At the state's nicest train station in Secaucus, some of the platforms are under the roadway of the New Jersey Turnpike, above. |
The Frank R. Lautenberg Rail Station at Secaucus Junction opened on Dec. 15, 2003. |
By VICTOR E. SASSON
EDITOR
Thirteen years after 9/11, nothing could be more powerful and emotional than this morning's live telecast of family members reading out loud the names of the victims.
And their personal messages to the dead can bring tears to your eyes.
In our TV age, The Record and other print media seem obsolete.
That's especially the case today with yet another 9/11 column by one of the Woodland Park newsroom's stale voices, Staff Writer Mike Kelly.
Never mind that his dated, unflattering thumbnail photo -- complete with shit-eating grin -- seems inappropriate on such a solemn occasion (A-1).
But why is he using the front page to call today "the anniversary of ... the unofficial start of the nation's war on terror [italics added]"?
What would make the war on terror "official" -- when the burned-out columnist says it is?
Writes ahead
His column was written ahead of today's ceremony at what was once known as Ground Zero.
But he's memorized such hackneyed details as bagpipes and the ringing of a bell, and presents them in his first paragraph, declaring another anniversary "has come."
Kelly also contributed nothing on Tuesday with his Page 1 anniversary column on the politically inspired George Washington Bridge lane closures in Fort Lee.
Here is one of his brilliant observations:
"In most New Jersey communities, traffic jams are viewed as the vehicular equivalent of cod liver oil."
Kelly then must be the journalism equivalent of strychnine.
Two GOP morons
A photo on A-9 today shows Mitt Romney, the last conservative Republican who ran for president and was defeated by a compassionate Democrat, and Governor Christie, the next conservative Republican heading for defeat, in the unlikely event he even gets the party's nomination.
On the same page, why does The Record's story on Christie's 12 outright or conditional vetoes of legislation only discuss two of them?
Environmentalists called his veto of a smoking ban at parks and on beaches "shameful."
"The governor sided with the tobacco lobby over protecting public health and the environment," said Jeff Tittel of the Sierra Club (A-9).
I'm still waiting for The Record's story on Christie vetoing more bills than any predecessor while portraying himself as a "compromiser" -- a fiction reporters like Charles Stile continue to peddle.
Hackensack news
Since a reform Hackensack City Council took office in July 2013, The Record has specialized in reporting largely negative news -- fueled by complaints from those who lost the election or were fired.
Today, a story on L-1 reports city Prosecutor Frank Catania Jr. has been charged in a complaint by the state Office of Attorney Ethics with "knowingly misappropriating a client's money in his private practice."
Another stale voice
In his Road Warrior column on the lane-closure scandal in Fort Lee, Staff Writer John Cichowski finally admits he has ignored commuters who ride NJ Transit buses and trains for nearly all of the 11 years he has been posing as the commuting columnist (L-1 and L-6 on Tuesday).
Indeed, he lists the subjects of his Road Warrior columns -- road safety, potholes, litter, neglected highways, confusing signs, E-ZPass "injustices" and the theft of "aluminum guardrails."
Of course, he doesn't mention he has made so many errors he is likely the only reporter who has prompted a reader to set up a Facebook page for his "bloopers."
Cichowski also mentions "The Road Warrior's 24 years at The Record," but doesn't say the original Road Warrior was Jeff Page.
He has demonstrated time and again he is no Jeff Page.
(201) magazine
I don't doubt Editor Amelia Duggan and other staffers at (201) magazine are well-meaning, but they often promise more than they can deliver.
On the cover of the September 2014 Fall Fashion Issue, Don Watros and Benedetta Casamento are listed as "fashion dynamos."
Then, Duggan's column on Page 14 says the Englewood couple "have a real passion for fashion -- the retail fashion industry that is."
Still, after that build-up, what is the explanation for why the wealthy president of Hudson's Bay Co. is wearing a rumpled, ill-fitting, off-the-rack suit in photos on Pages 8 and 73?
Surely, with Lord & Taylor and Saks Fifth Avenue in his Canadian company's portfolio, Watros can afford made-to-measure or custom-made clothing.
Indeed. His position demands it. Why settle for anything less?
The suit he is wearing on Page 74 is more like it.
0 comments:
Post a Comment