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Connecting - Welcome to Connecting Archive
Paul Shane <[email protected]> Connecting July 1, 2015 1 message Paul Stevens <[email protected]> ReplyTo: [email protected] To: [email protected] Wed, Jul 1, 2015 at 9:16 AM Having trouble viewing this email? Click here Connecting July 1, 2015 Click here for sound of the Teletype Top AP news Top AP photos Colleagues, Good Wednesday morning ‐ and here's to the first day of July! (For the Simon and Garfunkel fans among us, will "she" indeed fly ‐ and give no warning to her flight? Click here for an explanation, sort of. Not many of us who elect to retire have their decision recognized to the world by the President of the United States, but that's what happened Tuesday to Jim Kuhnhenn, White House and politics writer in the AP's Washington bureau. President Obama gave Jim a shout‐out during a joint news conference with President Dilma Rousseff of Brazil: PRESIDENT OBAMA: All right, we're going to take a few questions, and I'm going to start with Jim Kuhnhenn, who I understand announced his retirement today. Jim, you're kind of young to retire, man. Q (Inaudible.) PRESIDENT OBAMA: While you're ahead? Q Yes. PRESIDENT OBAMA: Well, we're going to miss you, but you're going to be here for a couple of weeks, right? Q Right. The file photo above shows Jim asking a question of the president in Chile, which (as noted below) Jim said was a career highlight, according to AP Washington deputy bureau chief Terry Hunt, who announced to the staff: I'm writing to tell you that Jim Kuhnhenn is retiring. I know. I gasped, too, that this high‐ energy, soccer‐playing, globe‐trotting journalist is slowing down. Everyone knows Jim as a thoughtful reporter and graceful writer who expertly tackles complicated subjects and makes them understandable. We put him on a politics‐economy beat where he brought his considerable skills to bear on deciphering some of the biggest stories of the day: the bank and auto bailouts, the stimulus package and ultimately the Dodd‐Frank financial regulation bill. Jim joined AP in the summer of 2006 to cover money and politics, just in time for the 2006 elections and the Democratic takeover of Congress. He was assigned to the Hill in 2007 and eventually returned to money and politics as a member of the 2008 politics team. In 2009 he turned to the politics‐economy beat and in late 2010 he started covering the White House. Jim has covered many of the big stories over the last five years. But he says a highlight was returning to his native Chile, standing in the presidential palace in Santiago, and asking the question for AP during a press conference with Obama and President Pinera. Jim came to Washington in 1993 as bureau chief for the Kansas City Star, where he had worked for 10 years. He joined the national staff of Knight Ridder newspapers in 1997 where he did stints as politics editor and congressional correspondent. In retirement, Jim plans to work less and spend more time with his wife Louise and two grown boys, often at their place in Vermont. We'll celebrate Jim's career at 3 p.m. Thursday July 9 in the bureau. Jim told Politico's Mike Allen: "Louise, my two boys and I have been spending parts of summers in Vermont for nearly 20 years. We finally decided that we needed a better toehold there, so we bought a small farmhouse in the Northeast Kingdom, about 35 minutes from Montpelier. It's in need of plenty of sweat equity. ... My boys are 26 and 23. The oldest will be returning after a year teaching in Chile." More stills from the 25‐Year Club dinner Retirees Kelly Smith Tunney, left, Jack Stokes, center, and Charlie Monzella catch up during the 25Year Club Celebration at New York headquarters, Thursday, June 25, 2015. (Photos by Stuart Ramson) Retiree Bernd Helling, right, embraces Brad Martin, Kansas City‐ based senior operations manager who was honored for 45 years of service. Senior Vice President for Human Resources Jessica Bruce shoots a selfie with retired colleague Bruce Richardson. Kate Butler, vice president for membership and local markets, shoots a photo of AP President Gary Pruitt, left, Travel Services Coordinator Susan Clark, center, and Paul Stevens, retired bureau chief and regional vice president. New York photographer Richard Drew, left, talks with Mark Mittelstadt, former