Archive for July, 2010

Taking the Newsroom to the Classroom: Mrs. Birdyshaw and the Pilot

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

By Jock Lauterer
Director
Carolina Community Media Project

South Brunswick High School English teacher Michaela Birdyshaw, right, confers with reporters, left to right, Lisa Stites and Ben Brown of the State Port Pilot in Southport where Birdyshaw spent an intense one-week total immersion internship this summer. (Photo courtesy of the State Port Pilot)
Publishers have no business whining about lost youth readers if they aren’t aggressively nurturing reciprocal relationships with local middle and high school administrators, teachers and students.

It’s called “Growing your own Readers,” and I’ve long preached that such pro-active “schoolwork” leads to “Growing your own Newsroom” as well.

So it was with great satisfaction that I discovered one of my favorite community newspapers thinking way outside the school lunch box, if you will.

Ed Harper’s State Port Pilot, one of the state’s most decorated weeklies (27 ad awards and 21 news awards in this year’s NCPA competition) — and arguably the finest weekly you’ll ever see — partners each summer with Brunswick Community College’s program, “Career Ready,” linking teachers with vital local service businesses.

This summer, the celebrated South Brunswick High School English teacher Michaela Birdyshaw, honored as a “21st Century Teacher” and SBHS Teacher of the Year, spent one week in an intensive immersion internship at the Pilot.

(more…)

COMMUNITY JOURNALISM ROADSHOW TURNS 10

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

by Jock Lauterer
Director
The Carolina Community Media Project

Summer, 2010

From a 2005 visit to the Mt. Airy News: I pose with happy staffers sporting the Roadshow’s trademark Pac-Man headgear I use as an ice-breaker. (Photo courtesy of Phil Goble)
When I came back to Carolina in January 2001 and launched the Carolina Community Media Project, the primary goal was to make free, on-site journalism workshops available to all 190 North Carolina community newspapers.

In the spirit of playful adventure, I dubbed it “the Johnny Appleseed  Community Journalism Roadshow.”

I estimated it would take 10 years for this ol’ publisher-turned-perfesser to reach all 190.

Silly me.

In this, the 10th summer of the Roadshow, I’ve reached only 150 papers — 40 shy of my lofty aim.

So there’s plenty of work yet to be done and papers to visit. And since my 401K is now a 201K, I ain’t quittin’ any time soon.

WHAT’S IN A NAME?

Recognizing an old backshop man, the folks at the Wallace Enterprise presented me with a “pig,” the metal substance used to print back in the “hot type” days of the ‘50s. Veteran editor Sammie Carter looks on as former owner Mary Hart Osborne Blackburn conducts the “grip ‘n’ grin.” (Photo courtesy of the Wallace Enterprise)
As to the Roadshow’s name, the tradition evolved to add one road warrior each year to the iconic “Johnny Appleseed” handle.

To date, the honorees include,

Charles Kuralt (On the Road With…)

James Taylor, (Walkin’ on a Country Road…)

Jack Kerouac (On the Road…)

John Steinbeck (Travels with Charlie)

Willie Nelson (On the Road Again..,)

Johnny Cash (I Been Everywhere, Man…)

And when Raeford publisher Robert “Bubba” Dickson suggested ‘possum for lunch when I came to his paper, that led to the “’Possum-Dodgin’” addition.

So if you put the whole shebang together it reads like this (take a deep breath):  The Johnny Appleseed, Charles Kuralt, James Taylor, Jack Kerouac, John Steinbeck, Willie Nelson, Johnny Cash, ‘Possum-Dodgin’ Community Journalism ROADSHOW.

Yes, that’s right. We need two more honorees to make 10. Any suggestions? At year eight we ran out of ideas and breath, so just reverted to Mr. Appleseed for our namesake.

FROM MURPHY TO MANTEO

The most unusual newspaper I've ever visited in 10 years of Roadshow workshops: the Maxton Times newsroom that doubles as a laundromat, run by James McDougald and Joyce McRae. (Photo by Jock Lauterer)
Since the first Roadshow in summer ’01, I’ve led workshops literally “from Murphy to Manteo.” (That’s from the Cherokee Scout to the Outer Banks Sentinel.)

