Indignant journalists take heed – writers come in all sizes

When people ask about my vocation I tell them I write for a living and have been doing so for 20 years. When they prod a little, I say I write practically anything. When they push more, I break it down to an easy-to-understand “journalism, advertising, marketing, opinion columns, blogs and Bar Mitzvah toasts”.

Raised eyebrows and quizzical looks come from all quarters.

Newspaper reporters (most of them freelancing now) wonder with righteous indignation how I can balance reporting and copywriting. The long-standing bias reporters have toward flacks comes through and they wonder if I’m not just a paid pen for hire. Unvoiced is the skepticism that anyone can maintain critical thinking and ethical balance if they write more than one form.

I say balderdash…partly because I never get to use that word in any of my writing and mostly because that contention is crap.

A comment on Twitter the other day said that the vast percentage of bloggers are unable to write with the same ethical integrity as trained journalists. I emphatically agreed and was chided by a woman I consider a traditional journalist.

My reasoning – slightly difficult to put into 140 characters – is that bloggers come in all shapes and sizes. They are people who want to share what they ate for lunch, who they met that day, the bad parking photos they took, amusement park ride reviews, naked photos of themself, stories and rumors they heard, and also some who report the news.

Just take a look at three of my blogs and tell me that they all serve the same purpose. Bowl of Cheese, Things to Worry About, TDF08.

BOC is a rant site. I talk about how people are idiots and how the world would be better if I were running it.

TTWA is a random site that gives voice to my fears – however ill-conceived.

TDF08 is a reporting site with a dash of editorializing.

Balance those three – or any of my 12+ blogs – with my 20 years as a journalist and you’ll start to get a complete picture of the versatility present in my writing. I hope it will also open your eyes to the reality of writers who can write across a variety of forms and venues.

This doesn’t mean I’m going to start writing press releases any time soon. But I’m still going to write where the money is. And as news organizations lose more focus and funding, my best bet might be to do some J. Peterman pieces inbetween my tech analysis, social media training, commentary columns and sports reports.

What do you plan to do to bring in money? Would you, as a reporter, every cross into public relations? What’s your take on my argument?

Keep reading…and please comment. I’d like to know what you think.

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4 Responses to Indignant journalists take heed – writers come in all sizes

  1. Mari says:

    You rock.

    Mari’s last blog post..harlan county horrors up for pre-order

  2. Craig says:

    Send a message to politicians who don’t get that good bloggers are journalists at defeatkessler.com

  3. JulieB says:

    My motto: whatever pays the bills, as long as it’s legal/ethical and as long as it’s something I can do with competence. That leaves a lot open.

    I’ve written press releases, advertising copy, tons of copy for web sites (not the cheap SEO stuff for a couple bucks a page), descriptive text for museum exhibits, you name it. Even had a long freelance gig answering computer questions under the guise of a “computer genius” for a retailer. (Can you guess?) I enjoy the variety. Keeps me sane, though my husband may disagree with that one!

    My background is in radio journalism, and I started freelancing print journalism pieces while I had the radio job.

    And I have a typewriter almost identical to the one you’re posing with. It still works, and I occasionally bang out copy on it just because I can.

    JulieB’s last blog post..The State of the Desk

  4. jeff says:

    Julie,

    Same here. Catalog descriptions for Brookstone, Website content for small businesses, and the buckets of other odd writing gigs that supplement the art and craft of covering school committee meetings, writing opinion columns, penning features and recording radio pieces.

    BTW, I bought that typewriter at a yard sale for $5. Then I used the advance check from my first book to get it restored. It weighs about two million pounds, but it’s the utmost in cool.

    Better still, the new kittens can’t destroy it.

    Thanks for writing!

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