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Posts Tagged ‘Whidbey News-Times’

Oh yes, please do look right into the flash as it goes off. That's super smart, that is...

   Oh yes, please do look right into the flash as it goes off, David. That’s super smart, that is…

My fingers are ready for their close-up, Mr. DeMille.

My fingers are ready for their close-up, Mr. DeMille.

We’re at a crossroads.

Admittedly, one of my own making, but still a crossroads.

We’re 33 months into the experiment that is Coupeville Sports (the three-year anniversary would be Aug. 15), which is a good sign, since #33 was the number worn by the greatest clutch athlete in the history of all known sporting events, one Larry Bird.

In that time, I have produced 3,148 articles (no, seriously), made a lot of people happy, pissed a few others off and revived my own interest in journalism (or whatever you want to call this here thing I’m doing now).

I have toned down (a bit) the anti-Canadian Evil Empire rhetoric and found (most days) a middle ground where we can ardently support Cow Town while not branding every other town’s school as the Antichrist.

As I see it, the Whidbey News-Times, Whidbey Examiner and South Whidbey Record (and their Canuck financiers) are the old-school dad in the comfortable chair, peering over the top of their print edition of the newspaper and calmly giving you the news, when it suits them to do so.

Myself?

I’m the hyperventilating, jacked-out-of-his-gourd-on-sugar kid who has crawled to the top of the fence and is screaming “Hey, guess what just happened?!?!?” at all hours of the day and night.

I have no deadlines and unlimited space (I just paid $79 to upgrade my storage capabilities, thank you) and I’m quite willing to write at 2:17 in the AM.

The response was been electrifying, far beyond anything that I ever received during my days at those aforementioned newspapers.

My readership numbers have far surpassed what I expected, and the interaction has made a huge difference in my life.

But this is where the crossroads comes in.

I am not funded by David Black, a kajillionaire who owns 300+ papers and (probably) 17 yachts, like the Whidbey newspapers are.

Though, if he’s interested, I’m not that hard to contact, I come fairly cheap and I’ve mellowed (a bit).

During the entire run of Coupeville Sports I have been working as a dishwasher/onion slicer at Christopher’s on Whidbey to pay my limited bills.

That means I write around my real job, and, thankfully, owner/chef Andreas Wurzrainer has been incredibly good about making it possible for me to cover as many home events in person as possible.

But now, as of the end of this month, I am leaving that job. For real, this time.

There are many reasons why, but the primary reason has nothing to do with the particular restaurant and all to do with the type of job itself.

Having turned 44 a week-and-a-half ago, I can’t keep doing a job that leaves me feeling 10 years older every morning.

My one semi-marketable talent — writing — is being made harder by the daily beating my body, primarily my fingers, is taking.

The buzz in my hands, the pinched nerves, the mussel shell slashes that are an accepted part of working with shellfish — they all went away when I took a two-month break last summer, and I’m hoping for an encore.

I’m not 17 anymore, and there are a lot of 17-year-olds who would probably be quite happy to show off their indestructible digits by taking my job. Go for it — they’ll pay you and feed you and keep you toasty warm all summer.

You’ll never be cold in a professional kitchen, that’s for sure.

And what of me, as my fingers come back to life (we hope)?

I either go one of two ways — get a different “real” job and continue to juggle things while still writing or simply do Coupeville Sports and nothing else.

A “real” job has more stability, but there is the very real possibility that a new employer would not be as accommodating as Andreas has been.

It might become much harder to cover things in person, and when I can do that, I can drop in stuff like Carson Risner’s mom holding him down and feeding him breakfast burritos before his baseball playoff game or Wolf softball coach Deanna Rafferty offering her players free candy if they could get a 1-2-3 inning.

Those little details, and my (often) shameless willingness to sprinkle them willy-nilly through my articles, is a huge part of what sets me apart from the newspapers.

You can get the scores from both of us.

Because I can obsess over small stuff, run a trillion photos with often less-than-factual cut-lines and write endless features on the last kid on the JV bench (cause, dangnab it, they deserve a story too!), I can weave a town-wide tapestry for which the newspapers simply don’t have the time, space or desire.

A new “real” job may make that much harder.

The other option is for me to make just enough to cover basic bills like rent.

I don’t have (or want) a cell phone, Netflix, fancy car or any costly booze ‘n cigs ‘n uncut heroin addictions to fund.

If a healthy amount of my readers were willing to forgo one Starbucks coffee and use the Donate button on the top right side of this page to pledge $5 to keep it going, we’d be set.

Not that you have to limit yourself to $5, heavens no…

So, we’ll see what happens. My intentions are to keep Coupeville Sports going strong, but I need to save my fingers as well.

I’d like to be able to still type when I’m 45.

I am in it for the long haul and will never, EVER put up a pay wall like the newspapers have, but, going forward, you, my readers, will have a large say in how I am able to run my renegade blog.

