lcjjdnh said:
Scribbled_Notz said:
lcjjdnh said:
Scribbled_Notz said:
lcjjdnh said:
Don't always agree with Whitlock, but his analogy to The Wire's "dope on the table" was apt.
The same Whitlock who just got absolutely destroyed when he just tried to write ONE news story on the NBA lockout? Forget mall cop, Whitlock is the one standing in line at Mrs. Fields cookies. That guy is an armchair journalist who talks about other people who are working. An abomination, and a major reason why Fox Sports will always be a joke when it comes to real journalism. He should reach for another cookie next time he thinks about writing a news story. I'm sure Billy Hunter would be willing to bring him some milk, too.
Good arguments usually address the argument itself rather than the speaker, especially given my preface--"don't always agree with Whitlock"--made clear I was not appealing to authority.
Also, Whitlock is no worse than any of the other NBA reporters getting spun by their sources. This lockout has not been one of journalism's finest moments.
"Dope on the table" is a reference to lazy investigating. If you're suggesting lazy investigating in all these stories, you must be friggin' Bob Woodward.
And yes, Whitlock referencing "dope on the table" is one of the most ironic criticisms in history, because I don't know a lazier reporter than Whitlock. Which is why I think it's awesome when he comes out of his self-aggrandizing cocoon of sycophants to write an anonymous single-sourced news story...and then it blows up in his face. For heaven's sake, stick to being the foremost authority on the Wire. Or better yet, get a new show and a new schtick already. Both the columnist and the sitcom are three years past their expiration date.
Dope on the table does not mean lazy investigating (nor is The Wire a sitcom). Its about police making arrests or hyping stats as good PR while doing nothing to correct the underlying system.
And, as long as we're deflecting conversation on the actual merits by criticizing the work of other journalists that have nothing to do with this particular issue, Woodward ain't exactly a shining example of a great journalist either. He's spent the past 30 years, as Christopher Hitchens has said, serving as a stenographer for the rich and powerful.
Yes, it does mean lazy investigating. As in, cops going for "the dope on the table"...taking the lazy, easy bust. And I say again, if you think those are lazy or easy stories, I say you're someone who has likely never done one yourself. Which I'm guessing is spot-on, since you reference (and thus align yourself) with a lazy ass shoot-from-the-couch critic like Jason Whitlock.
I'll take Robinson and Woodward and break stories. You can take Whitlock and Hitchens and tour the country in a balloon with your abundance of sanctimonious hot air.