Showing posts with label LG. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LG. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

All of a sudden, Christie is sensitive about his weight


Hackensack's new City Council at a meeting in July. Did The Record cover the council meeting on Tuesday night, and, if so, when will it tell readers what happened?



By Victor E. Sasson
Editor

In his first three years in office, Governor Christie's waistline ballooned, he was hospitalized on a hot summer day in 2011 after an asthma attack and he refused to tell the national media how much he weighed.

The Record and other state media never asked how much Christie weighed nor have they bothered reporting what, if anything, his administration has done to fight the childhood obesity epidemic.

Meanwhile, he was the butt of jokes by late-night TV comedians, and even pulled out a donut and crammed it into his mouth during an appearance on David Letterman's show.

400-pound bully?

Letterman guessed Christie weighed 400 pounds. Finally, early this year, Christie gave up pretending to control his eating, and had weight-loss surgery.

Now, the GOP bully is objecting to a seemingly innocent comment by state Sen. Barbara Buono, D-Middlesex, about his appearance in TV ads promoting the Jersey shore after Superstorm Sandy (A-1 and A-3).

"I'm very disappointed that she has decided to go down that road for me and other folks across New Jersey, many folks who are challenged by their weight," the governor told Staff Writer Melissa Hayes (A-3).

Easy choice

What a joke. Christie has been in denial for decades, as are the grossly overweight local editors at The Record who have refused to launch a series on obesity.

In the November gubernatorial election, voters have a simple choice between a fit woman who cares about the middle class and an overweight governor who does the bidding of the wealthy and other fat cats.

Going national

Editor Marty Gottlieb has fashioned another front page -- for The Times or another national newspaper -- with local stories playing second fiddle.

What are readers supposed to make of the boring ANALYSIS about Sen. Bob Menendez, D-N.J., supposedly "on [the] world stage" during the debate over attacking Syria (A-1)?

Is The Record grooming him for an invasion of communist Cuba and the presidency of the Caribbean's biggest island?

Below the fold, a story about saving a plot of land in the Meadowlands falls into the "that's nice" category, but can readers visit and see for themselves (A-1)?

On A-2 today, 3 of the many errors that have appeared in recent days are corrected.

Go home, LG

When is The Record going to stop pretending that a new LG Electronics' corporate headquarters -- which would be an indelible scar on the Palisades north of the bridge -- will by itself lift the economy of Bergen County (A-1 and A-4)?

This is nothing more than an irresponsibly selfish grab by ratable-hungry officials in Englewood Cliffs, and a South Korean conglomerate eager to put the company logo in view of millions of New York consumers.

More local slop

Readers of head Assignment Editor Deirdre Sykes' Local section have become accustomed to accident-photo captions supplying no information on the possible cause or other important information.

But today's sensational coverage of a Route 17 crash that killed a 31-year-old mother and seriously injured a father -- while their baby was left home alone -- is a new low for the copy desk and Production Editor Liz Houlton (L-1).

The L-1 photo caption says "a car broke into three pieces after hitting a thick metal pole on Route 17 in Lodi," but that's contradicted by the story:

"The impact of the accident and the rescue attempt [italics added] left the car mangled and broken into three pieces" (L-2).

Putting aside the awkward phrase "impact of the accident," readers are left with questions about what caused the car to break up.

Was speed a factor? Why doesn't the story address that?

Are Houlton and her copy editors doing anything more than spell-checking stories and slapping headlines and captions on them?

Back to school

Also on L-1, Road Warrior John Cichowski is so desperate to get readers interested in another column that has nothing to do with commuting (school-bus inspections), he begins with a total non-sequitur about car owners too busy for emissions testing (L-1).

Of course, readers in Hackensack and other towns without school busing just turned the page. 

Two local obituaries appear today, apparently marking the end of a vacation for Staff Writer Jay Levin (L-6).

One reader I heard from on Monday thought The Record had missed the death of former Freeholder and Midland Park Mayor William Van Dyke, but the obit appears today, albeit 8 days after the fact.



Saturday, July 6, 2013

My vacation from fuzzy, amateurish journalism

The line was long and slow moving on Friday at Starbucks Coffee in the New Jersey Turnpike's Thomas Edison Service Area. Speeders, tailgaters, weavers and other aggressive drivers were plentiful on the turnpike and Garden State Parkway, but state police were scarce -- a lack of enforcement The Record continues to ignore.



By Victor E. Sasson

Editor

It's always good to get away from New Jersey and The Record's fuzzy journalism.

