Bill Horton
Active Member
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2002
- Messages
- 1,310
I guess I never really thought about this, but I ended up on the other side of a story this weekend when I read a newspaper story about my son's first victory in a college cross country race.
He was a pretty good CC runner in high school but there were better runners and better stories so the local papers never wrote about him. No big deal. CC and high school distance running doesn't get much coverage anyway and within that genre there were better stories that needed to be told.
But all of a sudden he sends me a link on Sunday morning. It's to the paper in the town where he ran and won a college race. I knew he had won but I didn't really think there would be a story.
But there it was ... quotes from the boy, mention of his PR and a picture of him just about to overtake the guy he passed with about a quarter-mile to go.
I read the story as both a parent and a writer and came away thankful that my son had a decent quote in the story and came off looking like he might be a pretty good runner and a good kid. I thought the writer did a good job with the story, which also covered the team and individual angles.
The only advice I ever gave my son with the media was to be respectful and considerate and just be himself. It looks like he did that.
But I've got to tell you ... as someone who's in the business, it was just plain weird to read about my boy in a newspaper.
Not bad, just weird.
He was a pretty good CC runner in high school but there were better runners and better stories so the local papers never wrote about him. No big deal. CC and high school distance running doesn't get much coverage anyway and within that genre there were better stories that needed to be told.
But all of a sudden he sends me a link on Sunday morning. It's to the paper in the town where he ran and won a college race. I knew he had won but I didn't really think there would be a story.
But there it was ... quotes from the boy, mention of his PR and a picture of him just about to overtake the guy he passed with about a quarter-mile to go.
I read the story as both a parent and a writer and came away thankful that my son had a decent quote in the story and came off looking like he might be a pretty good runner and a good kid. I thought the writer did a good job with the story, which also covered the team and individual angles.
The only advice I ever gave my son with the media was to be respectful and considerate and just be himself. It looks like he did that.
But I've got to tell you ... as someone who's in the business, it was just plain weird to read about my boy in a newspaper.
Not bad, just weird.