bureau chief and executive director of APME. Drew, a member of the AP team that received the 1993 Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography, was honored for his 45 years of AP service. Vickie Cacioppo of Markets, left, talks with Corporate Archives staffers Eve Rothenberg, center, and Francesca Pitaro. Former New York editor Marty Steinberg, right, chats with current editor Brian Friedman. Corporate Archives Director Valerie Komor, left, and Sue Boyle of AP Images. More memories of AP‐UPI competition Bob Haring ‐ When I became correspondent in Tulsa, my competitor with UPI was Alex Adwan. We became part of a regular luncheon group which included Phil Dessauer of the Tulsa World, who had been UPI's stalwart capital correspondent before joining the World. Competition aside, we became friends if not confidants. but 10 years later, after I had wandered on through Ohio and New Jersey to NYC, I returned to Tulsa to work for the World. Dessauer then was top editorial writer and Adwan had shifted from UPI to the World. The three of us worked together until Dessauer died, prematurely. Adwan and I remained in contact even after both of us retired from the World. ‐0‐ Carl Leubsdorf ‐ Working for the AP in the 1960s and 1970s, I got used to working alongside ‐ and against ‐ UPI competitors. But occasionally, I encountered signs their budgets were more limited than AP's. And that was really fun ‐ for me The most one‐sided situation I ever enjoyed occurred in December‐January 1969‐70 when Vice President Spiro Agnew, who was big news after his speeches denouncing the press as "nattering nabobs of negativism" and "hopeless hysterical hypochondriacs of history," made a 25‐day, 11‐nation trip to Asia. I was one of the 10 reporters on board Air Force Two, but UPI covered it with locally based reporters at each stop. That was fine on the ground stops, but Agnew got in the habit of coming back on the plane and talking to us on the air hops, which inevitably took place in midday Asia time. As a result, when we landed in early afternoon, I was able to hand a full story to be filed in the prime PMs wire time to AP colleagues, including the likes of Peter Arnett and Mike Putzel, who were responsible for filing my story. That help was invaluable. The UPI reporter who showed up when we landed had to ask if anything had happened en route, write a story and then file it. He was lucky to get some partial quotes at a time when there was no such thing as a transcript. By the time UPI could file, my story was in the hands of papers and broadcast stations around the world. After that trip, UPI decided to staff Agnew's travel. On another trip in 1971, which went around the world and lasted 33 days, I was joined by my friendly competitor, Steve Gerstel, who later was my counterpart in Washington as head of UPI's Senate staff, and the competition evened up a lot. It also meant that, when the rest of the traveling press corps went out on the Red Sea for a day of fishing and swimming, we both had to remain behind in case some news occurred (it didn't.) One other recollection: the Agnew staff, especially its mercurial press secretary, Vic Gold, protected those of us in the traveling press party. Especially me. When we were in Singapore on July 4th, having been reassured nothing would be happening, I had gone off to have what proved to be a delightful lunch with the local AP correspondent, Mort Rosenblum. When I returned, I discovered to my horror that Agnew had held an extremely rare news conference with the traveling press corps. But the press conference was embargoed until 3 p.m. (remember that this was 3 a.m. on July 4th back home) so I could listen to it and not suffer competitively. Those were the days! ‐0‐ Doug Pizac ‐ Back in the '80s I was covering a Los Angeles Rams game at the California Angels ballpark. The UPI photographer had been in the business for many decades. The game came down to a winning field goal. I had the photo of the ball going through the uprights. The UPI photographer's timing was off and he didn't; but then he did. He made a print of another kick that had the ball in the air, cut out the pigskin, put two‐sided tape on the back and stuck it on the last play picture. During the rotating scan the pasted ball flew off and what the clients got was the original photo with a