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f/k/a archives . . . real opinions & real haiku

September 2, 2008

the yawning gap in legal journalism

Filed under: lawyer news or ethics — David Giacalone @ 6:01 pm

The new issue of the D.C. Bar’s Washington Lawyer magazine arrived this afternoon, so I flipped through it to see if there was anything in it that might get me out of the post-summer energy funk mentioned in my post this morning. The most likely item seemed to be the cover story, “Legal Journalism at a Crossroads” (by Sarah Kellog, September 2008).  So, I rolled off my virtual hammock and, armed with a grande-sized mug of iced coffee, actually read through the 6000-word article.

The mag’s editors tease us by saying:

In–depth court coverage by mainstream media has given way to law–related Web sites, publications, podcasts, and blogs. Sarah Kellogg explores these mediums that are redefining what constitutes legal news.

And asking:

Should legal institutions, aided by the Web, fill that gap and tell the story themselves?

The article starts with the interesting question “Who will tell the public the story of the American legal system?”  And the author’s concluding paragraph tells us:

“What Web 2.0 and the proliferation of legal publishers’ sites may be telling us is that it is time to redefine legal journalism. It is no longer about newsgathering in a vacuum or from an ivory tower. It is evolving into a system where the role of news arbiter can be taken up by any individual or group with the passion, time, or money to do it.”

In between, there were quotes from interesting folk like the always-insightful journalism professor Mark Obbie (who “watches the journalists who watch the law, at his LawBeat weblog); Tim Mighell of Inter Alia; Amy Howe of the SCOTUSblog; and Jerry Goldman, who founded and oversees Oyez.org.

Unfortunately, as happens virtually every time I read an article in a bar association magazine, I came away feeling like I learned nothing new and gained no helpful new perspectives.  I’m no closer to knowing what “legal journalism” actually is or could/should be (including what subjects it covers), what the public might actually  want from news reportage about the legal system or the courts, or what can be done about a loss of objectivity and accuracy that might be endemic on the web.

I’m glad I read it, however, because it lets me warn you not to waste your time on it.  Instead, head for those last-minute “back to school” sales.  Watch the Republican Convention (or bone up on “age of consent” in Alaska).  Better yet, get out to see the sunset or grab an ice cream cone with someone you love.

sunset–
the town is buzzing
with dragonflies

eye-catching
over the sunset mountain…
a kite

the woodpecker works
one spot…
all through sunset

.. by Kobayashi Issa, translated by David G. Lanoue

hanging on to summer

Filed under: q.s. quickies — David Giacalone @ 11:56 am

widowwearswhite

– poem: David Giacalone
– photo: Arthur Giacalone

The New York Times editorial writers warned us yesterday just how fleeting and inadequate Labor Day 2008 would feel, for those who needed a buffer between summer and autumnal duties.  Appropriately titled “A Breathless Labor Day” (September 1, 2008), they concluded:

“So rest up, fast. However you recharge your energy and your idealism, recharge them now. The truth is that we’re going to need a Labor Day a week for the next couple of months, and this is the only one we’ve got. The next clearing in the calendar is Thanksgiving, and by then we’ll know what we’d all like to know right now. And Thanksgiving, it goes without saying, looks almost infinitely distant.”

The f/k/a Gang fully agrees.  We are no where near ready to give up our hammocks for a rush into the workaday world. Around here, it still feels like summer.

autumn heat
slapping the dust
from his jeans

first day of school
the girl smoothes a crease
in mom’s face

autumn sunset
papa resting
his eyes

autumn heat
the swelling
of a fresh tattoo

… by w.f. owen – (haiku notebookLulu.com, 2007)

Of course, if we find the energy, we might get back to this posting later today with a few more haiku to help us and you make the transition.

update (1 PM):  I don’t think Matt Morden is quite ready either, despite being back from his weblog hiatus:

holiday’s end
remembering only
a shaft of sun

… by Matt Morden – Morden Haiku, Sept. 2, 2008

September 1, 2008

free haiku for a labor-free Labor Day

Filed under: Haiku or Senryu — David Giacalone @ 11:06 am

The snowy egrets may have over-stayed their welcome in Wilows, California. (see L.A. Times, ”Egrets ruffle feathers,” Aug. 14, 2008). But, we can never have too much of the fine haiku selected for each edition of The Heron’s Nest.

Here are thirteen haiku written by f/k/a Honored Guests that appear in the newest edition of THN, which went online this morning — The Heron’s Nest (Vol. X, No. 3, September 2008)

early dusk
an inch of snow
on a half inch branch

morning clouds
the swan waddles
over a shallow part

…………………………. by paul m

cul-de-sac
the knife-grinder rings in
summer’s end

… by Roberta Beary

dawn frost
a screech owl finishes
the hunt

all the answers
in the back of the book —
summer solstice

…… by Alice Frampton

an eagle sighting —
the frailty
in my father’s hug

spring sun
her urn gathers
the whole family

… by Carolyn Hall

slow driver —
is he watching
the hawk?

… by Hilary Tann

behind our backs —
the sounds the ocean
covers up

… by Gary Hotham

a female mallard
leads two drakes —
spring morning

… by Barry George

my garden gloves
streaked with dirt —
meeting a monarch

… by Laryalee Fraser

from the lookout
mountain after mountain . . .
ant on the gravel path

… by George Swede

starlit sky
a touch of dampness
on the scarecrow

… by Yu Chang

This is going to be as labor-free as possible a Labor Day for the f/k/a Gang.  If you are looking for interesting blawger commentary today, you should head over to Simple Justice, as Scott Greenfield apparently never takes a day off.  For example, he talks about what “Labor Day 2008” means to him (and the “fudgy-wudgy man”).  Plus, in “Wearing the American Hat,” Scott looks at the reaction of McCain and Obama to Hurricane Gustave, and hopes that “this election offers two candidates at the top of their tickets who (despite the expected pandering, position shifting, vagaries and manipulation of reality to gain transitory advantage), will ultimately prove themselves to be sincere in their concern for the country.  What a wonderful change of pace.”  Worried he might be sounding a bit too “polyannaish,” Scott adds: “If America could only chose a president for the good reasons, we could have avoided so many of the problems that have plagued this country in recent years.”

Labor Day
the parade starts and ends
at the mall

.. by dagosan [Sept. 2, 2004]

.  . . .  As Ted and Walter at Overlawyered.com might have opined, had they observed Love Litigating Lawyers Day yesterday (Aug. 31st; see our post on Thursday), there’s one very good thing about LLL Day falling on the Sunday of a holiday weekend: Those dang lawyers couldn’t file any pesky lawsuits for three days in a row.

Labor Day
sweat on a glass
of lemonade

… by tom painting – Frogpond, Vol. 31:2 (Spring/Summer 2008)

p.s. Last year, weblogger George Lenard of George’s Employment Blawg never got the memo about taking Labor Day off. Instead, he produced the mammoth Blawg Review #124 – Labor Day Special Historical Edition, which includes a history of the American labor movement.  It seems that Blawg Review editor “Ed Post” associates Labor Day with excessive drinking and driving, as he assigned Blawg Review #175 to Jamie Spencer at the Austin DWI Lawyer weblog. Before I forget, the f/k/a Gang wants to salute D. Todd Smith, of the Texas Appellate Law Blog, for making last week’s Blawg Review #174 totally themeless.  As any good appellate counsel knows, the best presentations avoid unnecessary and distracting argument and explanation.

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