Category Media

Rising Heat Indeed

Remember when Wired, and its associated websites, were about technology and science? I do.

I stopped subscribing to the paper magazine a couple years ago — even though it’s only something like $8 a year — when I realized that I didn’t even bother to read it, most months.

I still have the Wired website in my feed reader, but that might be soon to go, too, because of garbage like this article.

Rising Heat Threatens World Food Supplies

The hottest seasons of the 20th century will be typical weather by 2100 — and scientists think that without agricultural adaptations to extreme heat, mass food shortages could follow.

Note it doesn’t say, in the headline, ‘rising heat could threaten world food supplies’. The first paragraph doesn’t say ‘If the hottest seasons of the 20th century are typical weather by 2100′. Nope. It’s a settled matter for Wired ‘Science’ that this will be. The article, or blog post, or whatever the hell this thing is is even accompanied by a little map showing the ‘likelihood (in percent) that future summer average temperatures will exceed the highest summer temperatures observed on record’. About half of the globe is colored red, for ’100%’. Science, ladies and gentleman!

The article ends:

The fates of these ['developing'] countries are uncertain — unlike, said Naylor, the changing climate.

“With the temperature projections, there’s no disputing where we’re heading,” she said. “We have to face reality.”

So why should I trust anything they have to say at Wired? Even the BBC appends ‘a new report by US scientists warns’ to the claim in their story.

Kindle Newspapers Suck

Or, The Washington Post sucks on the Kindle. At least this morning’s version. Amazon offers a two-week free trial of newspaper subscriptions on the Kindle, so this morning I poked and prodded, and wound up with the Post on there. And it’s terrible.

I don’t know why I’m surprised. I’ve been complaining for years that online newspapers suck because they almost totally fail to take advantage of one of the newspapers’ best skills — selling stories by placement. And I’ve been pointing out that the Kindle is good for one thing only — reading single, long pieces of text. And still I’m shocked at how bad the Kindle version of the Post is.

This morning’s paper Washington Post has eight different sizes of headline on the front page. The front page of the Post‘s website right now has three.

The Kindle version has one headline size.

What’s more, the Post‘s liberal use of label heads means that a lot of the Kindle headlines are almost totally useless. A label head is a headline that is not, by any stretch of the imagination, a complete sentence. In traditional newspaper headlines, you leave out articles, forms of be, etc., etc. and wind up with something that’s extremely pithy but that still tells the story that it sits atop. ‘Elvis Dead’ would be a good example, or, to use an example from this morning’s Post, ‘Bush’s Budget Projects Deficits’.

Label heads, on the other hand, are just that: labels. They don’t tell a story, and they don’t have even an implied, invisible verb. From this morning’s Post, we get:

  • Two Races, One Big Day
  • A Rich Market For Russian Icons
  • In China, Pulled by Opposing Tides

Those last two are iffy: you could say that they mean ‘[There Is] A Rich Market For Russian Icons’ and ‘[People] In China [are] Pulled by Opposing Tides’, but both of those would be terrible headlines.

The Post uses two-deck headlines a lot, though: a label head on top and a quite prolix (for a headline) thing underneath, usually set in italics. Whoever they have writing headlines at the Post is doing a pretty good job — not as good as at the New York Times, which generally has excellent headlines, but pretty good nevertheless — but those headlines can’t be repurposed for other media without being rewritten completely.

For the Kindle version, of course, they don’t rewrite them. Except for a very few stories from the front page, they don’t include the subheads. Here’s the front of the Washington Post as seen on the Kindle:

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Here’s the same thing as seen on paper. Click on any of these pictures for a bigger version:

Pa1

I’ve gone to the trouble of photographing the entire A section of today’s Post (Virginia Boonies Edition), and the whole of the Kindle article list for the same section. There are a number of outright differences — stories which are present in one version that are totally missing from the other. Some of this might be explained by the fact that the version of the Post that you get out here in the hinterland is put to bed at about 10 p.m. the night before.

Pravda On The Potomac

According to this Washington Post story, Muslim women are having a hard time of it in homeless shelters:

When Muslim women are sent to shelters that serve the general population, they are often exposed to lifestyles that challenge their faith, such as drinking, abusing drugs, eating pork and undressing or bathing in front of others [...]

