
today
9 a.m. 15th Annual Plant Sale Bayside Grange
read >10 a.m. 35th Annual Daffodil Show Fortuna River Lodge
read >10 a.m. Peace Begins with ME Eureka Center for Spiritual Living
read >10 a.m. Annual Juggling Festival Humboldt State University
read >10:30 a.m. Learn How to Meditate Humboldt Area Foundation
read >11 a.m. Understanding Islam Arcata Library
read >noon Rainwater Harvest and Reuse Systems Living Earth Landscapes
read >2 p.m. Antigone Matinee College of the Redwoods
read >2 p.m. So Hum Tales Mateel Community Center
read >2 p.m. Open Jazz Jam Morris Graves Museum of Art
read >2 p.m. Irish Tea and Celebrity Cake Auction Fieldbrook Winery
read >2:30 p.m. Open Mic World Cup Cafe
read >6 p.m. Vintage Jazz (jazz) Chapala Cafe
read >6 p.m. Competitive Scrabble See Event Description
read >7 p.m. Open Mic Mosgo's
read >7:30 p.m. Zoe Boekbinder Westhaven Center for the Arts
read >8 p.m. Karaoke at Bear River Casino Bear River Casino
read >8 p.m. Karaoke Blue Lake Casino
read >8 p.m. Cabaret Arkley Center for the Performing Arts
read >9 p.m. Deep Groove Night Jambalaya
read >9 p.m. Piano Ben Six Rivers Brewery
read >previous columns
July 2, 2009
Fishing for Advice
Editor: Great to see a cover story on the Marine ...
read >June 25, 2009
$2.99 Tasting Notes
Cartoon by Joel Mielke
read >June 18, 2009
Wabash Willie in Eureka Street Crossing
Cartoon By Joel Mielke
read >Pinko Rags
By North Coast Journal Readers
Editor:
I found your article by Marcy Burstiner comical ("Media Maven," July 2).
Leave it to an academic journalism professor to be absolutely clueless as to how the real world actually works. I shook my head at her lamenting can't-we-all-come-together plea to media and suggestions for the near-dead Times-Standard. She apparently is unaware that most everyone with a media finger, whole hand or toe in the area is already communicating. Well, with the exception of the Times-Standard — most of us small guys are not fit to breathe their rarified air or have the honor of e-mail exchanges.
The Times-Standard has decayed to nothing more than a supermarket flyer delivery system and no amount of inter-agency reporting is going to change the core problem with the paper: a trust in the reporting.
To illustrate my point, take the NCJ as an example. I am a staunch conservative. I have my problems with some of the issues put forth by the NCJ from time to time, but any feature story they produce and publish is right down the middle. I trust their reporting. Their agenda, should they have one, is always front and center.
Compare that with the Times-Standard. It's a free country and the T-S can run their business any way they want. Apparently they wish to run it by selling advertising to, and delivering content for, liberals of the community.
Burstiner would have been better off remembering and teaching her students from the get-go that journalism is a business. You can have all the feel-good ideas you want, but without readers you don't have a newspaper.
Tom Fredriksen, Myrtletown

















1. Lill Miss:
July 10, 8:11 a.m.
Why are conservatives always so mad?
2. Hank Sims:
July 10, 9:11 a.m.
That is truly the question.
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