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Posts Tagged ‘Black Press is hosin’ you’

It’s a shame. It really, truly is.

Back in the final days of 2020, my journalism mentor, Jim Waller, retired after his second, and final stint, as Sports Editor for the Whidbey News-Times.

Since he was actually pulling double duty and also crafting stories for their sister paper, The South Whidbey Record, his departure to North Carolina essentially ended sports coverage in Whidbey’s newspapers.

Now, his departure is not the shame.

And neither is the work of the current staff at those newspapers, with Jesse Stensland, Emily Gilbert, Karina Andrew, and Kira Erickson doing fine work.

The shame lies with the bean counters, whether they are at Sound Publishing or, ultimately, at Black Press in Canada.

We are 10 months past Waller’s retirement, and well into a very-active fall school sports season, and Whidbey’s newspapers have not hired a new Sports Editor, or a sports writer, or anything remotely close.

From Jan. 1, 2021 to today, I have published 713 largely Coupeville-centric stories, most of them sports-related, on this blog.

By contrast, the News-Times and Record, the “papers of record” for Whidbey, have largely pretended sports no longer exist.

In Coupeville. In Oak Harbor. In Langley. From Deception Pass Bridge to the Clinton ferry, poof, athletics be gone.

Now, for someone like myself, who worked for the Canadian-funded Whidbey papers back in the ’90s, seeing an ultra-thin eight-page paper (with $1.00 stamped on it) arrive in my landlord’s mailbox is shame enough.

To leaf through it and see nothing sports-related, other than a random photo or brief, rewritten press release, is a stake through the heart.

Go online and it’s no different.

And I get that the newspaper industry has radically changed since the ’90s. I understand, better than many, how much of a struggle it is now.

I also understand my own Don Quixote thing, tilting at windmills and publishing 8,720 small-town sports stories in a little over nine years, can’t and won’t be replicated by anyone who’s not willing to live fast and (really) stupid.

But for the Whidbey newspapers, publications which have endured for 100+ years, papers which have employed really good sports writers in the past, to give up, is beyond shameful.

Both the South Whidbey High School volleyball and girls soccer teams are enjoying outstanding seasons, and seem capable of making serious playoff runs.

Years from now, when the players on those teams look back, they aren’t going to have many published stories, in print or online, to marinate in.

How are Oak Harbor teams doing?

No clue, as I’m buried, writing 4-5 Coupeville-related stories per day, every day, and, unlike the past, the News-Times isn’t there to let me catch a quick update.

There have been times in recent months where people from the two schools I don’t cover have asked me if I would write stories for Oak Harbor and South Whidbey.

I feel their pain. I do.

But I can’t rescue the newspaper bean counters for not doing their job.

I’m too busy with Coupeville, the town which I have committed myself to, and the athletes, parents, coaches, and administrators here, who have supported this blog since 2012.

The current staff at the News-Times/Record is doing what it can to stay on top of Whidbey news. They seem to care a great deal.

But they need help.

The bean counters back at corporate, if they intend to keep these newspapers running, need to realize how important sports coverage is as a part of small-town journalism.

The cost of hiring another reporter, one to cover Oak Harbor and South Whidbey sports (and give me someone to shoot it out with in Coupeville), will not wreck your ledger.

What it will do is give additional advertisers in the North and South a reason to support your papers again.

What it will do is give teens a reason to ever look at your publications, and grandmas a reason to clip stories or print out your work from the internet.

What it will do is restore a proud tradition of Whidbey sports writing which has included the work of Wallie Funk, Jim Waller, Brian Zylstra, Jill Johnson, and a whole lot of others.

What it will do is get me, a guy you paid to write about sports from 1989-1994, off your back, at least for a bit.

Though, I have a long history of chafing Sound Publishing and Black Press, so emphasis on the word “bit…”

Whether you’re a bean counter or David Black, the mythical gazillionaire media mogul behind the curtain in Moose Jaw, as long as you’re running them, you damn well should respect the history of Whidbey’s newspapers.

Sports matter, greatly, when it comes to small-town journalism.

Stop shaming yourself, and act like you have a clue.

If nothing else, give me a competitor again. I dare you.

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Which of these is not the same as the others?

Which of these is not the same as the others?

I have a battered, cruddy t-shirt, worn down by time and the tears of those who toiled for The Whidbey Examiner while she was still still an independent newspaper.

The hole across the collar is getting larger, and, since the shirt itself is getting thinner after several years of wear and washing, it’s about to go from a slight annoyance to full-on disgrace.

I should probably throw it away, or burn it.

And yet, I have held on to it, since it was the last connection to a time before the Canucks swept down from Moosejaw and bought up The Examiner, putting a monopoly on Whidbey’s three papers.

Having written a lot of stories for the rag — my weekly video column alone ran, without missing a week, for 15 years — I wasn’t thrilled to see it sold off to Black Press, becoming just another small line item in a vast global media empire’s business report.

