JackInTheBox
Member
- Joined
- Mar 29, 2006
- Messages
- 55
I cover a big college beat in a fairly big city. At most press conferences, the vast majority of the questions are asked by me and one or two other people. Meanwhile, all four TV stations in town are filming, and various fan Web sites and publications are running stories off of these quotes while doing nothing but turning on a tape recorder. The press conferences are even carried live over the school's Web site while the people in charge never ask a question.
On national football signing day this coming Wednesday, the school is planning to carry the coach's presser live over the Internet...and the whole thing is basically going to be driven by my questions and those of one other writer. Meanwhile, the school promotes its Web site as the official and best source of sports information. :
This is starting to annoy me. The way I see it, why should people be able to log on to the school Web site and watch a press conference driven mostly by my questions? Isn't that sort of an injustice to my newspaper? If no one else in the room has an insightful question to ask, am I justified in being a bit pissed about carrying their water? Am I overreacting?
Thoughts?
On national football signing day this coming Wednesday, the school is planning to carry the coach's presser live over the Internet...and the whole thing is basically going to be driven by my questions and those of one other writer. Meanwhile, the school promotes its Web site as the official and best source of sports information. :
This is starting to annoy me. The way I see it, why should people be able to log on to the school Web site and watch a press conference driven mostly by my questions? Isn't that sort of an injustice to my newspaper? If no one else in the room has an insightful question to ask, am I justified in being a bit pissed about carrying their water? Am I overreacting?
Thoughts?