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Daniel Cárdenas Sr. kisses the casket of his son Daniel, at the boy's funeral Tuesday. photo by Pedro Portal, El Nuevo Herald. |
"News is the deviation from the normal." -Miami Herald executive editor Janet Chusmir, quoted in the Herald, Feb. 2, 1988
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What Chusmir was talking about when she made that statement - almost 3 years before her death in December 1990 - is journalism's "man bites dog" rule. A rule
that says, "an unusual, infrequent event is more likely to be reported as news than an ordinary, everyday occurrence."
But if you looked at a copy of Tuesday's
Herald you might have noticed at least two stories on page 1 that run counter to the "man bites dog" rule.
Taking up much of the front page, left, was a
back to school story.
A story about kids going back to school at the end of summer. To most of us, that's an ordinary occurrence. Happens every year around this time. Yawn!
Another story gracing the
Herald's front page Tuesday was about
Haitian president Michel Martelly "having a hard time meeting expectations in his first months in office."
Stop the presses! Things
are not getting done in Haiti!! As sad as that is, many would consider that another "ordinary, everyday occurrence." OK, so it's news. But page one news? I think not.
What isn't an ordinary occurrence is three teenagers - their lives full of promise - having those lives snuffed out in a violent, horrific and senseless car crash.
That's what happened Saturday night in Doral
A car driven by
a 19 year old kid with an abysmal driving record, crashed into a light pole killing his three teenage passengers. The driver, Alberto de Jesús Coterón Oliva, survived and fled the scene of the crash. He later surrendered to police.
The
Herald tried its best not to
run the story. But the story - written by two
El Nuevo Herald reporters - ran anyway, on
page 4B....far from the prying eyes of casual readers of the paper.
To their credit, editors at
El Nuevo recognized this story as an important one and it ran on the paper's front page. They followed up today with another page 1 story and photograph of the funeral of one of the victims. (See photo above.)
This is not the first time the
Herald has attempted to protect its readers from the unpleasantness of death.
Late last year, the deaths of five Little Haiti teens in a Hialeah motel room
barely made it to page one.
Last November, 20 year-old Michael Beatty was chased down a Liberty City street in broad daylight and
gunned down by a thug with a Mac-10. The crime was caught on tape. But
Herald editors thought this was more violence than their squeamish readers could handle and the paper never printed a word about it.
But
Herald editors also shy away from other newsworthy stories.
A couple of weeks ago, an alert Miami police officer
arrested two Miami men who were driving around Miami in a 2002 Pontiac Bonneville that was a rolling arsenal. Inside the car the officer discovered a loaded 45 caliber Glock handgun with an extended magazine, a loaded AK-47 assault rifle and a 45 caliber Ruger handgun.
A Miami police officer told me, "these arrests probably prevented a drive-by shooting or a homicide."
Herald editors apparently decided that a story of two potentially violent felons being removed from the streets wasn't newsworthy enough. Nothing appeared in the paper.
Perhaps one of these days the
Herald will return to its original mission as outlined by Janet Chusmir in 1988: printing stories of "unusual, infrequent events," which at most other newspapers is still known as "news."