iPhone


9
Nov 11

Big day

Spent the day covered in newsprint:

papers

Now comes the time of year when stories must be submitted for contests and other notable honors. This is a multiple-day process that will stretch into next week, includes solving Byzantine riddles and parsing out the meaning of a rough online translation of a fortune cookie’s first draft.

There are very precise rules for news contests. It requires a great deal of precise effort, because imprecision means disqualification. It is a mess, really. But then you think of the person who must deal with the many submissions.

He is a kind man, and he welcomes dealing with these submissions and finding judges and sending out the clips and getting them returned and sorting out winners and he does it in a contest that can have about 30 categories for dozens of schools. He’s also a patient, hardworking man. And he needs these rules in place, just to make sense of it all.

So you can’t complain, really. Almost every one of the rules makes sense when you see it from his point of view. And if you heard the reasoning behind the other two or three rules you’d probably think, “Yeah, well, that figures too.”

Which doesn’t exactly make the entire process fun, but it is an important one. And, as I said, will stretch into next week.

Busy day otherwise. Jefferson County voted to file for bankruptcy, the largest municipal failure in the history of the United States. Here’s a fine timeline on the issue from August. It saddens me to read that. This story has been going on my entire adult life.

Indeed, it was one of the first stories I ever reported on the radio. And even back then it seemed like this would go on forever. More than a decade later, they’ve avoided the bankruptcy for as long as possible.

And so here’s the next story, the numb and numbly titled Now What?

Speaking of the radio, I returned to the old format for about five minutes this evening. Ingram Smith, sitting in for Chuck Oliver, asked all the right questions about a football game coming up this weekend. I surely gave all the wrong answers. The final conclusion: if the ball bounces the right way the Deep South’s Oldest Rivalry will have a close finish.

Speaking of football and old and tradition and finishing … Here’s the historic Penn State press conference from this evening. I especially like when the students in the room started asking questions.

That will be around water coolers for a good long while.


8
Nov 11

When the journalist talks of press releases

Beautiful day:

drive

Beautiful autumn, even:

autumn

That’s from my phone, as I cruise down the interstate. With a real camera, and a sincere processor, the entire back of Oak Mountain there would just explode. You can never capture the fall in a photograph, but this year is trying to help us out.

Class this afternoon was on public relations. I joked with the students they had the wrong professor, that the esteemed Dr. Smith was the one they really needed. After class there was the paper.

The student-journalists put together a pretty good paper, but they have a good time, too. They showed me this video tonight, demonstrating their grasp of one of the seven news values. Can you guess which one?

Bizarre.


7
Nov 11

A day spent with my nose in the computer

Some days you just have to curl up and cover your nose with your tail.

Allie

Or maybe that’s just me.


6
Nov 11

Catching Up

Wildflowers on weeds on campus.

wildflowers

Pumpkin seeds anyone?

pumpkins

Mums from our stoop.

mums

A rainy view of the break area outside our building, as seen from our classroom.

The turning maple in our yard. I was talking with my grandmother when I took this.

maple

They’re turning up top, but still sprouting down low.

maple

The stages of the maple in early November.

maple

Auburn would win the swim meet against Penn State handily, in part because of the men’s 50 yard freestyle where and Karl Krug and TJ Leon, finishing first and second, led the way. Andrew Sideras finished third for PSU. Krug swam the race in 20.15.

The Auburn and NCAA record in this event is held by Caesar Cielo of Brazil. He swam it in 18.69 in 2007. The Auburn men improved to 2-0 on the young season with their 152-86 win. The women are now with their 138.5-99.5 victory.

Finally, a video in which not much happens. This is from the Caf, looking into the Samford quad on a rainy day. But the tree is nice.


5
Nov 11

Geaux Tigers

Auburn is off today, but we’re keeping it in the feline family. Top ranked LSU on the road at second ranked Alabama. It is the supposed Game of the Century. Allie is cheering for the other Tigers.

Allie

Well. Didn’t live up to that hype — though no game could — but it was an entertaining evening of football. Bengal Tigers won on the road, in overtime, after a 9-6 slugfest. Good game for everyone. Shame it came down to low percentage kicks, but those are two good teams otherwise.

LSU is rubbing it in with their game shirts, too:

The Crimson Tide just weren’t destined to have an undefeated season. They’ll complain about bad calls and lack of offense, but deep down the Tide will know they just got beat by a better team — your LSU Tigers.

That must sting.