Showing posts with label Book TV. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book TV. Show all posts

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Miami Book Fair International: LIVE Coverage on C-SPAN 2 on Saturday and Sunday

Miami Book Fair International: LIVE Coverage on C-SPAN 2 on Saturday and Sunday

Sat. Noon - 6:30 pm ET (Re-airs at Midnight)
Book TV will have LIVE coverage of the Miami Book Fair International over the November 20 - 21 weekend. Authors we'll be covering on Saturday include Sebastian Junger, Karl Marlantes, Edwidge Danticat, Carlos Eire, Ngugi Wa Thiong'o, and Salman Rushdie.
Book TV will also be doing call-in segments with several authors attending the fair.


Sun. 10:30 am - 6:30 pm ET (Reairs at 12:30 am)
Authors we'll be covering on Sunday include Ron Chernow, Simon Winchester, Meghan McCain, John Avlon, Bill Press, Douglas Schoen, and Jonathan Franzen. Book TV will also be doing viewer call-in segments with several authors attending the fair.

Visit
booktv.org for a complete schedule.

Monday, July 28, 2008

Dopey Gitmo "expert" and author Mahvish Rukhsana Khan

I don't want to belabor this particular point, since it has nothing at all to do with my part of South Florida, per se, the usual main course on this blog, but I also didn't want to let it be like the 1,001 other things I've wanted to comment on here or at South Beach Hoosier over the past 18 months and never got around to mentioning for whatever reasons, usually timeliness.
Instead, I'm just going to say it and leave it to a future post to pick up the conversation.
And then get some sleep.


After watching the series finale of the excellent ITV WWII series, Foyle's War, on PBS as part of their Masterpiece Mystery-about veteran Detective Chief Superintendent Christopher Foyle and his colleagues batting crimes and mysteries in the seaside town of Hastings during the war- roughly about 12:30 a.m., I flipped over to C-SPAN's Book TV to see who was on.
(See http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/masterpiece/foyleswar/ , http://www.foyleswar.com/ and http://www.booktv.org/ )

The segment airing was
After Words: Mahvish Rukhsana Khan author of "My Guantanamo Diary: The Detainees and the Stories They Told Me" interviewed by Nancy Snow, senior research fellow at the USC Center on Public Diplomacy which I'd seen parts of earlier in the day.

For purposes of information, while I was growing-up in the 1970's in North Miami Beach, I lived in a house next door to a wonderfully kind older Central European couple who loved gardening, both of whom were concentration camp survivors.
We had many, many conversations, the moral and philosophical points of which remain with me today.

Two of the undercurrents of the last episode of Foyle's War, "All Over," were the growing sense of anticipation that the war would be ending -V-E Day- and the growing anti-German sentiment and sense of revulsion following the news of the liberation of the Belsen concentration camp and what had transpired there.
http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/article.php?lang=en&ModuleId=10005224

So, half-asleep, I was not quite prepared to suddenly hear recent law school grad and newly minted author Mahvish Rukhsana Khan -whom you and I have never heard of for good reason- express her p.o.v. that, after roughly 30 visits to Cuba, she really thought the U.S. treated the Gitmo detainees just like the Nazis treated Jews.

Even more improbably, if possible, after admitting that -shocker!- she never met any of the high-risk detainees, she expressed her disappointment at finding out that a man she was to meet accused of being either an Al Qaeda/Taliban member/sympathizer(?), actually looked much more like a kindly old man, not one of the 9/11 hijackers.

As it turned out, the man apparently had been a pediatrician in Afghanistan after the Russians retreated, and Khan went on at some length to talk about how middle-class the doctor was in his personal views.

Yet Khan admitted that while she was in Gitmo, she really wanted, perhaps even secretly hoped for, was to see a detainee who more closely approximated the physical appearance of the popular image of what a 'terrorist" looked like, but she never did.

A few moments later, almost as if I'd written it for entirely comic purposes, like two ships passing in the night, moderator Nancy Snow, a Cal State-Fullerton prof, expressed the p.o.v. that the truth is always much more complicated than simple black and white.
Who could argue with that simple maxim?

Yet Snow said it in such a smug, condescending way that it was readily apparent to me that she intended the remark to stand as a chastisement to U.S. popular opinion.
As if we were all just rabble, rolling around like a marble in an old car's trunk, completely unaware of any of the the complexities of the matter that someone of Snow's station knew implicitly.

