Light/Breezes

Light/Breezes
SUNRISE AT DEATH VALLEY-Photo by Tom Cochrun
Showing posts with label sunrise. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sunrise. Show all posts

Thursday, February 7, 2019

LOOKING UP

    Another good sunrise here in the land of the "painted sky."
    It ushered a day to pay attention to sky works.
      The symmetry of the pelican formation amused me. Natural precision.
       A good day to take to the breeze.


for adults only
a place of reason
    I was pleased to hear from a friend that his stress level has dropped, his information level is up and he has a wider view of the world's ways and events. He's made the switch to the PBS News Hour.
    If there is anything about which I think I know a thing or two, it is broadcast journalism and television news. 42 years in the trenches and you learn. As cable news devolved to opinion, forced controversy, yacking heads and a mania for breaking news and assorted hype it lost my respect. 
   The old line networks still provide some traditional balance but they too have been swept up in the post social media din of shallow, short and not very nutritional. They and the cable channels, right and left, are about audience and specifically audience size. How far we have tumbled from the days of CBS, NBC and ABC before news divisions needed to be "money makers!" Back when the mission was information and news, instead of audience, we were better served and better informed.
     It is still that way with PBS. The news is reported without hype and contrived controversy. Complex political and policy issues are dealt with in-depth, with intelligence, balance and significance. In addition the axis of interest, the topics covered, are much wider, more global, more diverse, and informative. Science, business, the arts, and medicine are given time and space. As a viewer you leave the experience fully informed and frankly, wiser. You are not being "spun," nor worn out by needless or excessive graphics, teases, or shallow reporting. They don't tilt right or left, they provide news and information, not rhetoric and hype. It is full service, intelligent and dignified broadcast journalism for adults.

the ground game
     A couple of afternoon friends on a recent stroll.

     So as the probes go deeper, and the number of indicted  grows, and the noose grows tighter and as crazy as it has been, think how this time will look in the history books. Don't you think some descendants will be embarrassed, even mortified by how their ancestors voted and stood in these days of our lives?

      See you down the trail

Thursday, November 13, 2014

THE TROUBLE WITH NEWS


   Sunrise was too pretty to ignore. My admiration of it woke up that corner of the brain where vexing thoughts are caged, waiting to leap into a blank space. 
   One of the troubles with the news business is the derogatory but not inaccurate sobriquet for a style of news "If it bleeds it leads." To be clear that means if it is crime or disaster, tragedy, plane crash, wreck, fire, explosion, or etc. it's the first story of a newscast. Fortunately not all television news rooms operate by that ethos, but too many do. The more competitive the market, the more likely there's a station that follows that path.
   NIGHTCRAWLER starring Jake Gyllenhaal as a stringer (freelance) photographer is a well done examination of the pathology of that kind of news, as played out in Los Angeles.
    One of the brilliant elements of this film is the extraordinary visual treatment of Los Angeles at night. Oscar winning Cinematographer Robert Elswit offers a rich and stunning essay. Seeing his work, especially the open sequence, is worth the price of admission. 
    Director Dan Gilroy plumbs the exploitative, crass world of sensationalism that passes as a kind of tabloid television.  Rene Russo, who coincidentally is married to Gilroy, is marvelous as a desperate news director, once a beautiful young reporter now trying to hang on to a job at a low ranking station by spiking the ratings with overnight gore gathered by Gyllenhaal.  
     Gyllenhaal's character is a solitary whacko. I think of him as a slick cousin or even brother to Robert De Niro's Travis Bickle in Taxi Driver. Gyllenhaal's performance is incredible. As Jon Stewart joked he only blinked twice in 2 hours. Indeed Gyllenhaal's eyes and manic delivery are so riveting it'll give you the creeps.  It is a great character by which Gilroy can explore the senselessness of exploitative content and the tyranny of ratings.
     I know of situations where station reputations and staff integrity have been destroyed by this cheap and trashy management and style. Still, there are enough viewers who thrive on tabloid journalism that it exists.

PROFESSIONAL and/or Citizen Journalists
  How deeply should newsrooms go in utilizing or pandering to social media? The debate continues and the first episode of NEWSROOM, the excellent Aaron Sorkin HBO drama mines the issue set against the Boston Marathon bombing.  
   NEWSROOM is to journalism what WEST WING was to politics, only much better because it is more realistic, drawn from real critical judgements and experience. Plus the acting, writing and directing are all worthy of the multiple Emmys.  

BEEN THERE-DONE THAT
   As a television news director I guided an evolution of a traditional and historic news organization into digital news gathering, processing and dissemination.  We changed the technology on which we wrote, edited and the cameras we used to capture the pictures.  Our remote trucks changed from microwave to satellite. We changed our work flow from television only to television and Internet. We moved from thinking only about the big screen to feeding computers, pads, and phones. We changed our graphics, our presentation style and our pace. In changing how we worked, we also advanced the output and our approach to thinking about what is news and how we cover it.  
    I've been retired a few years now, but even back then we were starting to wrestle with blogging, the ethics and legality of using material from personal phones or on line chatter. Now Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and other micro blogging and social networking realities impinge on how a news shop operates. I'm not sure they've got it figured out, or properly.  But as my old friend and former broadcast journalist the Catalyst AKA Bruce Taylor cajoles me, don't worry about it. You can't do anything about anyway.  It's another generation's problem. Yea, probably so. But it makes great fodder for film, television or having a drink and bullshitting, or posting about.
     It may still wake me, but Bruce is right. It's someone else's job now.
DIVERSIONS
Late Afternoon
 Evening
Post Sunset
Neighbors
could have been the national bird
Heavy Weather on the way
Turning on the night lights
THROWBACK TO A GOOD DAY
    My late brother Jim, at the wheel and yours truly enjoying a day of golf in the late 70's or early 80's.  Dad was an extraordinary golfer, Jim and I not so much.  But we had fun.

      See you down the trail.

Friday, October 26, 2012

THE WEEKENDER-THE DOG THAT WONT MOVE

LAZY OR STUBBORN
   Pal Will, a retired journalist with globe trotting tales and a penchant for nuance, supplies this week's video wonderment.  
    Maybe you have felt so listless or just simply didn't want to be bothered.  Here's a weekend chuckle for you.

UP WITH THE SUN
    Rising for an early morning tennis match, I was distracted by the sun and the morning clouds.







 YES THE FRIDAY LUNCH FLASH MOB 
IS AT IT, STILL.
     We've had an inquiry or two about the weekly gathering at San Simeon.  Still going strong.  In fact, this week's "theme," courtesy of Jeannie, is Autumn Harvest.

The set up before the big kids at play arrive.
Have great weekend.
See you down the trail.