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Coaches like Wolf boys' hoops guru Anthony Smith (John Fisken photo)

  Coaches like CHS boys’ hoops guru Anthony Smith have agreed to sacrifice time and work their schedules around a season. When athletes (and parents) don’t want to do the same, why expect a free ride? (John Fisken photo)

High school sports can be tough.

Not everyone can play them. Not everyone should.

But, if you, as a player, and you, as a parent, make the decision to do so, realize you’re going to have to occasionally step out of your entitled world and face off with reality.

Not every kid makes varsity. Not every kid gets the same playing time.

Right there, sports just introduced you to the cold, hard reality of the real world.

Those with internal fortitude will press on and work harder, and, possibly, hopefully, be rewarded for the time, effort and sweat they put in.

Sports teach tough lessons, but they also show reward can come (sometimes, not always) when effort is put in.

But then you have parents such as Kimberly DeJesus, who just had a letter to the editor published in The Whidbey News-Times.

In the letter, which I have linked to below, she cries (a lot) about coaches having practices during holidays.

Her main point:

I, as a parent who had children in school, would not allow my children to practice on holiday break, especially if we were traveling out of town to visit relatives.

And then if the coach(es) wouldn’t let my kids play because they missed practice, oh my.

You would not want to take me there, as it would be my decision that we left town, not my kids’.

Let’s go through this, shall we?

1) In the state of Washington, athletes have to have a certain number of practices in to be eligible to play in games.

With barely two weeks from the first official day of practice to the first basketball game (and athletes needing 10 practices to be eligible), coaches have little choice but to have practices AROUND the holiday (none that I know of had day-of-Thanksgiving practices).

So, while you scream at the coach, you ignore the WIAA, which set the practice requirements.

2) When you signed your kid(s) up, you saw a schedule. You knew, in advance, when the practice and games were. It is your choice if you want to have them play or go on vacation.

You don’t always get to have it both ways.

The coaches, who have committed to the season and agreed to work THEIR schedules around the holidays, certainly don’t.

3) So, we’ll say your child is not at practice. Other players are.

Fine. Your choice to make, as a parent. No one disputes that.

Yet you want them to be rewarded the same as the players who sacrificed, who scrapped, who committed heart and soul to the program. Who actually showed up.

Or else you will throw a snit fit.

Thereby teaching your children that if you’re not given everything you want, regardless of whether you worked for it and deserve it, the only way to solve the problem is to scream and cry and pretend to be abused.

And we wonder why so many high school coaches burn out and walk away after just a few years.

The letter:

http://www.whidbeynewstimes.com/opinion/letters/284017111.html

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My dad, Marlo Svien (on right) always appreciated a good bargain.

   My dad, Marlo Svien (on right), would be for this, since he always appreciated a good bargain. (Photo courtesy Sarah Kirkconnell)

It’s a sham and it’s a scam.

The Whidbey News-Times, like many other Canadian-owned newspapers, once thought the good times would never end.

Then, Craigslist came along and killed the classified ads business, and panic set in.

They need money to prop up their failing business model and they’ll get it anywhere they can.

So, they decided to stick it to the folks trying to pay tribute to their dearly departed.

The WNT currently charges $15 a column inch to run an obituary. They’ll take your photo and cut it down to two column inches to go with the obit, at a cost of $30.

Having written an obit for a local family in the last week, I can state for a fact that 147 words and a teeny, tiny pic will cost you $150 if you choose Canada.

That’s not very much space to sum up a person’s life. But, you have to choose between thrift and story-telling, unless you’re wiling to let the credit card bill roll up to several hundred dollars.

Until now.

Coupeville Sports is all about bringing the news back to the people, with no pay walls to restrict how and when you get that info.

It’s simple.

For a flat donation of $50, I will run your obit (no word count restriction) and one or two full-sized photos on my blog.

What would cost you considerably through the WNT will no longer break your wallet at a time when you have other things to be concerned about.

If you look at the top of Coupeville Sports, you will see a tab marked Obits. Click on that and you will find a dedicated section where they will be.

This service is open to anyone, regardless of what town they live in. You do not have to be from Coupeville to be honored on Coupeville Sports.

The obits will always be there, for friends, families and interested readers to get a glimpse into your loved one’s life. Once it’s published, it will remain there for the life of the blog.

While I do not have a print edition, you can easily print off the obit from my site if you would like to have a permanent copy. Without having to pay a second time when you purchase a newspaper.

Creating an obituary is not easy. I have done so for too many family members over the past 10 years not to appreciate that.

My hope is by bringing the financial cost down, at least one part of the process becomes significantly less painful.

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He is legend.

The voice of a generation (of journalists).

I blame Fred Obee.

If it wasn’t for him, you probably wouldn’t be reading these words now. And a lot of newspaper editors would have spent less time waking up with night sweats, screaming, for the past 24 years.

Journalism wasn’t my first choice. Cooking was.