caption noting a ball in the air which wasn't. The photographer talked his way out of it saying his eyes were bad and he thought he had the ball. Six months later the same UPI photographer and I were covering an Angels game where there was a big play at the plate with the ball being knocked free allowing for a run to be scored. I had the loose ball; the UPI photographer did not, but then he did. He used a hole punch to create a ball with caption paper and this time securely pasted it onto the photo and transmitted. The problem however was really with his bad eyes this time because he did have the loose ball in the photo but didn't see it. Now the clients got a photo with two balls. The photographer retired shortly thereafter. Then in the late‐'90s I covered President Clinton taking a family vacation at Grand Teton National Park in Montana with Hillary and Chelsea. The UPI photographer from D.C. was a nice guy but a bit lost. He was given a new Mac laptop and Nikon film scanner to use on the trip with no training whatsover. He didn't even know how to turn it on. Photographers from the NY Times and Washington Post helped him out. He and I got along great so I decided to play a little prank on him. He brought his wife and daughter along so with the help of his child I loaded a startup macro on his computer. Everytime he turned it on in the makeshift White House press room his daughter's voice said "It's not sharp daddy" to the amusement of the traveling press corps. He had no clue how to stop it. After two days of teasing I confessed and deleted the macro. To make it up to him, on the last night of the trip I happened to be eating at the same restaurant he and his family were at. I told the waiter we shared that at the end of their meal to bring them a bottle of champagne and put it on my tab. Unbeknownst to me, it was their wedding anniversary and he already ordered a bottle ‐ an expensive one. My joke cost me $150 for a bottle of Dom Perignon. ‐0‐ Joe Frazier ‐ During a presidential campaign rally on Portland, Or., organizers had set up a phone bank with one phone labeled for each news organization. I tested the one tagged for AP. It didn't work and things were starting to get underway. I quickly (unnoticed) switched the labels on the AP and UPI phones and miracle of miracles "ours" worked and "theirs" did not. This was 1976. In the latish 1980s I was in Jackson, Ga. covering an execution and raced for a phone outside the death house when it was over. UPI was coughing up serious blood in those days and their staffer, who said he was the only one on duty that day in four southeastern states, approached me as I was dialing the Atlanta bureau and breathlessly asked something to the effect "Hey Joe, what do think the lead is here?" I don't recall what I answered, if I did at all ‐0‐ Joe McKnight ‐ Re AP/UPI competition, did you forget INS, or am I the only one around who remembers that news service? I think UP absorbed INS and became UPI in the late 1950s. It was not a competitive situation but you might want to use this. In the early 1960s, the AP office in Birmingham was a room adjacent to the Birmingham (Ala.) News' city news room. The AP room had a wall of glass panels looking out on the city room. Opposite the AP door to the city room was a hall leading to the Scripps Howard Post‐Herald city room. UPI's office was a cubby hole with a desk and a teletype printer just off the Post‐Herald city room. I was working in the AP office one night when the UPI staffer came in (a rarity) with a request. "Can I have a pencil?" he asked, holding up a pencil stub the size of my little finger. I handed him a pencil and joked about the tight wad UPI. He acknowledged it, saying, "We have to send these stubs to Atlanta before we can get new pencils." Both of us laughed at his comment but he said he was serious, as he left to return to his desk. Connecting mailbox Nothing grumpy about Walt Marty McCarty ‐ There was nothing grumpy about Walt Stevens (Tuesday Connecting). It was a facade to conceal his gentle heart. But he was a fierce guardian of accuracy. I'll never forget the moment Walt called me into his office to reprimand me for misspelling someone's name. I still have flashbacks of that episode. Connecting profile ‐ Claudia Luther Claudia Luther (Northern Illinois University, 1961) was a writer and