I spent several days in Montreal, and didn't read any newspapers, but I did glance at The Globe and Mail, the widely respected national daily published in Toronto.

Returning home on Thursday, I found looking over unread Records a real chore.

I left last Sunday, when The Record's front page was dominated by the 25th anniversary of the Hackensack Ford fire that killed 5 of the city's bravest.

I remember seeing the fire from the newsroom's fourth-floor library on July 1, 1988, when I was a reporter assigned to cover business news.


Major local news

The pathetic Local news section on June 30 led with a real North Jersey scourge: feral cats (L-1).

The Road Warrior column that day continued Staff Writer John Cichowski's minute examination of driving and parking issues with breaking news about repairs to the Route 46 bridge "this fall" (L-1).

The next day, July 1, The Record's front page carried a large photo of a memorial to the 5 firefighters who died in the Hackensack Ford fire.


Falling asleep over A-1

The rest of A-1 is a real snoozer, typical of the balanced approach to boredom under Editor Marty Gottlieb, once a prominent journalist at The New York Times:

The stories were a "new era" at Rutgers University,
a political column on Sen. Jeffrey "Who?" Chiesa, R-N.J.; and a lawsuit filed against Paterson police officers who allegedly beat two handcuffed men.


Dissing Paterson

Under Gottlieb, head Assignment Editor Deirdre Sykes; and Gottlieb's predecessor, Francis Scandale, Paterson has been treated as little more than a center of drugs and prostitution.

The Record has completely ignored the inability of the Silk City's Police Department and its overpaid police chief to protect residents from drive-by shootings and other gun violence -- even before Governor Christie's cut in state aid forced the layoff of 125 cops.


Accident filler

On the July 1 Local front, Sykes ran another filler photo of an overturned car and first responders standing around bullshitting, complete with a photo caption that contained "no information."

The swearing in of a reform City Council in Hackensack ran as an afterthought on a July 2 front page dominated by the memorial service for 19 firefighters in Arizona, and a second arrest in the murder of a Wayne teen (A-1).


Bad headline

The headline on the Hackensack story is a real clunker -- what readers have come to expect from Production Editor Liz Houlton:


Changes
right off 
the top 



"Off the top" is a phrase used in barber shops, but whoever wrote this headline probably was looking for "at the top" to describe replacement of three professionals tied to the Zisa political family.

And I didn't see any interviews with residents who wanted to say good riddance to the four Zisa family allies who wreaked havoc during their 8 years on the council.

Mayor Michael Melfi and the others allowed Ken Zisa to run amuck as police chief instead of firing him many years ago.

On July 3, Road Warrior John Cichowski actually expected readers to believe adults "lose track" of children in the back seat, leading to their death from heat stroke (L-1).

Another food scam

On July 4, Better Living acquainted readers with so-called foodie Sameer Sarmast's Halal Food Tour, set for tomorrow at the armory in Teaneck (BL-1).

A previous report on June 24 omitted the hours, noon to 8 p.m.


But the paper lets down readers, as it has done so many times when discussing kosher meat and poultry, which are more expensive than non-kosher food.

Kosher and halal meat and poultry don't guarantee higher quality; the vast majority of animals are raised with harmful antibiotics and growth hormones, and higher prices aren't justified.

Real fishy

Freelance Julia Sexton continued The Record's promotion of fattening, artery clogging desserts on Friday in her lukewarm review of Ridgewood Fare, another overpriced restaurant (BL-16).

Sexton didn't like some of the food, including the $22 mahi mahi taco her husband ordered, but she goofed when she referred to the fish as "none-too-fresh tuna."

Mahi mahi is also known as dolphin fish; it isn't related to tuna.

More problems

Today's paper is filled with sloppy, amateurish journalism.

Readers might wonder why the lead story on Page 1 doesn't refer to the Jersey shore until they get to the continuation page and learn the gas pipeline would be 8.5 miles closer to Jones Beach in New York than to Long Branch, which is 28 miles away from the planned route (A-6).

As do past stories, the umpteenth report on LG's controversial plan to build a 143-foot-high corporate headquarters fails to emphasize the building would be built on top of the tree-shrouded Palisades, between Sylvan Avenue and the Hudson River (A-1).

The description used now -- "along Sylvan Avenue in Englewood Cliffs above the Palisades" -- is too vague.

No news here

On the Local front, a huge photo of a house fire in Cliffside Park is complete with a caption that tells readers nothing beyond what they can see (L-1).

Finally, in a story on today's Local front, does The Record really expect readers to believe a group of Passaic city natives actually drank water from the polluted Passaic River (L-1)?