Posted by Warm Southern Breeze on Monday, March 6, 2023
Previously, I’d written about, and provided one example of, what I considered to be an exemplary model of poor journalistic practice — which is the failure to properly identify individuals quoted in stories by their academic/professional achievements, proper title, capitalization, organizational affiliation, and location, to which I added the practice of abbreviated (or not) states’ names.
There are at least TWO fundamental issues underlying the first matter, both of which can be boiled down to one, that one being respect:
1.) Respect for the individual whom is quoted and referenced in the story, most often only obliquely recognized as an authority or expert, and;
2.) Respect for the reader, the party whom is being informed by reading the story, and for whom the authors write.
Folks who earn PhD’s didn’t just have that terminal degree handed to them on a silver platter. They worked their hineys off for years to earn it. As a matter of fact, folks who earn ANY academic achievement didn’t have it handed to them on a silver platter. They had to WORK to EARN it.
And this is a corollary, though obliquely related matter, which is that Read the rest of this entry »
Like this:
Like Loading...
Posted in - Did they REALLY say that?, - Even MORE Uncategorized!, - Read 'em and weep: The Daily News, - Uncategorized | Tagged: abbreviation, ANSI, AP, Associated Press, education, GPO, ISO, journalism, news, PhD, Respect, USCG, USPS, work | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Warm Southern Breeze on Monday, August 10, 2015
It was Easter Sunday, 2010, and unknown to me, dumb luck had befriended me.
Pure dumb luck.
Even scientists believe in it.
In 1996, Duncan C. Blanchard, a meteorological researcher then affiliated with the State University of New York at Albany, authored a scientific paper entitled “Serendipity, Scientific Discovery, and Project Cirrus” published in the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society in which he cited Project Cirrus (1947-52), a period and project of research from which “many serendipitous discoveries and inventions were made, opening up areas of research still being pursued today.”
Blanchard’s work was cited a decade later in 2006 by David M. Schultz, who was then affiliated with the Cooperative Institute for Mesoscale Meteorological Studies, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma, and the NOAA/National Severe Storms Laboratory, Norman, Oklahoma in a research paper entitled The Mysteries of Mammatus Clouds: Observations and Formation Mechanisms. In it he wrote that what little we know about mammatus clouds was, because of their nature, “obtained largely through serendipitous opportunities.”
In other words, what little we know about the clouds (so named after human breasts because of their appearance), has been obtained by pure dumb luck – although, being prepared, and being in the right place at the right time does account for something.
In conversation recently with a dear, and longtime friend, I shared about Read the rest of this entry »
Like this:
Like Loading...
Posted in - Faith, Religion, Goodness - What is the Soul of a man?, - My Hometown is the sweetest place I know, End Of The Road | Tagged: ASA, baby, Camera, cancer, Catholic, children, Christian, clouds, death, DLSR, dumb luck, Easter, faith, family, Film, friends, grandmother, image, ISO, life, love, luck, Meteorology, mother, photo, photographer, photography, preparedness, RCIA, research, science, sensor, SLR, story, weather | Leave a Comment »