What made it funny from my perspective was the fact that it was author Khan, whom Snow had already been interviewing for over a half hour, who had expressed the un-sophisticated stereotypical B&W p.o.v. she'd criticized, not some imaginary straw man named USA or the viewers.

Snow was so insistent on playing the role of the moral scold that she didn't let the facts get in the way.
You almost have to admire her, even while you're glad you were never stuck in one of her classes, since it must be sheer torture.
----------------------------------------
One more general criticism before I hit the sack:
Can I be the only person in the country who's noticed the steady decline of Book TV's interviewers and moderators?
They seem to be putting just about anyone on C-SPAN 2 these days, and that's not to even get at how bad the Book TV website has gotten, with LESS complete information available on the books there than ever before.


Nancy Snow is a senior research fellow at the University of Southern California Center on Public Diplomacy. She is also an associate communications professor at California State University, Fullerton and adjunct communications professor at the University of Southern California. Ms. Snow is the author of three books, including "Information War: American Propaganda, Free Speech & Opinion Control Since 9/11 public

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Upcoming Radio and TV FYIs

Meant to post this yesterday but was having lots of trouble with my Bell South internet connection, which came and went of its own volition, regardless of my own plans.

Had some recommendations for two Book TV segments on Sunday, featuring new books by authors whom I've greatly enjoyed in the past, Marshall Goldman of Wellesley College, and Simon Winchester, and an overnight radio program early Tuesday morning featuring Richard Florida, whom you can hear and judge for yourself whether my take on him and his work is correct.

I first got turned onto Dr. Goldman when I lived in Evanston in the mid-80's, thru my then-girlfriend, who was attending grad school at Northwestern and who'd taken his classes when she was an undergrad at Wellesley.
(The Wellesley grads in the Washington D.C. area annually have one of the largest and best book fair events of the year, which most of my friends and I have gone to a few times, due to the great finds there. I could always find issues of Foreign Affairs or Foreign Policy that I was missing, for whatever reason.)

The only Wellesley grad I've met since returning to South Florida is Hollywood activist and public policy guru Sara Case, the Editor of Balance Sheet Online. http://www.balancesheetonline.com/
Sara is also a member of the Hollywood Charter Review Committee and was recently appointed by Broward Commissioner Sue Gunzburger to the Broward County Planning Council.

http://cityofhollywoodfl.com/html/charter_review.htm
Next meeting is Thursday, August 7, from 3-5 p.m.
Article 4 - Initiative; Article 5 - Referendum; Discussion on campaign finance reform and suggested topics from Vice Mayor Blattner
________________________________________________
On C-SPAN 2, Direct TV 351

Sunday, July 27, at 7:30 AM
Monday, September 1, at 12:00 AM

http://www.booktv.org/program.aspx?ProgramId=9514&SectionName=Politics&PlayMedia=No
Petrostate: Putin, Power, and the New Russia
Oxford University Press. 230 pages. $27.95.

About the Author
Marshall Goldman is a senior scholar at the Davis Center for Russian Studies at Harvard University and an economics professor emeritus at Wellesley College. Mr. Goldman's writing has appeared in several publications, including The Washington Post, The Atlantic Monthly, and Foreign Affairs.

About the Program
Marshall Goldman recounts Russia's economic collapse in 1998 and its reemergence only a decade later as a financial force due to its energy wealth. Mr. Goldman reports that Russia is the world's largest producer of petroleum and the second largest exporter. He details the efforts Vladimir Putin made to renationalize Russian oil and how these profits were used to pay off the countries national debt. This event was hosted by the Southern Center for International Studies in Atlanta.