But, we’re not here to rehash that.

Instead, I’m here to show off the unexpected gift that showed up in my mailbox yesterday.

Having seen a photo of my much-battered Examiner t-shirt, Eric at Ashley’s Design (http://www.ashleysdesign.com/) in Oak Harbor decided, on a whim, to print up some shirts for Coupeville Sports, using a similar design.

It was a nice, unexpected surprise.

As this blog careens, slightly out-of-control, towards its two-year anniversary on Aug. 16, maybe it’s time to put on a new t-shirt and fully discard the past.

Who wants to make smores cooked over the embers of a beat-up Examiner t-shirt?

Anyone … anyone … BuellerBueller?

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Yes, I am three years old.

Yes, I am three years old.

Nature finds a way. Always.

In the past, you could try and control the news, parcel it out at the rate you wanted and make people pay every time they read it, but that time has passed.

The Whidbey Island newspapers, which would prefer you didn’t look behind the curtain and realize they’re all owned by one of the largest media conglomerates going, Black Press of Canada, are locked in denial and they’re not coming out any time soon.

Access to their web sites (which is where far more people are looking for their news as print editions of newspapers wither on the vine) is limited to a handful of articles per month before the screen goes gray and a popup attempts to block your access.

I use the word “attempt” for a reason, since, if you go to the side and hold down the mouse, the articles roll upward, paragraph after paragraph coming up over the top of the popup.

Guess what? Live with the gray of the screen and you just read the entire article … for free.

When a commentator on the News-Times Facebook site raised the question of why articles weren’t freed for reading after their expiration date, a Canadian-paid employee tried to draw a comparison to the bakery at Safeway giving away its inventory at closing, saying you couldn’t expect that, could you?

Well, except that DOES happen EVERY day.

When it was pointed out that Safeway, like all grocery stores on the Island, do EXACTLY that, donating large quantities of merchandise to local food banks, the offending comment, and the one that provided the set-up for the rebuttal, suddenly vanished.

I’m not saying the Canadian-financed papers, which send most of their profits back to Canada no matter how many times a random employee or two may purchase cheese and wine at local shops (David Black is NOT operating a non-profit), would deny people access to food.

Even those who can not always pay for it.

But, they would deny you access to news.

Including news about … the food banks.

The “local” papers are using a broken business model, clinging desperately to the belief that they, and they alone, are capable of providing you with the news.

When they are beaten, consistently and loudly, by a one-man operation working on a computer run by two hamsters on a treadmill, they are prone to getting seriously defensive.

They don’t like other people getting the news out there before them, free of charge for all to read.

It threatens their ability to buy wine and cheese, because, at some point, the bean counters in Moose Jaw may realize the business model is broken and shut it down.

And then they might have to become familiar with the local food banks.

Of course, that could be a liberating experience, finding out how many people on Whidbey Island actually do give stuff to others without requiring something in return.

 

And yes, I once cashed checks from the Canucks, when I was Sports Editor at the News-Times from 1992-1994. We all have our youthful indiscretions…

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Just a taste of Cookie Wars 2014.

  Just a small taste of Cookie Wars 2014. The beanie was sewn for me by baseball mom Joan Payne.

Special delivery. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Special delivery. (Shelli Trumbull photo)

Have an extra buck or two and not sure what to do with it?

With one swipe of a credit card, you (yes, you!) can help keep the dream alive.

The dream of independent journalism not being snuffed out by a monolithic corporation. The dream of every kid on Central Whidbey getting every one of their athletic accomplishments, be it a first or a 71st-place performance, noticed.

The dream of getting me out of the dish pits.

In just under 21 months, Coupeville Sports (a one-man operation run out of a top-secret bunker next to Penn Cove on a computer powered by a squirrel on a treadmill) has published 2,006 articles.

That’s a real number.

A number that makes the output of the “professional” papers look like diddly and squat. And I’m doing it in my spare time, working around a real job to pay my minimal bills.

Varsity high school sports. JV. Middle school. Youth sports. Community sports. You name it, I cover it.

The Canadian-owned “local” newspapers do not, can not and will not do what I am doing.

For one thing, they have a problem with my over-use of exclamation points…

Suck it, back bacon lovers!!

But, I could do more. Freed from the constraints of answering to The Man, I could be at EVERY home high school game, and not just some.

I could show up in person for more community sports activities. Hunt down more scoops.

Expand into South Whidbey coverage, even. Recent articles on Falcon athletes Ricky Muzzy and Isla Dubendorf got nice numbers.

The sound you just heard was the South Whidbey Record trying to wake up from its 12-year coma/nap, and failing…

But to do it, I need your help.

Many have donated to the cause so far (check out our David’s Best Ever Friends page), but now it’s a billion, trillion times easier, with the addition of a donation button to the blog.