This seems kind of interesting. I’m pretty sure that all homeless shelters ban drugs and alcohol, not just on ideological grounds but in the interest of keeping order. And most Americans — particularly women — aren’t exactly bullish on the ides of undressing and bathing in front of others.

And as far as pork goes: why haven’t we heard anything about homeless Jews having problems with pork served in homeless shelters? Jews in the U.S. tend to be rather under-represented among the down-and-out, but I’m sure that there are more than a few homeless Jews, and that some of those are observant at least to the point of not eating pork. Interesting that the Post has never felt the need to run a story on the front of the Metro section about that.

The real gem, though, comes from one Michael Stoops, acting executive director of the National Coalition for the Homeless.

Stoops said most shelters are privately run. The largest shelter organization is Catholic Charities, he said, followed by the Salvation Army and the Association of Gospel Rescue Missions. Traditionally, Stoops said, many Christian-oriented shelters — he called Catholic Charities an exception — have offered clients “soup, soap, sleep and salvation.”

Stoops added: “I’ve always found that to be offensive. Shelters in this country need to get with this century.”

Well, then, maybe you should RUN YOUR OWN GODDAMNED SHELTERS instead of being ‘offended’ by the nature of the help that other people provide.

Some Islamic leaders have begun to raise money to establish more shelters that cater to the Islamic community. There are now just two serving the Washington-Baltimore area, according to local mosque leaders. The leaders said they were unaware of any in Northern Virginia.

I wonder whether Mr. Stoops is offended by these shelters. Conspicuously unanswered by the Post is the question of whether these shelters will admit non-Muslim women, and, if they do, whether they require residents’ adherence to Islamic principles.

This story from The Muslim Link suggests that the al-Mumtahinah shelter in Baltimore, at least, does discriminate on the basis of religion:

The center will be monitored by a “house mother” to ensure religious obligations are met, and to encourage the cleanliness of individual living spaces.

Emphasis added. That kind of seems like an important point, doesn’t it? I mean, the story complains, in its first paragraph, about Christian-run shelters ‘hold[ing] prayer meetings or services at odds with [the Muslim women's] own religious beliefs’. Do the Muslim shelters hold prayer meetings which would be at odds with the religious beliefs of Christians? Are Christians even eligible for admittance? Are Jews?

If Muslims want to run homeless shelters that are only open to Muslims, I don’t have a problem with that. If the Salvation Army wants to make Bible-study classes and prayers a condition of staying in their shelters (which, according to the Post‘s story, they don’t), I also don’t have a problem with that.

But it does seem like a failure of the Post to write a story about how hard it is for Muslim women to be homeless because most homeless shelters are run by Christian organizations, without even touching on the question of whether the Muslim-run shelters are open to all. It’s probably safe to assume that these shelters are in fact not open to non-Muslims, because if they were, the Post would certainly have trumpeted that fact.

So it is possible to get information out of Washington Post articles, but only if you inspect them as you would have done Pravda in 1965.

People Fleeing Maryland

The Washington Post:

In recent years, Maryland’s economy has slowed relative to other places. It is still holding up, however, experiencing only a slight decrease compared with other states.

So:

  1. Relative to other places, the Maryland economy has slowed. But
  2. Compared with other states Maryland has experienced only a ‘slight decrease’.

If they mean by #2 that the decline has been slight when compared to the declines seen in other states, #1 is false. If they mean by #1 that the Maryland economy has slowed when compared to other places, #2 is false. Professional journalism, ladies and gentlemen! Step right up and see the journalism! Ladies and children not admitted, because of the gruesome horrors of the professional journalism all over the place.

This wonderful professional journalism is found in a curiously short article headlined ‘Housing Costs Driving Away Marylanders’, on page T1 of today’s Post. Because of the way the Post organizes their website, it’s hard to tell what the heck page T1 is; but I think it’s the weekly zoned tabloid section that varies according to where you buy the paper. If I bought it here, it would be ‘Virginia’; in Maryland, this would be titled ‘Maryland’.

In any case, it’s in the Washington Post, and they ought to be ashamed. The biggest problem isn’t even the terrible editing. The big problem is that it doesn’t connect this with a story that ran on page A1 yesterday, headlined ‘Stricter Policy On Growth Approved in Montgomery‘.