Publisher's blurb:
http://www.us.oup.com/us/catalog/general/subject/Politics/InternationalStudies/InternationalSecurityStrategicSt/~~/dmlldz11c2EmY2k9OTc4MDE5NTM0MDczMA==

Dr. Goldman was on NPR's Diana Rehm Show on June 8th,
http://wamu.org/programs/dr/08/06/08.php

The most insightful critique of the book was this one by Edward Lucas on his blog about his new book on Russia, The New Cold War: how the Kremlin menaces Russia and the West
http://edwardlucas.blogspot.com/2008/06/marshall-goldman-book-review-petrostate.html

The biggest hole in "Petrostate" is its skimpy treatment of the European Union. An important question facing the EU now, for instance, is whether its energy liberalization policy -- unbundling the wholesale and retail businesses in gas and electricity -- will help or hinder the Kremlin. A fragmented market may be even easier to manipulate. Mr. Goldman's sharp mind would be well-suited to untangling such intricacies.
The unanswerable question is whether the Kremlin -- or more precisely, Vladimir Putin -- will use gas as a weapon to gain international political influence. The optimistic view is that business normalizes politics -- in this case, that Russia's need to be a dependable partner will require it to soften its political edge and conform to international standards of behavior. Pessimists fear that gas dependency will lead to the Finlandization of Europe. On the evidence so far, the pessimists have the better chance of being right.


That this particular angle on energy policy and U.S-Russian foreign policy is hardly ever discussed either intelligently or at length on network TV news goes without saying, not that PBS has much to crow about, either.
________________________________________
Sunday, July 27, at 7:00 PM

http://www.booktv.org/program.aspx?ProgramId=9475&SectionName=History&PlayMedia=No
The Man Who Loved China: The Fantastic Story of the Eccentric Scientist Who Unlocked the Mysteries of the Middle Kingdom

About the Author
Simon Winchester is the author of numerous books, including "The Professor and the Madman," "The Map That Changed the World," and "Krakatoa." Mr. Winchester has written for several publications, including National Geographic and Smithsonian.

About the Program
Historian Simon Winchester recounts the life of Joseph Needham (1900-1995) a Cambridge University biochemist who became obsessed with China and wrote "Science and Civilization of China" a twenty-four-volume study of Chinese history and culture that assisted in introducing the West to the East. Simon Winchester discusses his book with John Major, senior lecturer of the China Institute at the Asia Society in New York City.
_______________________________________
http://www.coasttocoastam.com/shows/schedule.html

WIOD-AM 610
Tuesday, July 29, 2008
LIVE with George Noory,
Guest: Richard Florida
Book: Who’s Your City?
Website: www.creativeclass.com
Website: www.whosyourcity.com

One of the world's leading public intellectuals, Richard Florida will discuss his work analyzing and predicting future trends in housing, economy, work, lifestyle and community.

Program runs live from 1-5 a.m., and I suspect that guest Florida will be on the first two hours.
As some of you may recall, I'm currently reading his insightful and perceptive book after having watched the author's fascinating apearance on Book TV a few weeks ago.

Who's Your City: How the Creative Economy is Making Where to Live the Most Important Decision of Your Life

Richard Florida contends that in the era of globalization it still matters where people call home and where you live is one of the most important decisions you will make.
From your quality of life to the people you surround yourself with, Mr. Florida determines which cities are suited for certain people.

Richard Florida is Director of the Martin Prosperity Institute and professor of business and creativity at the Joseph L. Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto.
He is the author of several books, including "The Rise of the Creative Class" and "The Flight of the Creative Class."

To see his recent appearance on C-SPAN's Book TV from the Google HQ: http://www.booktv.org/program.aspx?ProgramId=9274&SectionName=&PlayMedia=No

For more information, see http://creativeclass.com/whos_your_city/

I've been meaning to suggest that those of you who who are hardcore book readers, might want to consider adding the book blog, Edmund's Saltmines to your list of things to peruse daily, since his list of authors on TV or radio is often quite helpful. http://whitehots.blogspot.com/

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Back to the blog fray; race identity politics; Miami Herald Editorial Board

Well, I've taken some time away from the blogging at South Beach Hoosier and Hallandale Beach Blog to do some final editing on some other writing projects I've been involved with over the past few months, but I'm ready to jump back into the fray.

I've also spent some of that time working out the kinks and am finally at the point where I may yet have finally(!) mastered my new digital camera, a gift from my Memphis-born sister, Jennifer, up in Pembroke Pines, and no longer have to rely on my once-trusty Canon, or a disposable Kodak or Fuji.

I feel in Greenspan-speak, "exuberant optimism."
Finalmente, maître chez moi!

If you look around you, you should already be noticing some better quality photos on the two blogs, as I've replaced some photos taken with the Canon that have been on the sites for the first 15 months of their young and impressionable lives.

