It's been a while since I've posted on here, but this wacky development has me astonished. Is it unethical or just bad form? Either way, it comes off as reckless and amateurish to me.
I wanted to see what you all thought of Armando Salguero of the Miami Herald outing Bill Parcells as one of his anonymous sources.
I'm simply amazed after getting an e-mail from a colleague pointing me to the story. My friend had read Salgeuro's blog Sunday afternoon on Jason Taylor and was checking Sunday night at about 10 p.m. to see what he might have added about the big story. At some point during the day Salguero SWITCHED THE ATTRIBUTION of his quotes from "a source close to the Dolphins" to "Parcells said."
Here's what my buddy wrote to me:
I'm certain the quotes are identical even though I don't have a page capture of the original to prove it. I could swear on my children because the wording of the quotes was memorable to me. Salguero also left the original time stamp of 11:56 a.m. with no update notice (bad form). Since I couldn't have read the blog until I turned on my computer at around 2:30 p.m., Salguero had been quoting this anonymous source for at least three hours. Given the popular subject matter, I'm sure many readers saw the original version before it was changed to this:
http://dolphinsindepth.blogspot.com/2008/03/source-taylor-will-have-to-retire-to.html
I'm grappling about the ethics of such an editorial decision. Parcells has been invisible and unreachable for months, so unless he explicity told Salguero they were off the record or not for attribution, why else would Salguero choose to label him "a source"? You'd have to assume then that Parcells asked to be protected and Salguero changed his mind.
OR ...
I also noticed the other two papers got Parcells at the ballyard Sunday afternoon while he was watching his buddy LaRussa's Cardinals. So Salguero probably made the attribution switch -- and made it a point in his column to flaunt he got Parcells BEFORE the baseball game -- after the Palm Beach Post and Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel got Parcells on the record. I'm sure Salguero felt the need to scramble and show he got Parcells as well.
That's somewhat more acceptable (I guess) but you would think Salguero would call back and ask permission first and in the process get some NEW QUOTES TO COVER TRACKS AND PROTECT PARCELLS, THE MOST IMPORTANT SOURCE A GUY CAN HAVE ON THE DOLPHINS BEAT.
But as a lower-level reporter myself (I've never worked a big beat, but I am in the business), I couldn't just OUT someone like that. It would tinge everything I wrote moving forward. If I quoted an unnamed source or noted intimate information about the team readers would automatically assume Parcells was the source. Plus, anybody who noticed the switcheroo would trust me that much less to protect them down the road.
I just don't know what to think about this professional decision, but I know it's not good.
I wanted to see what you all thought of Armando Salguero of the Miami Herald outing Bill Parcells as one of his anonymous sources.
I'm simply amazed after getting an e-mail from a colleague pointing me to the story. My friend had read Salgeuro's blog Sunday afternoon on Jason Taylor and was checking Sunday night at about 10 p.m. to see what he might have added about the big story. At some point during the day Salguero SWITCHED THE ATTRIBUTION of his quotes from "a source close to the Dolphins" to "Parcells said."
Here's what my buddy wrote to me:
I'm certain the quotes are identical even though I don't have a page capture of the original to prove it. I could swear on my children because the wording of the quotes was memorable to me. Salguero also left the original time stamp of 11:56 a.m. with no update notice (bad form). Since I couldn't have read the blog until I turned on my computer at around 2:30 p.m., Salguero had been quoting this anonymous source for at least three hours. Given the popular subject matter, I'm sure many readers saw the original version before it was changed to this:
http://dolphinsindepth.blogspot.com/2008/03/source-taylor-will-have-to-retire-to.html
I'm grappling about the ethics of such an editorial decision. Parcells has been invisible and unreachable for months, so unless he explicity told Salguero they were off the record or not for attribution, why else would Salguero choose to label him "a source"? You'd have to assume then that Parcells asked to be protected and Salguero changed his mind.
OR ...
I also noticed the other two papers got Parcells at the ballyard Sunday afternoon while he was watching his buddy LaRussa's Cardinals. So Salguero probably made the attribution switch -- and made it a point in his column to flaunt he got Parcells BEFORE the baseball game -- after the Palm Beach Post and Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel got Parcells on the record. I'm sure Salguero felt the need to scramble and show he got Parcells as well.
That's somewhat more acceptable (I guess) but you would think Salguero would call back and ask permission first and in the process get some NEW QUOTES TO COVER TRACKS AND PROTECT PARCELLS, THE MOST IMPORTANT SOURCE A GUY CAN HAVE ON THE DOLPHINS BEAT.
But as a lower-level reporter myself (I've never worked a big beat, but I am in the business), I couldn't just OUT someone like that. It would tinge everything I wrote moving forward. If I quoted an unnamed source or noted intimate information about the team readers would automatically assume Parcells was the source. Plus, anybody who noticed the switcheroo would trust me that much less to protect them down the road.
I just don't know what to think about this professional decision, but I know it's not good.