Sounding Board -- JOSEPH E. MCKEEVER
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I am writing in reference to the May 2 article titled “2 Violent
Fights Injure 3 Students.” Both the sensational headline and the lack of
factual substance in the article were totally inappropriate. It is
painfully obvious that the reporter had nothing more than a vague notion
of what had actually occurred in the incident involving a Corona del Mar
senior.
Unfortunately, the article is another illustration of the
sensationalism and hyperbole that surround school “violence” -- in the
reporter’s terms -- in the wake of the Columbine, Santee and other school
incidents that actually involved violence and death.
The purpose of your reporting should not be to exaggerate and
sensationalize a relatively minor incident through the use of bold
headlines and inflammatory verbiage such as “violence,” which was quite
unnecessary in this case. This constitutes another example of the worst
kind of quasi-journalism that appears more concerned with selling papers
and advertising, as well as increasing readership, than in relating the
actual facts in a straightforward manner.
Moreover, it is inexplicable that the Pilot failed to follow up this
article with another, equally visible, piece which would have noted that
the charge against the student was reduced at the arraignment to a
misdemeanor, an unusual decision by the court based on the police file
and the district attorney’s office’s own recommendation.
Playing to the current public hysteria and fear caused by truly tragic
events such as Columbine and Santee and by sensationalizing a local
incident that was nothing more than a schoolyard shoving match is not
only irresponsible journalism, it is disgraceful. People like to believe
that what they read in the papers is accurate and not exaggerated. I know
I do. The Pilot has demonstrated that perhaps, at least in this case, it
may care more about sales and advertising than digging out the truth.
* JOSEPH E. MCKEEVER is a Newport Beach resident and a Corona del Mar
High School parent.
Editor’s note: The idea that this incident was a minor one is contrary
to the facts. It’s not every day that a “schoolyard shoving match”
results in a student being hospitalized and another being arrested and
held on $10,000 bail and later being charged with a misdemeanor. The
Daily Pilot stands by its reporting and the story.
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