I now have roughly about a dozen and a half pretty well-written issue-oriented posts ready to hit the ground running tomorrow, and hope they make up for some of the time I've been away.

Not to get too far ahead of myself here, but I think some of you will be pretty surprised at some of the things I reveal in these posts, including about my own involvement in politics locally, statewide and nationally.


It's my hope that they'll serve to make a lot of the things I've already written in my blogs, seem more inherently logical and consistent.

For some folks in South Florida, especially in Hallandale Beach and environs, it will definitely feel like laser-guided cannon balls aimed squarely at their heads.
That's exactly my intent.

As Elvis Costello sang on his great album, "My Aim is True."

Whatever your plans are for the day, I strongly encourage you to tape a one-hour program Sunday at noon on C-SPAN 2's Book TV:
Bruce Bartlett talks about his new book, Wrong on Race: The Democratic Party's Buried Past.

It's really quite interesting and is moderated by Clarence Page of the Chicago Sun-Times. I first watched it last week and it's quite a lively hour

http://inside.c-spanarchives.org:8080/cspan/cspan.csp?command=dprogram&record=562503144

In case you're not familiar with him, economist Bruce Bartlett is an anti-Bush 43 Republican.
How much does he dislike President Bush?

Well, his previous book, from 2006, was called "Impostor How George W. Bush Bankrupted America and Betrayed the Reagan Legacy"
'Nuff said.

Bartlett's first job in Washington was working for wacky West Texas Rep. Ron Paul, one of the most consistently un-popular members of Congress while I was in D.C. all those years, and whose staff was hardly less insufferable.

Think typical Harvard wonk attitudes, but from U-T or Texas A&M, instead.

They were sort of like the grand-kids of all the creepy conservative businessmen that '60's liberals always claimed were deeply involved in the JFK shooting as a result of the CIA, Cuba and Castro and...

(Both of my parents saw JFK and Jackie the day before Dallas, when they flew into Kelly AFB in San Antonio, and got shown around. At the time, my mother was the secretary for the Base Commander. Years later, we were living in Memphis when Dr. King was murdered.)

Years later, perhaps a little wiser, Barrett worked for a garrulous Republican some of you might've heard of, who's 180 degrees different than Paul's intensely grating personality:
former Buffalo Bill QB, 1988 G.O.P. Veep nominee and U.S. Rep. Jack Kemp.

For more on Barret, see his past writings at
http://bartlett.blogs.nytimes.com/
and http://www.townhall.com/columnists/BruceBartlett/2007

On top of whatever you think you already know about the former Bush 41 HUD Secretary,
Kemp 'walked the walk and talked the talk,' famously threatening to strike the AFL All-Star game one year, along with other players, due to hotel segregation at the site of the game.

Like conservative icon Charlton Heston, Kemp was actually at the MLK "Dream" Speech in Washington.




About the Program
In “Wrong on Race: The Democratic Party’s Buried Past”, author Bruce Bartlett argues that the Democratic Party had a racist past and he says there’s an unfair perception of America’s two national parties. In his book, he contends that Democratic Presidents and congressmen of the past supported racial segregation and the “Jim Crow” laws that dominated the Confederate states. Mr. Bartlett discussed his book with Clarence Page, syndicated columnist at the Chicago Tribune.

About the Author
Bruce Bartlett was a domestic policy adviser to President Ronald Reagan and a treasury official under President George H.W. Bush. He has had a nationally syndicated newspaper column for the last ten years, and has written for The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Commentary, The National Review, and Fortune.



I mention this Barrett interview in light of the silly, pointless Marc Caputo story in the Miami Herald Saturday about the Florida Black Republicans and their attempt to point some fingers at FL Democrats, thru a magazine that, quite likely, has less readership than those godawful real estate mags you find in those plastic vending racks all over the area.

If I recall correctly, the City of North Miami recently tried to commandeer them, along with some of the Miami SunPost and NewTimes, too.

Of course, I realize silly, Saturday and Herald are still redundant on many scores, since it's the one day of the week where the mysterious Herald Editorial Board turns over half its space to one of their many pet causes, running all sorts of nonsense, Verbatim.

