A sign in the unisex bathroom at Pushcart Coffee on Ninth Avenue and 25th Street in Manhattan. |
Shivering tourists on a walking tour of Manhattan's Theater District on Saturday, another frigid, sunless day. |
By VICTOR E. SASSON
EDITOR
A headline declaring "deep divide in D.C." certainly is familiar to anyone who has read a newspaper in the last few years.
But after months of hysteria in The Record and other media about Tea Party radicals and other Republicans taking full control of Congress and dismantling President Obama's health care law and other initiatives, reality has set in.
On Monday's front page, more than two months after the 2014 election, Columnist Herb Jackson reports voter turnout was pushed down "nationally to its lowest point since World War II," and ending gridlock is "overly optimistic, to say the least."
Jackson blames voter apathy on a "bitter election," but the media also are at fault for ignoring issues in favor of conflict and sound bites, and failing to reveal the lies in GOP attack ads.
However, the main headline on his column used the old "deep divide in D.C." and ignored the real truth -- no end to gridlock in the new Congress, despite Republican majorities.
Monday's A-2 carried another long correction of a story in the Local news section, the one on Sunday about Brendan Jordan, 7, the New Milford boy who died in a school accident.
Today's paper
Page 1 today is dominated by Staff Writer John Cichowski's Road Warrior column -- based on press releases, phone interviews and fatal accident reports (A-1).
If the past is any guide, Cichowski likely has committed a number of errors in citing state police data, and he continues to refer to pedestrian deaths as "crashes."
Weak laws
Cichowski should be calling for stronger laws to hold drivers criminally responsible for killing a pedestrian.
Now, drivers can use the excuse that they "didn't see" the pedestrian as a get-out-of jail card.
Older drivers
The challenges facing older drivers is another issue the lazy, demented reporter has neglected in the more than 11 years he has been writing the column.
That can be plainly seen today in the two photos that run in Local, where head Assignment Editor Deirdre Sykes and her deputy, Dan Sforza, hold up another older driver to ridicule.
Look at the helpless expression on the white-haired woman's face -- as captured by an ambulance-chasing freelancer -- after she drove her 2009 Honda Civic "over a guardrail and retaining wall and down an embankment at a condominium complex" in Ridgewood (L-3).
Of course, the woman didn't "drive" her car through the guardrail on Monday afternoon.
She likely mistook the accelerator for the brake pedal, a common error for elderly drivers.
Is driver retraining available for older drivers such as this woman?
Cichowski could care less, and Sykes and Sforza fear any such public service stories would deprive them of the filler accident photos they so desperately need to complete their weak local news report.
Second look
On Sunday, Columnist Mike Kelly criticized Governor Christie for not attending the funeral of another pedestrian, Cliffside Park Special Police Officer Stephen Petruzzello, who was killed by a driver who claimed she didn't see him (Opinion front).
But Kelly gets absolutely no editing, and thinks readers have nothing better to do than plow through a dozen long introductory paragraphs about Christie the football fan and a gubernatorial vacation.
The criticism appears on the continuation page, and many readers may have been so bored by all the background they never saw it.
It seems silly to tell someone who has been a columnist for more than 20 years: Put your criticism in the first paragraph and leave the background for later.
But it's necessary with Kelly, one of the paper's chief word pushers.
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