That story is about Maryland’s most populous county raising school ‘impact taxes’ on new residential construction by 125%, and transportation impact taxes 70%. The example the Post gives has the taxes rising from $15,375 for a given new single-family home to $31,105.

$10 million a year from the tax is to be used to provide rental subsidies for ‘moderate’-income residents, and new development is now banned all together in the catchment areas of three high schools.

Surely that’s unrelated, though.

Its reasonable for local governments to impose some restrictions on construction; the development depends on the roads and other services which are run by the local government. In the absence of road pricing, this means jerky command-economy tactics like occasionally banning development.

Command economies are easy to get wrong, though, because they such systems are inherently brittle. Bad decisions are hard to reverse, and the worst ones are often the hardest. When the local government persistently gets it wrong, to the point of driving people away, shouldn’t that at least merit a mention?

NY Times Names Reporter, Editor as Readers' Representative

The New York Times has named a new readers’ representative:

The New York Times yesterday named its next public editor, Clark Hoyt, a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter and editor who oversaw the Knight Ridder newspaper chain’s coverage that questioned the Bush administration’s case for the Iraq war.

Mr. Hoyt, 64, was the Washington editor at Knight Ridder [...] Before that, he served as Knight Ridder’s Washington bureau chief, and then as vice president for news, with responsibility for hiring and promoting top editors at the company’s newspapers, which included The Miami Herald, The Philadelphia Inquirer, The San Jose Mercury-News and The Detroit Free Press.

[...] Mr. Hoyt worked as a reporter for The Ledger of Lakeland, Fla.; The Detroit Free Press; The Miami Herald; and the entire Knight Ridder chain.

In 1973, he shared a Pulitzer Prize for uncovering the history of mental health problems suffered by Senator Thomas F. Eagleton of Missouri, who briefly was the Democratic vice presidential nominee in 1972, and the fact that Mr. Eagleton had undergone electric shock therapy.

Mr. Hoyt also held top editing jobs at The Free Press and The Wichita Eagle-Beacon. His wife, Linda Kauss, is a deputy managing editor at USA Today.

Mind you, this guy is supposed to be the readers’ representative. All I see here, though, is stuff to establish what a great newspaperman he is. He sounds more like the newspaper’s representative to the readers — a spokesman, if you will — than a representative of the audience to the paper. Time will tell.

It would be interesting to see what would happen if they chose someone with absolutely no news-media experience whatsoever to do this — just a person, intelligent and fair-minded, who’s interested in getting accurate information. That would be a real readers’ representative. If this person didn’t understand the restrictions under which the reporters and editors worked, and demanded things that the newspaper staff didn’t think were important or worth the trouble — too bad; it’s up to the papers to solve those problems.

The newspapers are, for one example, still using a lot of anonymous quotes. These are not too popular with readers, but the newspapers love them because it’s easier to get someone to say something newsworthy if they don’t have to stand behind their words.

This is insane, of course; the value and perceived reliability of a piece of information is very largely dependent on where it comes from, and on what axes that source might have to grind. If I say ‘George Bush is a fool’, that’s worth nothing because I don’t have access to any information that anyone else has. If Nancy Pelosi says ‘George Bush is a fool’, that’s also worth nothing because the Democrats have misinterpreted the idea of ‘staying on message’ to mean nothing more than ‘say the same thing over and over again’.

If Condoleezza Rice, on the other hand, says ‘George Bush is a fool’, that’s front-page news because she has information about Bush that most people don’t have, and because saying this would seem to be contrary to her political interests. If she says this, but is quoted merely as a ‘senior State Department official’, then it’s not news. There are lots of ‘senior State Department officials’, and many of them might just not like the president.

In practice, the Secretary of State isn’t going to complain about the president to the New York Times just on the condition that they not print her name. There are a lot of other situations, though, where the identity of the person making a statement is pretty important to the readers’ understanding of it. If we hear that a ‘former U.S. Attorney General’ is complaining about Gitmo, the information that such complaints were being made by Ramsey Clark, as opposed to John Ashcroft, would be pretty important.

And, more plausibly — because Ramsey Clark doesn’t exactly speak off the record — when we hear that ‘senior military commanders’ are complaining that the war in Iraq is ‘lost’, who these commanders are is a very important part of the story.

