First Poynter KSU award goes to
Poynter’s point person
When the first Poynter KSU Excellence
in Media Ethics award was handed out today (Thursday, Sept. 18), it seemed
almost pre-determined that it would go to Bob Steele.
Bob Steele |
After all, he IS the Nelson Poynter Scholar for
Journalism Values who has taught hundreds of workshops and thousands of
journalists and media leaders at Poynter seminars since 1989.
And the Poynter
Ethics faculty moderates the KSU Poynter workshop.
Colleges all over the country do this mutual back-scratching and back-patting thing, so it's not only at Kent State. If a celebrity will show up at a college graduation, they'll give him an honorary doctorate even if he can't spell the words.
The Poynter KSU Media Ethics Workshop
in Kent is the 10th organized by former BJ editor Jan Leach, on the
Kent State faculty – a role many ex-BJ management people wind up with.
Steele
continued in the Poynter Values Scholar role after he joins his alma mater, DePauw
University in Greencastle, Indiana, as the Eugene S. Pulliam Visiting
Distinguished Professor of Journalism. He teaches journalism ethics classes to
DePauw students and also serves as a scholar-in-residence at DePauw’s Janet Prindle Institute for Ethics.
He
co-authored “Doing Ethics in Journalism,” originally published by The Society
for Professional Journalists. He spent ten years as a broadcast journalist.
The
Poynter KSU Media Ethics Workshop is a one-day training program for
professionals, educators and students which examines media ethics. It is moderated
by the Poynter ethics faculty.
KSU’s
School of Journalism and Mass Communication is in its 77th year.
The BJ’s Bruce
Winges and Doug Oplinger and the PD’s Connie Schultz have participated in
previous Poynter KSU Ethics workshops.
The first
time I met Nelson Poynter, the St. Petersburg Times owner, was for the monthly ushering
of new Times personnel into his grandiose office (much more pretentious than
John S. Knight’s corner office, which is another reason JSK towered over
Poynter and other newspaper owners for decades).
The custom
was to round up everyone who had been employed within the 30 most recent days
and have Poynter welcome us to his royal playground and give us a glimpse of his
philosophy.
He’s not
John Knight. But, then, who is or was?
I will give
Nelson Poynter this: His newspaper was lightyears ahead of the BJ and most
other newspapers when it came to technology, particularly the German printing
presses.
I was at the St. Pete Times (they hate and ban using “Pete”) in 1966-67 and it
was 20 years later before the BJ achieved the level of color quality that I
worked with in St. Petersburg.
We all have
our areas of superiority.
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