I’ve been to papers as small as Ken Ripley’s redoubtable 2k-circ weekly Spring Hope Enterprise (where I gave my pitch to one lone intern in a converted darkroom)…

I’ve brought my community journalism dog ‘n’ pony show to several of the state’s major metros where a roomful of glum staffers dutifully sat through my rant.

The most unusual newspaper I visited was James McDougald’s Maxton Times, housed in and run in conjunction with his Laundromat. Repeat, Laundromat.

The most unusual roadshow visit was with Al Carson of the Oxford Public Ledger, who, instead of listening to my stump speech, regaled me with a two-hour comprehensive essay on where to find and how to judge the state’s best hot dogs.

During a 2003 visit to the Tabor-Loris Tribune in Tabor City, I got to meet and greet the “Yam-Man” during that town’s annual Yam Festival. Are we having fun yet? (Photo by Lynne Vernon)
Along the way I’ve met the Yam Man of Tabor City (a marching sweet potato in the annual Yam Festival), a human newspaper in the form of the Mint Hill Times life-size marching newspaper (also used in parades), eaten mind-numbingly good barbecue in Lexington, and driven THROUGH a rainbow during a summer downpour in Scotland Neck, and been given a kiss on the top of my bald head by veteran editor Sammie Carter of the Wallace Enterprise.

Not one to just observe, over the past decade I’ve helped cover two US Open golf tournaments for the good folks at the Pilot of Southern Pines… and the annual Barbecue and Bluegrass Festival for Jeff Byrd’s crew at the Tryon Daily Bulletin.

Along the way I’ve met the legends of North Carolina community journalism: Pulitzer Prize-winning Ashley B. Futrell Sr. of “Little” Washington, Pulitzer Prize-winning Horace Carter of the Tabor City Tribune,  ­­­­Hoover Adams of the Dunn Daily Record, Virginia Rucker of the Forest City Daily Courier, Sarah Campbell of the Davie County Enterprise-Record, Sammie Carter of the Wallace Enterprise, Margaret Harper of the State Port Pilot.

I’ve also taken the Roadshow to spunky little indie upstart papers with the grit and gall to attempt a start-up in the 2000s: to the Smoky Mountain News in Waynesville, The Citizen of Garner, the Roberson Journal in Lumberton, the Surry Messenger in Mt. Airy — and right in my own backyard, the Citizen of Carrboro.

And there have been places that have given back to the ol’ perfesser — from mugs, umbrellas to ballcaps — even an old enlarger from the Daily Southerner of Tarboro. But my most prized thank-you gift was a “pig” (you old-timers will know what I’m talking about here) — a doorstop-weight hunk of printer’s lead left over from old hot-type days — awarded to me following my roadshow at the Wallace Enterprise.

During my workshop at the Mount Olive Tribune, the staff insisted that I bring my canine sidekick, Webber, into the newspaper office to hang out while I conducted the session. Now, that’s hospitality. (Photo courtesy of the Mount Olive Tribune)
There have also been roadshow stops that have been sentimental journeys: to the Alleghany News of Sparta where I was a green-as-grass 22-year-old editor fresh out of Chapel College; to the Transylvania Times of Brevard where I interned one college summer and fell in love with a local girl and local journalism; to the Wake Weekly of Wake Forest where Bob and Peggy Allen hired me for the summer of ’84 (after Orville Campbell had fired me for the second time). I slept on a cot in their screened-in porch and became an honorary “Allen boy.”

I’ve only had one “speedbump” on the Roadshow: when I called to offer a workshop to the publisher of one of the Heartland papers, he hung up on me.

Guess he didn’t like my haircut.

In this, the 10th summer of the Roadshow, I’ve been to Alain Lillie’s string of Charlotte Weeklies and Charles Broadwell’s venerable Fayetteville Observer (the oldest continuously-running paper in the state!) with projected stops later this summer in Greenville, Lake Lure, “Little” Washington and Louisburg — and who knows? — your paper might be next.

Roadshow self-portrait somewhere in deep rural North Cackalacky. So let the Roadshow roll on! (Photo by Jock Lauterer)
So let the Roadshow roll on. Here’s to another 10 years.