That hasn't changed since I lasted posted here!
________________________________________
http://www.miamiherald.com/516/story/528574.html
Miami Herald
Magazine attacks Democrats for racist past
By Marc Caputo
May. 10, 2008

For a sign of Florida Republicans' all-out effort to attract black voters, look no farther than the glossy full-colored The Black Republican magazine that launches broadsides like these:
The KKK was the ''terrorist arm of the Democratic Party.'' Democrats, in addition to waging ''war on God,'' are still mired in sex and financial scandals.

That's all tucked in the back of the Sarasota-based National Black Republican Association's 60-page mag, the first half of which touts Republican Gov. Charlie Crist's civil rights record and the Republican Party of Florida's minority outreach efforts that the association has helped coordinate.

The strident comments and images -- replete with a Ku Klux Klan rally snapshot that notes ''every person in this photo was a Democrat'' -- has outraged Democrats and caught the Republican Party of Florida flat-footed as well.

''Oh my gosh,'' party spokeswoman Erin Van Sickle said when told of the magazine's content, which she described as "inflammatory.''

Though the magazine lists the party as a financial sponsor, Van Sickle said the GOP ''had no editorial control'' and that party chairman Jim Greer "is disappointed in some of the content.''

Van Sickle is listed as a contributing writer, but she said that's because she helped supply the content and photographs concerning Greer, Crist and the party.

The black Republican association's chairwoman, Frances Rice, said her group operated independently of the party and is aggressive about its viewpoint because it wants to ''wake up'' black voters and "shed the light of truth on the racist past and failed socialism of the Democratic Party.''

But Democrats suspect Republicans knew more about the magazine's content than they're admitting. Democrats got wind of the publication, dated Fall 2007, at a black voter event Tuesday in Tallahassee where Republicans were passing out the magazine.

''Shame on Chairman Greer and the Republicans,'' said Jacksonville Democratic Sen. Tony Hill. "They should be about bringing people together, not demagoguery about the KKK. That's not going to win African Americans today, and Barack Obama is showing that.''

If Republicans could get 25 percent of the black vote nationwide, according to Rice's magazine, the party would win Congress and the White House. But to do that, Rice said, she wants black voters to know the Democrats' history of "slavery, secession, segregation and socialism.''

Rice said black voters tend to be religious and aren't as receptive to the secularism underpinning the Democratic Party -- hence the ''Democrats Wage War on God'' article.

She said the magazine features articles from top black thinkers and conservatives to hold black leaders accountable.

As for listing the ''Top 10 Democratic Sex Scandals,'' Rice said her publication sought to ''balance'' the news media's coverage of Republican woes.

Florida Democratic Party spokesman Mark Bubriski quickly rattled off the names of Republicans caught in sex scandals: "There's no Mark Foley, no Larry Craig, no David Vitter. Where's Bob Allen? He's the guy who said he was afraid of black guys and that's why he offered a police officer $20 to perform a sex act.''

One of the articles in the magazine says Martin Luther King Jr. was a Republican. Rice contends she knew Martin Luther King Jr.'s family and ''there's no way they were Democrats'' in the 1960s, a time when racist southern Democrats were fire-hosing black protesters and trying to keep them out of public schools. Her association, established in 2005, aired political ads concerning King's political leanings in 2006 political radio ads in Florida, Maryland Ohio, Pennsylvania and Georgia.

Democrats counter that King was nonpartisan. Hill and other Democrats say they don't dispute the central facts about the Democratic Party's role in pushing slavery, seceding from the Union and precipitating the Civil War.

And they acknowledged that those pictured in the old KKK snapshot were likely Democrats, but said that was many decades ago.

But Democrats say the magazine omits the fact that many Southern Democrats joined the GOP after the 1960s civil rights movement.

'You could change the caption to say, `All of these people are now Republicans,' because the Democratic Party no longer suited their racist Southern strategy,'' said Dan Gelber, a Democratic state legislator from Miami Beach.
________________________________
Dan Gelber is no Jack Gordon, that's for sure!

Instead of being a Profile in Courage and taking the necessary heat for his leadership role in the FL primary debacle, and so many other issues, he's an Alibi Ike for the Ages.
No wonder he likes Obama -now!

My memory is a bit hazy on this point, so I need some help to pin this down.

