2muchcoffeeman
Well-Known Member
Jim Alexander of SCNG member Press Enterprise:
https://www.ocregister.com/2023/09/...riley-or-any-news-source-to-dictate-coverage/
When Riley "suspended" beat writer Luca Evans for two weeks, ostensibly because of a laundry list of infractions against the program's media policies, he forgot one thing. Two, actually.
First: You are not entitled to "suspend" someone who does not in fact work for you. Evans is paid by the Southern California News Group, and his job is to report on USC athletics without fear or favor.
Second: It is the news organization that decides who covers the beat, not the news source. That's sort of inherent in journalism, and while not explicitly stated in the First Amendment it's something of a deal-breaker. The reporter's job is to be an independent source of information for those who care, be it USC football, the White House or the Temecula school board. Good news or bad, it's the reporter's job to inform the public and enable them to make up their own minds – especially since so much of what we do involves finding and reporting information that those in charge would rather hide from the public. …
But the suspicion here is that Riley's ire isn't so much that Evans used what he heard, but that it included the question from one player to the other before that press conference: "Did they tell you what to say?" Knowing what we know about the way college football coaches operate, with thumb squarely planted on the scale as often as possible, seeing that in print might have been what enraged Riley.
And by the way, if Riley thinks I deserve a "suspension" after this, he shouldn't waste his breath. I'm "suspending" USC football from this column for a while.
Other missteps cited by USC director of football communications Katie Ryan constitute penny-ante stuff, things like asking a question after the "last question" notification. Or using USC president Carol Folt's first name during a press conference. (What's the preference, Madame President?) Or greeting players away from the program-approved scrums following practice. Or sending emails to members of the athletic department for the purpose of introducing himself.
Those aren't things from which players, or coaches, or administrators, need to be protected. It's simply diligence and enthusiasm from a young man about to tackle a major beat for the first time and wanting to do it well. Evidently, these media policies constitute the "Don't You Dare Be An Effective Beat Writer" code, in which you go with the pack and regurgitate the same stuff everybody else gets. ...
Attempting to dictate coverage in such a ham-handed manner rarely happens in this diverse market. The last example I can recall involved – who else? – the Raiders in 1993, toward the end of their stay in Los Angeles, when Al Davis tried to have Daily News writer Eric Noland removed from the beat during training camp because of negative coverage. Among the highlights: Davis sycophant Steve Ortmayer telling Rick Vacek, then the Daily News sports editor: "I'm not telling you who can cover the team. I'm telling you who can't."
No, he couldn't. The NFL stepped in and threatened a huge fine, and other newspapers and broadcast organizations threatened a boycott of Raiders coverage. To be fair, 30 years ago there were far more beat writers then (from 10 individual papers) covering the Raiders regularly than cover USC now. And forget any thoughts of the NCAA or the Pac-12 intervening in this situation. You'd have better luck with Fox or ESPN, so rudderless is college football.
But consider this: Not only does Luca Evans have the unconditional support of SCNG and the 11 newspapers in this group, but he also has the support of his previous professional stop: The Los Angeles Times.
Think hard, Trojans.
If you're reading this publication, you are benefitting from independent reporting, again without fear or favor. And so we go back to the very beginning: The news source does not have the right to dictate who does – or doesn't – cover the beat.
First: You are not entitled to "suspend" someone who does not in fact work for you. Evans is paid by the Southern California News Group, and his job is to report on USC athletics without fear or favor.
Second: It is the news organization that decides who covers the beat, not the news source. That's sort of inherent in journalism, and while not explicitly stated in the First Amendment it's something of a deal-breaker. The reporter's job is to be an independent source of information for those who care, be it USC football, the White House or the Temecula school board. Good news or bad, it's the reporter's job to inform the public and enable them to make up their own minds – especially since so much of what we do involves finding and reporting information that those in charge would rather hide from the public. …
But the suspicion here is that Riley's ire isn't so much that Evans used what he heard, but that it included the question from one player to the other before that press conference: "Did they tell you what to say?" Knowing what we know about the way college football coaches operate, with thumb squarely planted on the scale as often as possible, seeing that in print might have been what enraged Riley.
And by the way, if Riley thinks I deserve a "suspension" after this, he shouldn't waste his breath. I'm "suspending" USC football from this column for a while.
Other missteps cited by USC director of football communications Katie Ryan constitute penny-ante stuff, things like asking a question after the "last question" notification. Or using USC president Carol Folt's first name during a press conference. (What's the preference, Madame President?) Or greeting players away from the program-approved scrums following practice. Or sending emails to members of the athletic department for the purpose of introducing himself.
Those aren't things from which players, or coaches, or administrators, need to be protected. It's simply diligence and enthusiasm from a young man about to tackle a major beat for the first time and wanting to do it well. Evidently, these media policies constitute the "Don't You Dare Be An Effective Beat Writer" code, in which you go with the pack and regurgitate the same stuff everybody else gets. ...
Attempting to dictate coverage in such a ham-handed manner rarely happens in this diverse market. The last example I can recall involved – who else? – the Raiders in 1993, toward the end of their stay in Los Angeles, when Al Davis tried to have Daily News writer Eric Noland removed from the beat during training camp because of negative coverage. Among the highlights: Davis sycophant Steve Ortmayer telling Rick Vacek, then the Daily News sports editor: "I'm not telling you who can cover the team. I'm telling you who can't."
No, he couldn't. The NFL stepped in and threatened a huge fine, and other newspapers and broadcast organizations threatened a boycott of Raiders coverage. To be fair, 30 years ago there were far more beat writers then (from 10 individual papers) covering the Raiders regularly than cover USC now. And forget any thoughts of the NCAA or the Pac-12 intervening in this situation. You'd have better luck with Fox or ESPN, so rudderless is college football.
But consider this: Not only does Luca Evans have the unconditional support of SCNG and the 11 newspapers in this group, but he also has the support of his previous professional stop: The Los Angeles Times.
Think hard, Trojans.
If you're reading this publication, you are benefitting from independent reporting, again without fear or favor. And so we go back to the very beginning: The news source does not have the right to dictate who does – or doesn't – cover the beat.
https://www.ocregister.com/2023/09/...riley-or-any-news-source-to-dictate-coverage/