Nothing like community journalism
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EDITOR’S NOTEBOOK
You can’t make a living in journalism and nobody reads the paper
anymore anyway.
It’s two of the first things you learn when you stick your toe
into the journalism pool. I heard it from professors and classmates.
Even my mother made a point to tell me on a regular basis, “make sure
you have a back up.”
But I had listened to too many U2 songs and watched “Salvador” too
many times to turn my back on becoming a war correspondent in some
third-world country. I dreamed of being one of the last out of the
embassy during a violent coup.
So why am I writing my first column as city editor for a community
newspaper?
After college I came home to Orange County and sent my flimsy
resume to every newspaper I could find in the phone book. I was
willing to start anywhere: intern, news assistant, whatever it would
take.
That’s when I first talked to Tony Dodero. The Coastline’s editor
was city editor of the Huntington Beach Independent at the time and
he led me to my first real job in journalism: part-time news
assistant at the Orange Independent -- a paper that doesn’t exist
anymore (an all-too common reality).
I didn’t stay there long and over the next seven years my life
took a few twists. Two children and a mortgage later, I find the idea
of being a war correspondent a completely foreign one.
But my path is hardly a disappointment. It hadn’t taken long for
me to fall in love with community journalism.
The truth is, less people are reading the paper. The rest of the
world isn’t quite like Laguna (if you haven’t noticed). Here
everybody seems to have a paper in their hand in the morning.
Elsewhere, people tend to get most of their news from TV or the Web.
But if any of them needs to know what’s going on in their city and
their schools they have to turn to their community papers. Even the
local sections of the Times and Register don’t give enough of the
meat.
Community journalism is about informing people with more than
scandal or even the big scoop (not that we don’t want to get the
story before anyone else has it). In community journalism I get to
feel like I’m doing a service. I’m helping to watch for any strange
goings on in politics and at the same time making sure everyone knows
what a great job the Laguna Canyon Foundation is doing in the effort
to preserve nature.
I get to hear the behind-the-scenes, off-the-record grumblings
about issues like the flood control channel, Treasure Island or the
3rd Street development.
The fact that most Lagunans are reading the paper means that many
of them are going to give their opinion about it. But whether they
want to thank us for an article about their son or chastise us for
leaving out an important event, I welcome the input and believe that
with enough of it, and enough hard work from us, we can put out a
paper that will serve this community well.
* ALICIA LOPEZ is the city editor of the Coastline Pilot. She can
be reached at (949) 494-4321 or by e-mail at [email protected]
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