editor at the Los Angeles Times for more than 33 years, including stints as a political reporter, editorial writer, feature projects editor, acting book editor, deputy op‐ed editor, acting op‐ed editor and, finally, deputy editor of obits. Some of her advance obituaries of notable people continue to appear in the LA Times. She was among a small group at the Times who launched the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books, now in its 19th year. After taking a buyout in 2006, Claudia worked in media relations at UCLA for six years. Now retired, she continues to do freelance for UCLA Magazine and others. She's married to a fellow journalist Tom Trapnell, who was editorial design director at LAT for many years. They live in Los Angeles. Claudia noted that as a life‐long journalist, "I've long been an ardent admirer of AP and its amazing reporters. I think I already mentioned to you that Linda Deutsch and I are longtime friends, having met at a high‐profile trial in LA in the late '70s. Which means that of course I became friends with Edie Lederer and others among Linda's wide acquaintance!" Connecting wishes Happy Birthday To Ed Andrieski (Email) Kent Zimmerman (Email) Jeff McMurray (Email) Keith Murray (Email) Welcome to Connecting John Liotta (Email) Stories of interest AP among Media Organizations Opposing Hulk Hogan's Move to Block the Press From Sex Trial (recode.net) Media organizations have countered a move by Hulk Hogan to block the press from viewing a sex tape and other evidence at the center of his $100 million invasion of privacy lawsuit against Gawker Media. A coalition of newsrooms that includes First Look Media, BuzzFeed, CNN, AP, Vox Media and an ABC broadcast affiliate owned by Scripps Media has asked a judge to deny Hogan's request to keep the public out of the courtroom, according to a brief filed Tuesday. (Gawker Media has separately filed a motion against the partial closure of the courtroom.) Click here to read more/ ‐0‐ Arianna Huffington's Improbable, Insatiable Content Machine (New York Times) One morning in March, a dozen Huffington Post staff members gathered around a glass table in Arianna Huffington's office. They had been summoned to deliver a progress report to Huffington, the site's president, editor in chief and co‐founder, on a new initiative, What's Working. It was created to help the site cover solutions, rather than focusing only on the world's problems ‐ or as Huffington explained in an internal memo in January, to ''start a positive contagion by relentlessly telling the stories of people and communities doing amazing things, overcoming great odds and facing real challenges with perseverance, creativity and grace.'' Huffington, who is 64, was getting over a cold, and coughed hoarsely now and then. She sipped a soy cappuccino through a straw as she asked for updates in her purring, singsongy Greek accent. One by one, staff members went through their story lists: corporations with innovative plans to reduce water use, a nonprofit putting former gang members to work, Muslims confronting radicalism. Huffington kept the pace brisk; she sounded like a person in a hurry trying hard to not sound like one. When an editor hashed out ways to present a new, recurring feature called the What's Working Media Honor Roll ‐ a roundup of similarly positive journalism from other publications ‐ she suggested that he launch first and tinker later. ''I think let's start iterating,'' she said. ''Let's not wait for the perfect product.'' Click here to read more. Shared by Sibby Christensen. ‐0‐ Did Nielsen Kill The Radio Star? (fivethirtyeight) At the start of 2008, everything was going well at Chicago's WNUA 95.5‐FM. The smooth‐ jazz station ranked in the top five in the city in listeners age 25 to 54, and its research showed that the station had a passionate, loyal, engaged audience. "The arrows for WNUA were still pointing up," said Rick O'Dell, a former host and program director at WNUA. But by July, arrows for WNUA and other smooth‐jazz stations started pointing down, seemingly overnight in some cases. Ratings fell, sometimes sharply ‐ down 20 percent for WNUA from the spring period. Advertisers fled. Station owners ditched the format, at WNUA and in just about every other major market. Click here to read more. ‐0‐ Gannett changes logo, says it's a 