Live in Jersey? Bangladesh? Want to help fight the invaders from Moose Jaw? Keep alive that one irrational voice in the woods, screaming the gossip in all caps?

You can do so now, much, much easier. If you feel like it.

Either way, I will keep trying to navigate that tightrope.

On the one hand, I am fond of flippin’ the bird at Black Press/Sound Publishing, as it tries to buy up every paper in the free world, before demanding you pay for the privilege of reading stories that run five days late (how very 1945 of them…).

On the other hand, Coupeville Sports is a celebration, and we have to keep the funk goin’ down.

The recent explosion of Cookie Wars, in which local moms and CHS athletes went on a rampage of bringing me sweet treats, was a grass roots example of how this can work.

I’m not looking for a Hawaiian vacation. My crud-encrusted car, “White Thunder,” is just fine for the one-mile trip from my duplex down to the sports fields at CHS.

But I would like to stop crushing my fingers in the dish pits and devote my entire time to doing what I do best, while I can still get those middle fingers extended Canada way at the Evil Empire that erased three years worth of my bylined stories and couldn’t give a crap.

So, think about it.

Your 45 cents (or more … you can certainly donate more … maybe make it an even two quarters, at least) keeps the Lone Wolf howlin’.

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Yes, I will publish a story at 2 AM, so you can be th efirst to read it. And no, I won't charge you ... EVER.

Yes, I will publish a story at 2 AM, so you can be the first to read it. And no, I won’t charge you … EVER. For I fight for truth, justice and a truly free press.

The kajillionaire who owns The Whidbey Examiner would like you to pay for his yacht to be vacuumed.

Seriously.

The Examiner, like the Whidbey News-Times and South Whidbey Record, for all their protests of being local, are owned by Sound Publishing, which is an arm of Black Press Group Ltd., a Canadian-based company that owns more than 200 papers in two countries.

When you spend your money with the “local” papers, a sizable portion goes North, and I’m not talking about Bellingham.

And now the Examiner, which, for many years, was the one true independent paper in this area, the last paper fighting the good fight, is a shell of its former self.

Canada stripped away the Examiner’s history, erasing years worth of stories off the paper’s web site in a day.

I wrote hundreds of stories for the paper when we were “fighting the good fight” under a publisher/editor, who, while we cheesed each other off frequently, was deeply committed to keeping independent journalism alive.

Good luck finding a single one of those stories now that the Tim Horton fanatics own the joint.

The Examiner does not have a stand-alone staff, as its reporters are News-Times employees and much of what is printed in the Examiner is a mirror image of what is printed in the News-Times, albeit with slightly altered headlines.

The Examiner rarely, if ever, breaks news. It frequently fails to cover “local” events the way a “local” paper would, and should, be expected to.

When Coupeville High School had its Homecoming parade and football game this year, not a SINGLE Examiner photo appeared online for a full week.

I ran more than 50 in the first 48 hours.

But starting next week, the Examiner (and the bean counters back in Moosejaw) wants you to pay for their paltry online offerings.

The News-Times and Record will follow shortly thereafter, unless this is merely cover to shut the Examiner down after the subscriptions fail to meet expectations.

As newspapers everywhere flounder, some are desperately grabbing on to digital subscriptions in an effort to find more money.

The Examiner cites a rise in the number of papers that are following this trend as their primary reason for making you pay to read their three-days-late, inch-thin coverage.

Except, they quickly ignore the other info readily available which shows newspapers are having a terrible time actually making any money off of digital subs. Because few people are actually willing to pay.

You can try and charge all you want. If no one is willing to pay, what’s the point, other than alienating the three people still reading your rag?

Times have changed. We live in an age where the internet has taken the power away from the media corporations who once controlled the flow of news.

A generation expects to receive their news for free, quickly. When a paper like the Record outright refuses to post stories to the internet until the print edition hits the streets, resulting in week-long waits, it’s beyond embarrassing.

It’s dereliction of duty.

Those clinging to the past can sneer all they want as they try and claim a high moral ground as “professionals.”

The reality is when major newspapers have crashed and burned and influential writers such as Art Thiel are writing for blogs, the folks running the blogs are often just as experienced, professional and creative, if not more so, than those hanging on in corporate land.

The biggest different is those of us out here on the “outside” are working for the people, while those of you on the “inside” are working for The Man.

Freedom of the press means many things, and one huge part of that is the ability of people to have free, easy access to the news.

I don’t have medical insurance, a 401K, paid vacation or doughnuts in the break room (well, actually I do, but they were gifts from local parents) like the Canuck-financed reporters do.

What I do have is the knowledge that you will never, ever have to pay a subscription to read Coupeville Sports.

Not today, not tomorrow, not ever.

It’s not the American way. But, then again, they do a lot of things differently in Canada…

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