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Old 09-01-2004, 11:06 AM
adpiucf adpiucf is offline
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Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: I can't seem to keep track!
Posts: 5,807
If a house catches fire, someone hazes, dies or a student wins a prestigious honor (and happens to be a GLO member), that's newsworthy. I would also say if a GLO raised an extremely large sum of money for a charity (I'm taking $100K or more), then yes, print.

An "undercover" rush story, a fluffy blurb about finding "sisterhood" or that XYZ hosted a slumber party jammy-jam and donated $3K to a local hospital-- that's a big yawn and it has been done to death.

The diversity story would have merit as a human interest piece if the reporter had actually done some digging.

News needs to pass a SO WHAT, WHO CARES test. I think there is a lot of reporting right now that starts off with a good idea, and then goes to a lazy reporter who doesn't really do the work-- he just "writes pretty." Journalists are the independent watchdogs of society-- this story was very weak, in my opinion.
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