'next‐generation media company' Fresh from a spinoff that saw its print and and broadcast assets separated into two different companies, Gannett's newspaper enterprise is touting itself as an innovator. Evidence of the rebrand can be found on Gannett's Twitter page, which recently swapped its old avatar ‐ a sans‐serif block "G" against a blue background ‐ for a brighter avatar with a dog‐eared corner that suggest a print newspaper or digital design file. Also new is a revised Twitter bio, which attempts to position Gannett as a "next‐ generation media company." The company is using a hashtag, #NewGannett, to organize a series of Tweets relating to an initiative around the relaunch. Here's a sampling of the posts, which have the flavor of a startup: ‐0‐ Missouri Press Association names new executive director (AP) KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) ‐‐ A former president of the board of directors of the Missouri Press Association has been named the organization's executive director. The MPA says Mark Maassen, the 2013 president of the MPA's board of directors, will replace Doug Crews, who retires next March. Maassen, who was selected by the board June 12, begins work Sept. 1 and will work with Crews on the transition. Maassen worked for The Kansas City Star for more than three decades and was recently the newspaper's director of classified, major and national advertising. He's also been a group publisher of four Kansas City area weekly newspapers. MPA President Jim Robertson says Maassen's diverse media experience led him to stand out from dozens of other applicants. Maassen has a bachelor's degree in journalism from the University of Missouri‐Columbia. Shared by Scott Charton ‐0‐ Jorge Ramos: USA, the mother of second chances (Fusion) SPEECH: Jorge Ramos, June 18, 2015; UCLA Extension Graduation Ceremony. Jorge Ramos, an Emmy Award‐ winning journalist, is the host of Fusion's new television news show, "America With Jorge Ramos," and is a news anchor on the Univision Network. Originally from Mexico and now based in Florida, Ramos is the author of nine best‐selling books, most recently, "A Country for All: An Immigrant Manifesto." Once, many years ago‐31 years to be exact‐I was where you are right now. And I was a happy young man. I think of that moment and I still smile. I had made a bet with my life and it had paid off. Just like you, I had enrolled at UCLA Extension to study journalism and television for one year. But for me it was very challenging. Yes, I know, I have an accent. But just imagine how my English was three decades ago. Sometimes I couldn't even understand myself. That's how bad it was. So I started from scratch. As an immigrant from Mexico, everything was new for me. I had left my home, my family, my friends and all the expectations that life was going to be easy and predictable. This country and this university have been incredibly generous with me. They gave me the opportunities that my country of origin couldn't give me. Click here to read more. Shared by Susana Hayward. ‐0‐ The Final Word Today in History ‐ July 1, 2015 By The Associated Press Today is Wednesday, July 1, the 182nd day of 2015. There are 183 days left in the year. This is Canada Day. Today's Highlight in History: On July 1, 1940, the original Tacoma Narrows Bridge in Washington state opened to traffic despite concerns over its tendency to "bounce" in windy conditions, inspiring the nickname "Galloping Gertie" (four months later, the suspension bridge's main section collapsed into Puget Sound). On this date: In 1535, Sir Thomas More went on trial in England, charged with high treason for rejecting the Oath of Supremacy. (More was convicted, and executed.) In 1863, the pivotal, three‐day Civil War Battle of Gettysburg, resulting in a Union victory, began in Pennsylvania. In 1867, Canada became a self‐governing dominion of Great Britain as the British North America Act took effect. In 1912, aviator Harriet Quimby, 37, was killed along with her passenger, William Willard, when they were thrown out of Quimby's monoplane at the Third Annual Boston Aviation Meet. In 1934, Hollywood began enforcing its Production Code subjecting motion pictures to censorship review. In 1946, the United States exploded a 20‐kiloton atomic bomb near Bikini Atoll in the Pacific. In 1965, "The Great Race," Blake