For decades, in an open mockery of fairness, the Dade County Commission didn't have member districts until towards the end of the 20th Century, when the Dept. of Justice said get with the program -or else.

The same sunny Miami where for far longer than most people think, the Orange Bowl Committee routinely had team functions at restricted clubs.

So what exactly was Dan Gelber doing to insure that African-Americans and Hispanics were given their fair chance at the ballot box in Dade County?
________________________________________
Since many of you no doubt haven't read my other blog before, to help explain where I stand on the Miami Herald, past, present and future, here's what I wrote in the second anchor of South Beach Hoosier when I started it last year, http://southbeachhoosier.blogspot.com/
modestly calling it, Dave's Intentions for South Beach Hoosier

South Beach Hoosier will offer commentary on popular culture, public policy and national politics -largely from a Democratic Leadership Council (DLC) p.o.v., with some policy differences-advertising & marketing news and innovations; the business side of Show Biz, especially the film industry; as well as insight on international trade, financial services and U.S. foreign policy, where from 1988-2003, I had a front-row seat for these and many other contentious and implacable issues on Capitol Hill, and their resultant fallout at DC-area think tanks and policy groups.

Fortunately for me, besides being blessed with a great memory for details, I also took copious contemporaneous notes of what I observed first-hand at Capitol Hill hearings -inc. important Congressional mark-ups- as well as at myriad events with policy makers, journalists and news makers at Brookings, SAIS, AEI, the Wilson Center, the Goethe Institute, the Center for Security Policy, the IMF and The World Bank -BEST wine!-the Economic Strategy Institute, et al.

Stories that, for whatever reason, NEVER saw the light of day in the pages of the New York Times, the WSJ or the Washington Post.

Which naturally had the entirely predictable ripple effect of insuring that these stories and issues NEVER made the airwaves of the TV networks, cablenets or, even NPR.

South Beach Hoosier will also examine the latest amusing or not-so-amusing scandals, cover-ups, controversies, contretemps and mis-adventures bedeviling South Florida, something I became used to while growing up in North Miami Beach in the late 1960's and the 70's.

Fortunately, because of my news-junkie DNA and myriad magazine subscriptions, and long-standing relationships with media types in Miami, I was able to keep up pretty well with the South Florida area while living in Bloomington, Chicago, Evanston, Wilmette and Washington, D.C./Arlington, VA.

Communities where sensible civic activism and high standards of journalism were the norm and not the exception.

Due to my own personal/business/political interests and experiences in those cities, as well as my good fortune to have a large number of well-informed and well-connected friends and former housemates while living there, many but not all of whom are or were reporters, columnists, editors, TV/film producers, along with a few who are now well-placed in Statehouses and legal circles across the country, I'll have a deep bench of facts, opinions, point-of-views and fact-checkers to work with.

That's the goal for South Beach Hoosier.

It's my hope that this'll help me offer up pinpoint criticism, whether of national and South Florida pols, media organizations and sports or show biz personalities, that have heretofore evaded public scrutiny, transparency or accountability -as well as well-aimed brickbats.

To examine the proverbial case of the latest dog that doesn't bark, or analyze why the latest case of media conventional wisdom has -again- been proven wrong, and why.

This is especially true of The Miami Herald, the morning newspaper I grew-up with and have suffered with since first leaving North Miami Beach for Bloomington in the fall of '79, as its most talented people jumped ship and the paper become evermore a shell of what it once was: an excellent newspaper with talented and respected reporters and editors telling compelling and intriguing stories of intrinsic value to its readers throughout polyglot and transient South Florida.

Television news-wise, when I'd return to South Florida from school or work in Bloomington, Evanston, and DC, whether for Christmas vacation, Baltimore Oriole spring training games or visits for weddings, I could still see that Miami had the kind of scrappy and innately curious reporters who make a tangible difference in a community.

The sorts of enterprising reporters that so many of my friends at Ernie Pyle at IU, and Medill at Northwestern were already well on their way to becoming. http://www.idsnews.com/ ,http://journalism.indiana.edu/news/erniepyle/ , http://www.medill.northwestern.edu/

Reporters who might have the talent and ability to convey to the waves of newcomers and visitors to the area, a nuanced sense of South Florida's decidedly mixed historical past, by writing with the proper amount of factual research, balanced perspective and sense of disbelief, to describe the events unfolding around them.

