dubtom wrote: So what's actually involved, qualifaction wise, to become a journo, be it tabloid or otherwise.Years of college,post grads, masters?What leap does it take after all those years of grinding to then write for a paper like the sun or star,which are,lets face it, absolute ****e. Or perhaps a career in model/celeb chasing, where one of them goes to a restaurant and farts and it gets the front page. I know we all have to earn a buck but when it comes to you dishing out drivel or worse,just filling page with uncredited tripe, you know the stuff that sits at the side of the page,usually stuff just repeated from an earlier page, is it not time to think of a new career.I know these rags probably sell thousands every day, so someone's reading,their popularity can't be still because of page 3. But does the fact that thousands are reading your drivel not make it drivel, in other words,is it enough to be read.Or do these rags pay humongus wages. I'm just asking like.
santosubito wrote: A basic grasp of grammar helps, like.
dubtom wrote: Was it just the one grammer slip up santo, like,or have my dreams been dashed so soon after realising that my 'Group cert' results would be enough for a career as a hack.
Deleted User wrote: Subs are there to knock copy into shape, so you don't need to be a brilliant writer unless you want to write 4,000 word features.
monument wrote: Two things on that, while you might not need to be a brilliant writer, being a half decent one helps (and, as you said, there is a lot more then writing to it), and while no matter what you do your editor or a sub may edit copy but the better your copy is the less of a chance it'll be messed around with.
santosubito wrote: The Joe O'Reilly case was a fine example: the number of subs in several papers who changed perfectly good copy into something dangerous was, frankly, scary.
flogen wrote: A question in relation to this - do you think this happening was the result of bad sub editing skills in general or was it an active attempt by some subs (be it through their own decision or a demand from above) to "liven up" the copy; something that's a dangerous thing to do in such a high profile murder case?
Riviere wrote: Before we lose the run of ourselves here, how do we know that the copy was 'perfectly good' before it landed at the newsdesks or backbenches? Which several newspapers were the ones in question? Give us direct examples from these several newspapers of how 'perfectly good' copy had 'dangerous' mistakes inserted by subs.
It's quite common for wholesale changes to be made to straight court reports: background information is often stitched in and/or the copy needs to be rewritten. However, this is usually done at newsdesk or backbench level and rarely by the subs, unless they are experienced. Reporters don't like it, but that's tough. The notion that fresh-out-of-college kids have carte blanche to go mental and change high-profile court cases without the finished product being checked by the backbench and/or a lawyer is fanciful, to put it mildly.
flogen wrote: That's interesting. A question in relation to this - do you think this happening was the result of bad sub editing skills in general or was it an active attempt by some subs (be it through their own decision or a demand from above) to "liven up" the copy; something that's a dangerous thing to do in such a high profile murder case?
Riviere wrote: Why was the number of subs so scary? It's usually one sub per story in most newspapers. 'Several' newspapers would mean, er, several subs. Maybe the fact that the copy was changed into something dangerous by subs in several newspapers was scary? 'Reporters need to be able to write very well.' Indeed. Before we lose the run of ourselves here, how do we know that the copy was 'perfectly good' before it landed at the newsdesks or backbenches? Which several newspapers were the ones in question? Give us direct examples from these several newspapers of how 'perfectly good' copy had 'dangerous' mistakes inserted by subs. It's quite common for wholesale changes to be made to straight court reports: background information is often stitched in and/or the copy needs to be rewritten. However, this is usually done at newsdesk or backbench level and rarely by the subs, unless they are experienced. Reporters don't like it, but that's tough. The notion that fresh-out-of-college kids have carte blanche to go mental and change high-profile court cases without the finished product being checked by the backbench and/or a lawyer is fanciful, to put it mildly.
Riviere wrote: Why was the number of subs so scary? It's usually one sub per story in most newspapers. 'Several' newspapers would mean, er, several subs. Maybe the fact that the copy was changed into something dangerous by subs in several newspapers was scary? 'Reporters need to be able to write very well.' Indeed.
Riviere wrote: It's quite common for wholesale changes to be made to straight court reports: background information is often stitched in and/or the copy needs to be rewritten. However, this is usually done at newsdesk or backbench level and rarely by the subs, unless they are experienced. Reporters don't like it, but that's tough. The notion that fresh-out-of-college kids have carte blanche to go mental and change high-profile court cases without the finished product being checked by the backbench and/or a lawyer is fanciful, to put it mildly.
santosubito wrote: By the way, writing on a board like this is completely different to writing in a newspaper. So you'll forgive me if the standards I use professionally are not the same as here.
santosubito wrote: Anyway, here's a perfect example. The trial heard that Joe O'Reilly told Rachel's parents that there were rumours circulating that they had abused their daughter. A sub on the Mail changed that to there were rumours that he had abused Rachel. That's a pretty big change for a sub to make. And it was a downtable sub. It certainly wasn't anyone on the backbench. Then The Mirror reporter had a piece that Nikki Pelley stayed over at the O'Reilly home when Rachel was away: that was changed to they had sex in her bed! Or what about the Sun saying the couple had sex three times a week when the copy merely said they met up three times a week? Or what about The Star saying O'Reilly and Pelley had an affair when (at that stage) the evidence only said they were close? The Times and Indo were also guilty of putting in mistakes to reporters' copy, but not as serious as the bove. All changes made by subs.
santosubito wrote: I could go on for quite some time. The standard of subbing in this country is a disgrace. And if you work in any national newspaper, you will have seen the number of young subs, with the minimum of experience, working there.
santosubito wrote: Well, surely you must recognise that the O'Reilly case (as an example) did not see every story handled by one sub every day in the same newspaper? So, I think it is fair to say there were several subs involved in the subbing operation for each newspaper on that case alone. I hope that clarifies things for, er, you.
santosubito wrote: That's nonsense. In all the papers for which I have worked, the subs change copy, be they experienced or not.
dubtom wrote: It's quite revealing how those, and I'm reading between the lines here, involved or aspiring to get involved in the trade take offence at my original post and resort to taking on the role as editor. If I wanted advice on my grammar and writing I'd have posted to the creative writing forum. If your skills are up to the mark you should not feel the need to defend or ridicule, why do you?
santosubito wrote: All changes made by subs.
monument wrote: I don't know what you expected with the tone of the first post... as I said - to be honest it isn't clear if you were just taking pot shots at the media, or wanted answers, or maybe both. With all of those, how can you be so sure? Was it agency copy you had a chance to see? Otherwise, I'd love to know how you are so sure it was the subs and not a the reporters (or could it have been the news editor, or the editor, or other depending on the paper?).
Riviere wrote: Nonsense? Of course subs change copy. I never said they didn't. I stated that most of the major changes (adding background, major rewrites etc) to important court copy is usually done at backbench level and rarely by the subs, especially the inexperienced ones. That's been the case in almost all of the papers on which I've worked I thought the post was quite clear, but maybe it needs a rewrite.
Riviere wrote: Fine, but perhaps you should extend the same courtesy to the posters you constantly flame for poor grammar and so on. Unless you saw the original filed copy and were in the newsrooms of each of these newspapers on the nights in question, how can you say that these transgressions were down to the subs? Agreed. However, let us not forget that for every bad sub there's at least one equally bad reporter out there. The general standard of filed copy in this country is also abysmal, in my experience.
santosubito wrote: You're quite right. Where I work at the moment there are some very good subs (and some very bad ones). But there are also several really bad reporters. And I've noticed the same in other papers. Obviously, I only see it from a reporter's perspective but my sub friends on the paper do moan about the standard and writing by reporters, both freelance and staff. So, in essence, there are an anwful lot of crap reporters and subs:mad: