From the Newsroom -- Tony Dodero
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In honor of President’s Day, I’m going to devote my column to
something that our Founding Fathers established some 225 years ago that
remains near and dear to this newsroom, the First Amendment.
Over the past week, we had some incidents here in this newsroom that
nudged me out of complacency and reminded me how precious the First
Amendment guarantees of freedom of the press and speech are.
You see, you don’t have to live in Afghanistan or Russia to have
threats against a free press take place. It can happen right here in
Newport-Mesa. I have several examples actually over the last few days,
but allow me to share just a few of them.
The first example comes from our advertising department. The Daily
Pilot ran a story last week that reported a certain business had gotten
in trouble with the law. That business, it so happens, is an advertiser
with us. I should say,o7 wasf7 an advertiser with us.
Right after our story ran, an employee of that business called our
advertising department and left a voicemail message stating the business
was pulling its advertising with the paper.
So what, you might ask?
Well, it is correct that no one forces advertisers to use our paper.
So they do have the right to cancel their contract with us any time.
But what is the message here? Did that advertiser expect special
treatment? Are we as a newspaper and a guardian of the public trust
supposed to just ignore lawbreakers if they spend enough money with us or
have a good friendship with the paper?
Absolutely not. And so what this advertiser has done is sent a message
that they do expect special treatment and they don’t support the right of
a free press to operate.
It didn’t end with the advertiser, though. We also received a heated
phone message on our hotline from someone angry about four letters on our
Community Forum pages, three of which were unfavorable to his views.
After calling us a few names, he vowed to tell the community just how bad
we are for sharing other points of view.
But again, isn’t the role of the press to provide a divergence of
opinions, not just those that are favorable to one idea or another?
I also had a caller threaten an advertising boycott because she didn’t
like our editorial views either. Of course the result of that would be to
put the paper out of business.
So let’s think about this. Would Newport Beach and Costa Mesa be
better served if these folks had their way and the Daily Pilot ceased to
exist?
I’m sure some of you are licking your chops at that possibility.
Especially those who cringe at the thought of another story about Dennis
Rodman. But aside from the latest on the Bad Boy himself, let me point
out what else would go away.
First and foremost, readers would lose the only daily source of news
for this community. Other news outlets don’t pay near enough attention to
this town to dispute that claim.
And what would losing that mean?
Readers would have no idea what Mayor Tod Ridgeway is up to at Newport
City Hall, or that Greenlight even is a viable group. The problems with
the Westside of Costa Mesa would be a mystery to many and the Home Ranch
project would have gotten about a day’s worth of ink in the competition.
What did Costa Mesa Mayor Linda Dixon have to say about parking
recreational vehicles on city streets? You won’t read it here anymore.
And good luck having your letter to the editor published regarding El
Toro or John Wayne.
There would be no more coverage devoted to schools and all of the
great programs at Newport-Mesa Unified. Nothing about API scores or the
academic all stars that we highlight each year and, even worse, no more
coverage of graduation ceremonies complete with the photographs of the
grads in joyous exultation. And, oh yeah, you won’t read much about
Orange Coast College or Vanguard University or UC Irvine anymore.
There will be no more boating coverage and you’ll probably never know
a thing about the Christmas Boat Parade or Newport to Ensenada’s annual
yacht race.
The latest at South Coast Rep, the Performing Arts Center, the Newport
Harbor Art Museum, the Newport Film Festival, all gone. No more daily
coverage of the Orange County Fair or Fourth of July coverage at the
Dunes.
It would mean the end to our unprecedented prep and youth sports
coverage. No more Dream Teams or Athletes of the Week.
And if Newport Harbor wins the CIF title in football again, it’ll get
a small mention somewhere but nothing big here.
Worse than anything, though, there would never again be a special
edition devoted to the 103 Most Influential People of Newport-Mesa.
OK, I think I made my point.
Those who threaten us, those who vow to tell the public “how bad” the
Daily Pilot treats the community, those who want to try to put us out of
business aren’t champions of democracy and a free press.
They only want the press to serve their own selfish motives.
But that’s not why we exist.
We exist because the framers of our nation’s Constitution believed a
free press was vital to the democratic process.
Even more, we exist because this community for the most part supports
this paper and demands a newspaper that has integrity and provides them
with relevant news.
That’s a responsibility we take seriously.
*
OK, now that I’m off my soapbox, I must tell the readers that I do
regret one thing we published last week.
We ran photos of a woman modeling some fairly provocative Valentine’s
Day lingerie in our weekly style feature called “The Look” that left some
readers both blushing and steaming mad.
We always joke in the newsroom about how we are a “family newspaper.”
But actually, there is a lot of truth to that statement and this time
around, we let the families down.
I take full responsibility for allowing the photos to run, but I vow,
that under my watch, we won’t do it again.
* TONY DODERO is the editor. His column appears on Mondays. If you
have story ideas or concerns about news coverage, please send messages
either via e-mail to o7 [email protected] or by phone at
949-574-4258.
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