Friday, May 21, 2010

This must be some sort of record

Panera BreadImage by BlueJeff via Flickr














A fifth straight day with Hackensack news in The Record of Woodland Park. What gives? Especially after the move to Woodland Park, the editors appeared to have declared dead the city where the newspaper was founded in 1895 and where it prospered for more than 110 years -- while making Malcolm A. "Mac" Borg one of world's richest men.


Thanks to Hackensack's suspended police chief, the city is in the news again today. But is that all there is? How many stories about Ken Zisa are we going to see from Staff Writer Monsy Alvarado? Who, but Alvarado and head Assignment Editor Deirdre Sykes, is interested in so much detail from yet another lawsuit filed against the chief by a police officer?


Isn't there anything else going on in the city worthy of news coverage? When was the last time Alvarado covered a City Council or Board of Education meeting? Has the Record published a photo essay on the city's architectural gems? What about Hackensack as the epicenter of pizza in Bergen County? A taste-off would attract thousands of readers.


The front page is a puzzle. Republican Governor Christie vetoes the Democrats' tax on millionaires -- in a salute to Borg and other wealthy residents -- but most of the page is devoted to the value of homes where murders occurred.


Only three homes are featured. I've always wondered about the resale value of the home on the East Hill of Englewood where a man killed his mother and father with an ax. I guess I'll have to wait for the next time The Record does the story.


The Local section leads with a sensational Passaic County story -- a teenage boy claiming he had sex with his nanny when he was 12. But there is no municipal, education or development news from Teaneck, Englewood or Hackensack.


Maybe if Staff Writer Giovanna Fabiano spent more time in Englewood, where she is assigned, she might wonder why businesses like Panera Bread closed and why there are vacant Palisade Avenue storefronts. Could one landlord be demanding rents many merchants consider just too high to pay?


Today's Better Living contains the bulk of the week's food coverage, including a flawed review of a French restaurant in Edgewater. Food Editor Bill Pitcher says the view from Le Jardin "is the envy of every other restaurant in Bergen County." 


That will come as news to the owners of the stand-alone Japanese restaurant that is part of the Mitsuwa Marketplace complex just down River Road. Even the cheap seats in the food court of the Japanese supermarket have a better view of the Hudson than Le Jardin.


I applaud freelancer Amy Kuperinsky for noting the origin of the beef served at Segovia Steakhouse in Little Ferry (Starters on Page 19 in Better Living). Unfortunately, she isn't aware Certified Angus Beef is raised conventionally and pretty much amounts to a marketing campaign.

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5 comments:

  1. Oh no! Panera Bread in Englewood closed down? I LOVE Panera Bread. They have these neat bagel-cutting machines where they throw the bagel in and WHAM, you get two slices, of course one slice is practically paper thin and the other is 90 percent of the bagel, but I still get a kick out of watching it work.

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  2. That's old news, about Panera Bread, which apparently was driven out by high rent. Another food place, Cosi, also closed, and there are several vacant storefronts on both sides of the tracks. Of course, if the reporter is covering the place from her apartment, she is likely in the dark. That Panera machine avoids a lot of problems. I remember editing a Washington Post story on how many prominent people went to the hospital with severe bagel-cutting injuries, including Henry Kissinger. Aaron, I can't remember my head, but I'll bet you can write a great one for that story.

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  3. Actually, if someone prominent cuts him or herself while slicing a bagel, that's the kind of injury for which a clever head would be in poor taste, no pun intended.

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  4. Unkindest cuts

    Slicing a bagel can bite you

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