You can talk about the need to ‘protect sources’, but with very few exceptions perhaps we should all discount statements that people are not willing to attach their names to. If you are witness to a scandal, you might be fired after you’re quoted in the newspaper complaining about your boss; but if it’s not just a tempest in a teapot, and if the People are actually incensed by what you’ve witnessed, you might just be hired to replace your boss after he’s sent to jail.

Instead of insisting on this kind of credibility, though, the news media happily accommodate people who are shocked — shocked! — by what’s going on around them, but who nevertheless insist on remaining ensconced in the middle of the scandalous pit of vipers that they feel the need to Inform The Public about.

The only other situation I can think of where this happens on a large scale is in high school. We’re conducting public discourse via rumor, and as most of the news media have dropped all but the pretense of political neutrality, few if any of these things are ever widely debunked. The New York Times still covers Dan Rather as newsworthy, but they don’t mention the fact that he left CBS in disgrace. If you get your news exclusively from the New York Times, you could quite easily wind up believing some things that are provably not so.

But then I can’t imagine that too many people read the New York Times any more for actual hard national and international news, and more than people read the Washington Times for the same thing. The New York Times has squandered much of the credibility it once had. And maybe that’s not such a bad thing, if we shift our media lenses bit.

The Times‘ article announcing Clark Hoyt’s appointment says:

Over the last year, [Hoyt] has spoken publicly about his concerns for the future of the newspaper industry, arguing that weakening finances, a toxic partisan atmosphere and coziness with government officials threaten to undermine journalistic courage and integrity. He also spoke before a Congressional committee, arguing for a stronger Freedom of Information Act.

The newspaper business is indeed in trouble. Circulation is falling, and the old business model, which depended to a large part on classified ads, no longer works.

National newspapers have never been very practical in the United States, simply because of the size of the place. Even today, there are only three newspapers that you can buy everywhere in the country: The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, and USA Today. All the other major newspapers in the country have had to do their best to attract as many readers as possible from the fairly small area in which they distributed their papers. As a result, in the early-to-mid 20th century, the United States developed a journalistic culture that strongly endorsed the proposition that news media should be fair and neutral.

This is, in the end, ridiculous. Newspapers are run by people, and people have opinions. These opinions will tell in the things they choose to write about, and in how they decide to write about them. For instance, I do not see the United States’ lack of government-paid health insurance as a problem; if I were writing a story about some poor uninsured wretch, I’d start by asking why it is that in the United States just about everything is very affordable except for health care. The New York Times doesn’t think this way, and so their stories on the subject are all about how government health care would help these people.

This isn’t dishonest; it’s just a reflection of the genuine opinions of the Times‘ staff.

Perhaps the answer to the problems that Hoyt has spoken about — which, in aggregate, mean the collapse of the newspaper industry — involves dropping entirely the pretense of neutrality.

Neutral coverage, after all, will tend to be dull. On the one hand, X, but on the other hand, Y. A well-written story like this by a conscientious reporter can approach neutrality and can give a fairly accurate picture of a situation. But it’s unreasonable to expect reporters to do this. Reporters immerse themselves in the tiniest minutia of minor stories, and in most if not all cases, after talking to the principals involved, they’re going to wind up with an opinion of their own on, say, who should be elected as dog catcher.

Our current approach requires this intelligent and well-informed person to then suppress all his conclusions about the subject he’s been studying. This is ridiculous.

The New York Times seems to understand this. A lot of conservative commentators point gleefully to the Times‘ falling circulation and finances, and say that these are the result of the paper’s increasingly transparent left-wing bias, and the allegedly decreasing quality of its coverage. I’m not sure that this is true. I think that it’s the result of the Times shifting from being a traditionally aloof and neutral Newspaper of Record and toward being a more overtly partisan paper. Being the Newspaper of Record is nice and it does help sell papers; but technology has largely obviated the need for such a publication. Today, it’s more valuable to have a fiercely loyal readership who are told what they want to hear.

Fox News has more viewers than CNN and MSNBC combined. You can’t get the same benefits by being nakedly partisan on the left wing in American media, because most of the allegedly neutral media outlets are in fact pretty left-wing.

The problem — the big problem — is that while everyone agrees that Fox News is more right-wing than most of the news media (if most of the media are left-wing, then ‘fair and balanced’ after all means ‘more right-wing than the rest of ‘em’), most of the news media and the left in general still clings to the notion that the New York Times, the Washington Post, AP, CNN, etc. are all ‘neutral’.