Then, ending the piece by dropping the hammer on whichever local corrupt/incompetent miscreant, pol or agency hack was the target of their ire, for attempting to perpetrate yet another in a long of of dubious acts against the people of South Florida.

Sadly for the people of South Florida, things have gotten so bad now that The Herald's numerous flaws are as much for what they don't publish, as much as for the self-evident mediocre quality of its writing and reporting, lack of thorough fact-checking, and inadequate search for conflicts of interest.

For all the talk of improving the paper by the new McClatchy management, it shows no tangible signs of changing for the better any time soon, a great disappointment to its readers.

It's common knowledge within the industry that The Herald's website is a joke compared to the efforts of many smaller circulation newspapers. www.miamiherald.com

Frankly, the website itself remains a constant source of embarrassment for Herald reporters and columnists, who are constantly besieged by readers and told yet another horror story about not being able to find recent Herald stories that should be on the paper's website but aren't.

The reporters can do little more than shrug their shoulders in response.

Even in the year 2008, The Herald still DOESN'T have a permanent Public Ombudsman to represent the interests of both its readers and basic fairness, like many newspapers with much smaller circulation numbers!

Meanwhile, with much more to fear and lose, The New York Times has an independent Public Editor, currently Clark Hoyt, who weekly takes the Times' policy, owners, editors, reporters and columnists to task publicly, even providing links back to the original story or column in question, unlike the once-in-a-while effort at the Herald. http://topics.nytimes.com/top/opinion/thepubliceditor/index.html?8qa

Meanwhile The Herald's Sunday attempt at high-minded opinion-shaping and public policy, Issues & Ideas, is so embarrassing and muddled on so many different levels that it's all one can do to not laugh from crying, so feeble is its effort, so low is its aim, so puny the actual result.

Yet rather than seeking the creative input of bright and knowledgable new faces who familiar with the real problems of South Florida, The Herald still regularly farms-out the Guest Op-Ed space in the paper to people living outside of the area, more than any other newspaper in America I've ever read.

They continually run long excerpts in their editorial space from parochial interest groups whose political sentiments echo that of the the Herald's own Editorial Board.

Even worse, if possible, in many cases these particular guest editorial tangents have already appeared in other forums or publications!

And speaking of the Herald's Editorial Board, who's on that exactly, anyway?

It's a great mystery that nobody seems able to fully explain away, yet The New York Times, under the guidance of Andy Rosenthal, has an entire webpage specifically devoted to detailing the background and credentials of its Editorial Board. http://www.nytimes.com/ref/opinion/editorial-board.html

Hmmm... call me old-fashioned, but South Beach Hoosier prefers transparency!

With more news coming out of South Florida than once ever seemed possible, and with the area's annual dance with hurricanes always fraught with danger, this area desperately needs an All-News radio station more than ever before, yet there's NO sign of one on the horizon to replicate the crucial role once served by CBS Radio affiliate, WINZ-AM 940.

Even worse, if possible, there's no LOCAL 24 hour cable news channel to replicate the important role played by a NewsChannel 8 in Washington, D.C., http://www.news8.net/ which gives a depth of coverage to D.C. and the VA/MD suburbs that people in South Florida can only dream about with envy: LIVE call-in TV programs with tough reporters who weekly or monthly grill the DC Mayor, Virginia and Maryland governors, as well as the VA and MD County Managers or Supervisors, the REAL powers in the area.

But then it's not like COMCAST is stepping up to the plate, either!

If there's one constant gripe in South Florida, regardless of your age, race, nationality or political persuasion, it's about the fundamental lack of PUBLIC ACCOUNTABILITY here among Florida's state, regional and local govt./agency officials.

South Beach Hoosier aims to be a small step towards regaining some of that needed accountability, whether it's thru simple public scrutiny, or requires a degree of investigation and follow-up public exposure of incompetency, cronyism or negligence -South Florida's usual "Perfect Storm."
In other words, a catalyst for positive change.

"And David put his hand in the bag and took out a stone and slung it. And it struck the Philistine on the head and he fell to the ground. Amen."-Preacher Purl encouraging the underdog Hickory basketball team before the title game against favored South Bend Central in Hoosiers, 1986. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0091217/