TONY DODERO -- Editor’s Notebook
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Like most Daily Pilot readers, I also think it’s distasteful that smack
dab in the middle of a Costa Mesa neighborhood is a home called the
Panther Palace.
A home where adults, young and old, venture in to partake in varying
sexual escapades.
But I disagree with and don’t understand some readers who say our recent
article about this West Side residence amounted to promotion of
prostitution.
Maybe it will help if I explain how the story wound up on the front
pages, two weeks ago.
Our police reporter approached me about a tip he received about the
Panther Palace and some new allegations of prostitution taking place
there. But when he told me about the news tip, I explained to him it was
nothing new and there was no story to be told.
You see, the existence of the Panther Palace was first reported by former
Pilot reporter Tina Borgatta five years ago this month.
Borgatta, who later became the paper’s assistant managing editor, also
followed a tip that residents then were concerned that the home owned by
the late “Wild” Bill Goodwin was nothing more than a den of iniquity.
Borgatta investigated, interviewed Goodwin and visited the house,
breaking the Panther Palace story in April of 1995. And Costa Mesa police
then, just like today, could not find evidence of prostitution or any
other wrongdoing.
Predictably, however, the news of Goodwin, who was 71 at the time, but
has since passed away, and his mini Playboy mansion spread to major
newspapers, tabloids and television shows. And residents reacted with an
equal amount of disgust over the Panther Palace even then.
Yet, like most flash-in-the-pan news stories, the Panther Palace soon
became old news and we went back to ignoring it, for some five years.
And we would have continued to ignore it if it weren’t for a coincidental
twist.
Not long after our police reporter learned about the news tip, we also
learned the very same Panther Palace was the subject of an independent
film that had been banned by the Newport Beach Film Festival.
Suddenly, we had what we call in this business, “a news hook.”
What followed was our latest story on this dubious Costa Mesa institution
that has become so popular today that the man who took over for Goodwin
is considering a reservation policy for visitors.
So, if the stories of the Panther Palace make you uneasy, I understand.
Even agree. But the Daily Pilot was just doing its job.
Newspapers, at least mainstream ones, are neutral observers of daily
life. And newspaper editors and reporters certainly aren’t in the
business of promotion as we’ve been accused. Our business is to report
the news, the good, the bad and the ugly. And sometimes, the news isn’t
what we want to hear.
Regardless, as members of the press, we have a responsibility to let our
readers know what’s happening in their neighborhoods. We would be
derelict not to. Keep in mind, we didn’t create the Panther Palace, we
just shed light on it.
If the Panther Palace is to go out of business, or at the very least
relocate, it’s up to the residents of Costa Mesa to step up and demand
that happens.
I wish them luck.
* TONY DODERO is the editor of the Daily Pilot. He can be reached at
(949) 574-4258 or via e-mail at [email protected] .
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