More openly partisan news media would be less bitterly partisan news media, and in the aggregate it would offer more accurate news than we have now. As it is, even NPR and the New York Times stubbornly insist that their open advocacy of socialism is ‘neutral’, and that anything to the right of them is therefore obviously ‘right wing’ and therefore ‘biased’.

If publications like the Times would merely admit — if only to themselves — that they have a specific socio-political point of view, they’d find themselves liberated to cover ‘the truth’ as they see it without maintaining a farcical pretense of neutrality. One way or the other, this is the future of news: the original justification for neutrality — the high capital costs of newspapers, radio, and TV, necessitating as broad an audience as possible — is now obsolete. If the newspapers can admit this, they might be able to turn into something the survives.

Fucking Ads

Do you see a way to get rid of this ad that popped into view? I don’t:

200703021208

Unless I’m really, really interested in the article, I’m just going to leave when something like this happens, rather than puzzle out how to dismiss the ad. And if it happens often enough, I’m going to avoid the site in the first place — or beef up my ad filters. Attempting to show me ads that are too intrusive and rude will result in me attempting to block all your ads.

Incidentally, if I click on ‘Click Here’, nothing happens, probably because the developers of the ad only thought about Internet Explorer.

Nothing Gets Past The Washington Post

A headline today:

200702141050

I realize that in some places, this might be surprising: but remember that Virginia has relatively lax gun laws. Robbing a house when there’s nobody there greatly increases the chances that the homeowner is going to blow your head off when he finds you standing in his living room with your swag bag.

And the Arlington cops are on top of things, too:

“We’re just getting downright aggravated,” said Arlington Detective Roger Estes, the lead investigator on the case. “Enough is enough.”

Nu Speling

The word ‘lead’ is an odd one. It can be the chemical element with the atomic number 82; it can be something you use to keep your dog from running off; it can be — particularly outside North America — an electrical wire; it can be a key piece of information in a police case, or it can be the first paragraph or so of a news story. And those are just the nouns that I can think of right now.

In the newspaper business, two of these uses intersect in a way that might cause trouble. These days, all large-circulation newspapers (as well as nearly everything else) are printed using a process called offset lithography, which involves using oily ink and wet plates; the ink adheres to the dry parts of the plates and is then transferred to a rubber roller (that’s the ‘offset’ part) which is then pressed against the paper to make an impression.

200701221137

In an earlier day, newspapers were printed using actual type, which was made of alloys containing a high proportion of lead (the metal). This historic use of lead in printing lives on today in such terms as ‘leading’ for the space between lines of type.

Anyway, so the newspaper people found themselves referring to two distinct things by the same word; they’re pronounced differently, but then newspapers are a written medium, so it was a problem anyway. And so they came up with the weird spelling ‘lede’ for the beginning of a story. I don’t know the history of that, but I’m sure McCormick was involved somehow.

This habitual use of the word ‘lede’, combined with the fact that minor American newspapers don’t seem to really even be trying anymore, results in things like this, from today’s St. Louis Post-Dispatch:

200701221114

And that’s a terrible ‘lede’ to the story, too, one that would get a ‘B’ at best in a college journalism class.

One might say that the Post, or at least its copy-editing department, has been Lee’d, but while the new ownership doesn’t seem to be an improvement the truth is that the thing was already a basket case when it was owned by Pulitzer.

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch and 'e-waste'

From the St. Louis Post-Dispatch:

LAGOS, Nigeria — Behind an outdoor market selling used computers, young men scavenge metal and plastic from a smoldering digital dump.

[...]

Three-fourths of the thousands of discarded American computers arriving in Nigeria each month are in bad shape or beyond repair, African business leaders say.

All this outmoded equipment — containing lead, cadmium, mercury and other contaminants — is creating dangerous messes that pollute land and air of one of the world’s poorest countries. Even computer dealers are outraged.

“People in the United States need to understand that we in this part of the world are human beings just like you,” said John Oboro, deputy head of the Computer and Allied Products Dealers Association of Nigeria.

The U.S. government not only permits the exports, but it also contributes to them.

In a Lagos warehouse, asset tags on dilapidated computers viewed by a Post-Dispatch reporter showed that some once belonged to the U.S. Department of Energy and the U.S. Postal Service.

[...]

