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by Whet Moser on September 23rd 2008 - 12:06 p.m.

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The one unquestionably positive thing I have to say about the Trib redesign--and I might be alone in not being wholly skeptical*--is that they're not neglecting obits (can't link directly to it, but in the tour look under Front Section, Legacies).

As someone who's mostly trained in features/literary journalism (including an immensely valuable and fun internship at the soon-to-fold Tempo section), I have an innate fear of "newsworthiness," and the fact that dying + being kind of interesting as a person is still considered newsworthy means that obits might be our last best hope for the form (until the economy gets better I'll have to scrap my plans for Obit Monthly). Anyway, support your local obits section, sometimes you find amazing things.

*Incidentally, re pictures: Some people will tell you that big pictures, because of eye-tracking charts, are useless. In other words, eyes don't stay on pictures very long. But that's crazy--of course they don't, the density of information is much lower. That doesn't mean they can't be used well. Just because a John Leax poem takes me a thousandth of the time to read as a book doesn't mean it's 1,000 times less good. More photo-oriented journalism, I think, would have made Americans more skeptical of the Iraq War, just as the unprecedentedly visual coverage of the Vietnam War undermined the official line.

I could get deep into the history and ethics of that, but kinda busy r/n. There's plenty of good literature on it.

And also: sometimes you just want to look at pictures, so I wanted to share my and my fiancee's gripe that the Trib's comprehensive Emmy red carpet photo gallery could stand to have wider pictures, kthxbye.


Comments
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Alison T
September 23rd - 12:43 p.m.
The obits have the best headline writers too. Today: http://tinyurl.com/3v222y
Koji
September 23rd - 6:54 p.m.
I always read the obits, and I think that it's important to still keep them. Some people (that do not understand why I like obits) think it's morbid, but I think it's just the opposite- a celebration of lives that were lived, and the featured obits in Trib, and NYT are great.

Mother Jones does a great job with photojournalism. The photos of amputees a few months or maybe about a year ago made me more skeptical of the war.




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