Edwards' big‐budget homage to oldtime slapstick comedy starring Jack Lemmon, Tony Curtis and Natalie Wood, was released by Warner Bros. In 1974, the president of Argentina, Juan Peron, died; he was succeeded by his wife, Isabel Martinez de Peron. In 1980, "O Canada" was proclaimed the national anthem of Canada. In 1995, rock‐and‐roll disc jockey Wolfman Jack died in Belvidere, North Carolina, at age 57. In 2000, Vermont's civil unions law, which granted gay couples most of the rights, benefits and responsibilities of marriage, went into effect. The Confederate flag was removed from atop South Carolina's Statehouse (in a compromise, another Confederate flag was raised on the Statehouse grounds in front of a soldier's monument). Actor Walter Matthau died in Santa Monica, California, at age 79. In 2004, actor Marlon Brando died in Los Angeles at age 80. Ten years ago: Justice Sandra Day O'Connor unexpectedly announced her retirement from the U.S. Supreme Court (she was succeeded by Samuel Alito). Rhythm‐and‐blues singer Luther Vandross died in Edison, New Jersey, at age 54. Five years ago: California lawmakers approved a $20 million settlement with the family of Jaycee Dugard, who was kidnapped as a girl and held captive in a secret backyard for 18 years by a paroled sex offender. At least two suicide bombers attacked a popular Muslim shrine in Pakistan's second largest city, Lahore, killing some three dozen people. One year ago: David Greenglass, the star witness in the trial of his sister, Ethel Rosenberg, and her husband, Julius, died in New York City at age 92. (The Rosenbergs were executed in 1953 for conspiring to pass secrets about the atomic bomb to the Soviet Union; Greenglass served 10 years in prison for espionage followed by years of living under an assumed name.) Today's Birthdays: Actress Olivia de Havilland is 99. Actress‐dancer Leslie Caron is 84. Actress Jean Marsh is 81. Actor Jamie Farr is 81. Bluesman James Cotton is 80. Actor David Prowse is 80. Cookiemaker Wally Amos is 79. Dancer‐choreographer Twyla Tharp is 74. Actress Genevieve Bujold is 73. Rock singer‐actress Deborah Harry is 70. Movie‐TV producer‐director Michael Pressman is 65. Actor Daryl Anderson is 64. Actor Trevor Eve is 64. Actor Terrence Mann is 64. Rock singer Fred Schneider (B‐52's) is 64. Pop singer Victor Willis (Village People) is 64. Actor‐comedian Dan Aykroyd is 63. Actress Lorna Patterson is 59. Actor Alan Ruck is 59. Rhythm‐and‐blues singer Evelyn "Champagne" King is 55. Olympic gold medal track star Carl Lewis is 54. Country singer Michelle Wright is 54. Actor Andre Braugher is 53. Actor Dominic Keating is 53. Actress Pamela Anderson is 48. Rock musician Mark Pirro is 45. Rock musician Franny Griffiths (Space) is 45. Actor Henry Simmons is 45. Hip‐hop artist Missy Elliott is 44. Actress Julianne Nicholson is 44. Actress Melissa Peterman is 44. Rock musician Bryan Devendorf (The National) is 40. Actress Liv Tyler is 38. Bluegrass musician Adam Haynes (Dailey & Vincent) is 36. Actress Hilarie Burton is 33. Actress Lynsey Bartilson is 32. Actress Lea Seydoux (LEE'‐uh say‐DOO') is 30. Actor Evan Ellingson is 27. Actors Andrew and Steven Cavarno are 23. Thought for Today: "In an age of multiple and massive innovations, obsolescence becomes the major obsession." ‐ Marshall McLuhan, Canadian communications theorist (1911‐1980). Share your stories Got a story to share? A favorite memory of your AP days? Don't keep them to yourself. Share with your colleagues by sending to Ye Olde Connecting Editor. And don't forget to include photos! Here are some suggestions: ‐ "My boo boos ‐ A silly mistake that you make"‐ a chance to 'fess up with a memorable mistake in your journalistic career. ‐ Multigenerational AP families ‐ profiles of families whose service spanned two or more generations. ‐ Volunteering ‐ benefit your colleagues by sharing volunteer stories ‐ with ideas on such work they can do themselves. ‐ First job ‐ How did you get your first job in journalism? ‐ Connecting "selfies" ‐ a word and photo self‐profile of you and your career, and what you are doing today. Both for new members and those who have been with us a while. ‐ Life after AP for those of you who have moved on to another job or profession. ‐ Most unusual place a story assignment took you. 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