It was a long time ago. Can’t remember what year.
     
  2. Bud_Bundy

    Bud_Bundy Well-Known Member

    We had a guy covering a NASCAR race at Talledega many years ago. This was back in the day before cell phones and the like. Reporters called in collect to a central switchboard for the newspaper, the operator accepted the call, then transferred the reporter to sports. The kicker was the operator had a book where they wrote down the phone numbers of the collect calls, so they could match up charges to calls. Turns out the guy went about halfway, a decent drive in itself, got a hotel room and covered the race from TV. He wasn't around much after that and it's been so long ago I don't remember any discipline.

    When we had a PM competitor to our AM, the PM decided to expand out in its high school football coverage one fall. There was a fringe team that was a state power and this one reporter for the PM always covered that team. Turns out, we found out after he left, that he never went to a game. He arranged with the coach to call him early Saturday morning, get the info on the game and put a story together with the coach's quote. He did put in for expenses, though.
     
    2muchcoffeeman likes this.
  3. rtse11

    rtse11 Well-Known Member

    A long-time ago an ink-stained wretch who served at The Youngstown Vindicator told me of the time Roger Staubach came to town with Pensacola Air Station (a few years after he won the Heisman) to play Youngstown University and the sports editor had him sit in the corner of the newsroom with a radio and write the gamer from that. The stadium was less than a mile from the office.
     
  4. Driftwood

    Driftwood Well-Known Member

    That's how the guy I referenced got busted. He was supposed to be 4 hours away covering the state tournament. He filed his story then called in to verify everything. The guy on the desk said, "Uhhhhh, you aren't there. We've got your home number on Caller ID."
     
  5. Equalizer

    Equalizer Member

    I learned in my last few years as an SE that a.) you pick your battles and b.) never give management a chance to say "no." According to his tweets, they offered to pay his mileage each day, but he showed them that it wouldn't save them much money, so they decided to just kill everything. As someone noted, just take the mileage and bunk with the friend, or do the round trip every day (it's a two-hour drive each way, according to Google Maps). Figure out a way to make it work if it's important.

    At my former shop, our publisher always had our ad people sell ads to go along with the coverage. Most of the time, the trips were paid for by that, and more than a few times we actually came out with a profit. Sadly, I'm not sure most of these places even have ad reps anymore.

    Still, as I said earlier, I don't think it's fireable, unless this was the final straw in a much bigger battle.
     
  6. BurnsWhenIPee

    BurnsWhenIPee Well-Known Member

    Not sure his tweets said that. He said all hotel stays need approval, mileage does not, and not that they offered to pay his mileage each day (unless I'm misreading it horribly). They told him to write it up remotely, he made his case, they told him again to write it up remotely, he made his own decision and made the trip.

    I think hours could be a factor in this, too. Covering a full day track meet in person is, what, a good 8-9 hours? Writing it up from results and making 2-3 phone calls can be done in a couple of hours.

    Covering it in person makes for a better story, but for the first 2 days of state track, is it worth it?

    Sure as shit isn't worth losing your job over.
     
  7. tapintoamerica

    tapintoamerica Well-Known Member

    Or your career.
     
    BurnsWhenIPee likes this.
  8. Baron Scicluna

    Baron Scicluna Well-Known Member

    Well, at least we know this guy is not Fredrick.
     
  9. SixToe

    SixToe Well-Known Member

    WTF is going on with people not doing what the boss says, getting in trouble and then whining on social media about it?

    Grow the fuck up and do what you're asked to do, or told to do, unless it's something illegal. If it's against your moral prinicples, either hold your nose and do your job or GTFO and find another one. If it's something going against union agreements, talk to your rep or whatever union people do.

    "Whaaaaa! I was told to cover this remotely but I went anyway and got my wee-wee smacked by the bad bossman! Whaaaaaa!"

    Fucking kids.
     
    wicked, PaperDoll and BurnsWhenIPee like this.
  10. Slacker

    Slacker Well-Known Member

    If you're gonna fight management,
    fight management the American way.

     
    Batman and sgreenwell like this.
  11. Sports Barf

    Sports Barf Well-Known Member

    Actually if your boss smacks your wee-wee you could probably take him to court for enough $$$ to bankrupt the newspaper
     
  12. HanSenSE

    HanSenSE Well-Known Member

    It's a newspaper. How much could it have?
     
    fossywriter8 likes this.
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