Seated in his office overlooking a bustling Nigerian computer market, Oboro argued that the responsibility lies not just with the U.S. government but with American people looking for cheap and easy ways to get rid of outmoded equipment.

“Americans should not leave their e-waste only for the black man to manage,” he said.

I’m tempted to just leave this idiocy to stand on its own, but I cannot resist making a few comments.

  1. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch, which is a terrible newspaper, sent someone to Nigeria for some reason, possibly explicitly for the purposes of reporting on ‘e-waste’. If you live in St. Louis and want to know what caused all the commotion and fire trucks screaming past your door last night, you’re out of luck: but you are fully up-to-date on ‘e-waste’ because they’re running this expensive, Pulitzer-bait series.

  2. There is, of course, a racial angle to it. The Post-Dispatch, aside from being a terrible newspaper, is also terribly liberal, far more so than the city it allegedly serves. So dead and obsolete computers are not being sent to Nigeria because Nigeria is a hellhole that exports oil and still manages to be an economic and social basket case where things like stripping monitors of components looks like reasonable employment to people. Oh, no: it’s because the United States collectively has it in for ‘the black man’.

  3. In the Post‘s view, the cause of the whole problem is that the United States government ‘permits the exports’. The article ignores the fact that the U.S. is not just running up to the beach and dropping off containers of computers, and then sprinting back out to sea before the Nigerians can protest. It ignores the fact that someone in Nigeria is importing the things and could simply stop doing so. It ignores entirely the fact that while the U.S. government could ban the export of dead computers, the sovereign Nigerian government could also ban the import of dead computers, or regulate the recycling and dumping of them. The Post-Dispatch, as I said, is a liberal paper, so this doesn’t occur to them: the U.S. must protect the Nigerians from themselves. The unwritten pinko racist assumption seems to be that the Nigerians are black Africans and are therefore far too stupid to look after their own interests. Banning exports from the U.S. is part of the White Man’s Burden.

  4. If the U.S. restricted the export of dead computers to more ‘developed’ countries that dealt with the stuff in a way that the Post-Dispatch considered acceptable, the Post would probably then howl about the denial of opportunity to Nigerians. They would then suggest that this was somehow racist, and call for foreign aid from the U.S. to Nigeria to be increased.

How Not To Sell Newspapers

The other day, I complained about finding some places near here selling the Washington Post for fifty cents, instead of thirty-five cents. I’m sure that if I checked — if I could have figured out who was responsible, and asked them — they would have said something about gasoline prices.

Gas around here is back down to $2 a gallon now. I haven’t bothered to check whether the price of the Post has also dropped, because the machine I usually buy my paper from never raised its price.

Maybe it should, though. I don’t try to buy a paper every day, but on the days when I do try to buy one, more than half the time lately I have been finding the machine entirely sold out before 9 a.m.:

If you can't get it, they don't get it

It’s been like this three days in a row now; the next time I’m passing, I will probably not bother to try to buy a paper. Burger King maintains house copies of both the Post and the appalling Northern Virginia Daily, and the demographics of Front Royal are such that I am usually the first person to pluck the Post from their rack. I save $0.35 (or $0.50), and the back seat of the Tinomobile doesn’t fill up with old newspapers.

But it’s not really the customer service failure that I’m interested in; it’s the corporate idiocy angle. If you do a search for Washington Post circulation on Google, you will not find words like ‘booming’ or ‘growing’ or even ‘holding steady’.

The media navel-gazers have a lot of explanations for this, but I have never seen them even mention the one thing that is within newspapers’ control. They can’t abolish the web, and they can’t get rid of TV, or reader apathy. But it is fully within their power to make it easier to buy the newspaper.

There’s precisely one place that I’m aware of on my end of Front Royal where I can buy the Post without having to wait in line or traipse all over a grocery store, or both. Is this machine outside a restaurant that serves breakfast? No. Is it outside a place that is open at all in the morning? No. Is it reliably stocked? No. In short, it’s placed and stocked for the convenience of the newspaper route guy, not would-be readers.

The newspapers are so focused on their external enemies, and their low opinion of their readers (a lot of big newspapers now produce a free daily tabloid full of celebrity ‘news’ and short, easy-to-read articles because they think that the public is too dull to understand the regular news), that they cannot see the most obvious and easily-correctable problems.