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Politics dude doesn't think WaPo's Nats writer can handle politics

A move from a major sports beat to politics could be terrific. To believe otherwise, in a general, broad-ranging way, is ridiculous.

That said, I read Janes' full good bye post and, although it was intended as a farewell to her baseball beat, I would like to know a bit of her thoughts on her new one, too. I got that she apparently thinks it might just be time to move on to something new, and I can see how that could be. (I also don't think this was a for-now thing. I doubt she'll ever be back on a baseball beat).

But why politics? Not that I think she can't do it. I'm just curious if this has ever, or long, been an area of interest, knowledge or passion for her that we just never knew or realized?

And what, and who, sparked the conversation about this switch? It seems as if, perhaps, Janes approached the paper about what else she could do, in lieu of baseball coverage. Or, as Hondo suggested, is the staffing thin at the Post in terms of people available and willing to cover a major politics beat for an election year? I wonder where the interest regarding this move originated, and what prompted it, if it's anything other than just that it's obviously a great opportunity if someone wants to change direction significantly. I'd be interesting to hear.


Politics beat is terrific right now. Prestige, leaks all over, seismic change, a president loathed by the very people who want your product. This is the best time to speak truth to power.

Now, once the progressives take over and the journalism is expected to be PR, not as fun.
 
On one level, national politics is probably easier than covering a professional sports team. A candidate goes somewhere and says X. A House committee or a think-tank releases a report that says Y. Those kind of stories could be written by a decent reporter on a college newspaper. And I bet the first baseman of the Nationals wasn't directly emailing her quotes right after a game, the way politicians and their press folk do whenever an issue comes up.

On the other hand, covering politics at this level is a lot about developing below-the-line contacts. Folks on congressional staff, grunts working on state campaigns. That's where the good stuff comes in. You also have to know where to look for publicly released information. So yeah, it should be interesting to see how she adapts.
 
Seems like some folks are missing the point - he's not saying she won't succeed at covering politics because she covers sports...actually, the opposite. He's taking issue with the fact that, these days, the media covers politics as if they are sports, with breathless minute-by-minute coverage of POLLS and RESULTS and DRAMA and SCANDAL and ACCESS and all the he-said she-said bullshirt instead of substantive, definitive reporting on and analysis of the actual issues in play. So, really, he's saying that a sports reporter is perfectly qualified to cover politics the way the Post wants them covered.
 
Seems like some folks are missing the point - he's not saying she won't succeed at covering politics because she covers sports...actually, the opposite. He's taking issue with the fact that, these days, the media covers politics as if they are sports, with breathless minute-by-minute coverage of POLLS and RESULTS and DRAMA and SCANDAL and ACCESS and all the he-said she-said bullshirt instead of substantive, definitive reporting on and analysis of the actual issues in play. So, really, he's saying that a sports reporter is perfectly qualified to cover politics the way the Post wants them covered.

Which of course is implying that the way she covered the Nats was all drama and no substance, which is of course false in every way.
 
Which of course is implying that the way she covered the Nats was all drama and no substance, which is of course false in every way.
If that's what he was implying, then, yeah, of course it's false, because Chelsea is very good. I personally doubt he has any idea who Chelsea is, or even reads sports coverage. I think he was actually stereotyping sports writing in general, suggesting that it is focused solely on the final score and the surface-level drama, and he was using that to support his broader point about political coverage. In general, I think the point he was trying to make is correct as far as the manner in which the majority of media covers everything. That's not to say that I think the Post's transfer of Chelsea supports that point. I don't.
 
The problem with people trying to tell me how better things were 50 years ago — political reporting included — is I now have access to all the shirt they're holding up as paragons. Political reporting was just as gossipy and results-based, because it's politics.
 
heck, I don't know if they ever talked to voters 50 years ago, or actually looked into issues that were of importance to particular regions. Mostly they talked to party power brokers.
 

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