But, a sudden move from Tumwater to Whidbey Island in the middle of my senior year of high school, liberally seasoned with the fact I’m not really all that special a cook, threw things all asunder.

And then, a fateful phone call from a tired Whidbey News-Times Sports Editor seeking a high school kid to cover one basketball game launched me into another world, and here we are, billions of words (some better than others) later.

There are many people who have been big influences on me during my torrid, on-again, off-again, screaming and kicking, bridge-burning odyssey through the world of journalism. None stands taller than the one-time editor of the WNT.

We danced the dance for three years — me a painfully green, no-college-ever-cause-it’s-for-sellouts “freelance reporter” (which means I camped out in his office and annoyed him until he gave me a story), he a well-respected newsman with a rapidly expanding migraine no Coca-Cola would solve.

Until that fateful day, when, after scintillating stories on dead starfish and Bigfoot hunters, hours of hand copying marriages and divorces at the court house and one ammunition-and-toxic-paint-fueled fire from Hell that landed me on the front page, he named me Sports Editor.

It was then that the fun really began.

Fred was quick. He was nimble. He was the best boss a 21-year-old idiot could have.

Somehow, he never fired me over the course of the next two years, through too-big headlines, poetry on the sports page and several thousand pieces of carefully crayon-scrawled hate mail from a couple of morons who couldn’t understand why I gave girls sports equal coverage with boys sports.

I won him some awards, gave him some angina and had a mid-life crisis at 23 (the first of many) and went to work on a mussel processing boat in Penn Cove.

Cause I’m a freakin’ moron.

But I never stopped writing, never stopped seeing how much I could chafe the folks in charge by loudly declaring, “Touch a word of my prose?!?! How dare you … from God’s lips to my fingertips!!!!!”

That always went over well.

And now, I answer to no one but my readers, a free man here at Coupeville Sports for the last two years.

All because one guy, who celebrates his birthday today, saw enough in me to keep me around even during the angina.

If I am a writer, it is largely thanks to his guidance, to his unwavering support, to the moments when he took me aside and gave me tips and the times when he just rolled his eyes, laughed and let me go on my merry way, knowing I would need to crash and burn sometimes to get the lesson.

Fred Obee is a towering figure in my development as a writer.

Maybe some day he’ll forgive me for all the angina.

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Ellen Hiatt

Ellen Hiatt

Always a winner.

Always a winner.

She was the one who DIDN’T shoot me in the head with a rubber band every five minutes.

Most days.

Ellen Hiatt was an oasis of elegance in the newsroom at the Whidbey News-Times in the early ’90s, a time when thousands (OK, millions) of rubber bands were sacrificed in the name of stress relief.

It was a different time, children.

There was no internet (or, at least what we think of today as the internet) and no one had a smart phone, so we found our amusement in other ways.

And, most days that amusement came in blasting rubber circles off of each others heads, especially when the victim was on deadline.

If you could make your target — a towering, grizzled, seen-it-all photographer — jump and scream like a little girl who just got a pony, so much the better.

Having attended not a single day of college or ever entered the hallowed halls of journalism school, I nabbed my Sport Editor position old school style, fast-talkin’ and one-finger-typin’ my way from the press room at 18 to the newsroom at age 21.

Maybe they thought the promotion would get me to shut up. They were wrong.

Ellen is one of the primary reasons I landed upstairs, though I’m sure there were days she probably thought twice about it.

There were times she rolled her eyes at me so hard she ended up looking up close and personal at her brain.

As Island Living Editor of the WNT, she gave me many of my early freelance stories, some of which I even followed her instructions on. Even when I zigged when I was supposed to have zagged, she was patient and nurturing.

After I landed in a desk next to hers, she, unlike one or two others, always acted as if I actually belonged in the newsroom.

Even when I bum-rushed the layout ladies downstairs with my sports stuff before she was finished with the layout on her section (I never missed a deadline in two years and was fanatical about it), Ellen put up with me without losing her smile.

She answered all my inane questions (questions they probably covered in the first year of journalism school), let me bounce off the walls while always being there to gently rein me in, and was always a bright, shining beacon of class, integrity and hard work.

Our paths parted — she went into politics and raised children, while I opted to marinate in video store life for many years while still chafing as many editors as humanly possible as an underpaid, overly-combative freelancer.

You can argue over whether I have lived up to my potential as a writer over the past 24 years (personally, I think the last two years, on this blog, stand as my best work), but the argument would never have even started if it wasn’t for Ellen’s influence and guidance in the early days.

She will always stand as one of my journalism idols, a wonderful woman of great style and distinction who was nice to me when she didn’t need to be, who gave me a chance to write and sorta, kinda kept me in line.

For a bit, at least.

As she celebrates her birthday today, I am a small piece of her legacy.

Might not be the biggest or brightest part of that legacy, but I will always be grateful for the chance to be even a small part.

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