Saturday, April 10, 2010

Reflections on my job

Gary Cartwright, 1969 in Harper's:
Still, ethics is a nebulous question to a profession that has never really defined its purpose. To report? To expose? To speculate? To entertain? To criticize? To subsist and endure? A good sportswriter does it all. I do not know a sportswriter who would accept, say, one hundred dollars to print something he did not believe.

Also:
Many times I put out the paper alone. All the sportswriters did. We staggered in, tore the night’s run of copy from the United Press machine, selected the stories according to the page dummies supplied by the advertising department, assigned headlines and wrote them, clipped box scores and other trivia from the morning Star Telegram, selected pictures and sent them to the engravers, made up the cutlines, then hurried to the composing room where a printer named Max would be waiting to change everything. Like Charley, Max was a professional. All he ever said was, “Who the hell do you think you are?”

We survived on the assumption that no one read our paper anyhow. It is the same feeling you get on a college newspaper or on mind-expanding drugs. There are no shackles on the imagination; there is no retreat, only attack. One of my jobs was to make up little “brights” or boxes:

John Doughs made a hole-in-one yesterday at Glen Lakes Country Club when a snake swallowed his tee shot, a dog swallowed the snake, and an eagle carried off the dog, dropping him in the cup after colliding head on with a private plane flown by Doughs’s maternal twin.

We went heavy on the irony. Under these circumstances you might think we. got a lot of letters to the editor, but I don’t remember any.

-from "Confessions of a Washed-Up Sportswriter" by Gary Cartwright. Required reading for all sportswriters (and journalists, for that matter). In this book, which is well worth getting.

3 comments:

SC said...

The second passage made me think of "American Beauty," when Lester Burnham tells his boss that he's not a twisted fuck; "I'm just an ordinary guy with nothing left to lose."

Also, how's the Nebraska book?

JHitts said...

It's a bunch of short stories. They're solid.

M. Perkins said...

All I know about journalistic integrity I know from (a) being friends with a bunch of journalists and (b) season five of the Wire. But I will say that first paragraph has a lot in common with the long-standing debate over the role and limits of the historian (Herbert Butterfield's 'Whig Interpretation of History,' which is like 70 pages long, is probably the best quick read on that, though I disagree with some of his conclusions).


I've been looking for a copy of Nebraska at the local used bookstore for a while. I've read three of his novels and enjoyed each of them, and I really like short story collections.