Last night, I went to hear a talk by Bruce Beehler. He’s the ornithologist/conservationist we wrote about last week. He has one of the great jobs in the world: to go to places that are still wild and document what is there. His talk was about his trips to the Foja Mountains on the Indonesian side of the island of New Guinea.
Beehler has been a prominent researcher for decades, but his work came to national attention in 2006, when his team’s findings after its first trip to the mountains were released. It was news around the world, and in his talk he discussed the quantum leap from humble obscurity to the the klieg lights of prominence. He showed a slide of all the newspaper clippings and said something like “Our findings were news around the world, maybe they were even in your own paper here….”
That’s when my stomach dropped. I wanted to yell out “We Did,” but I didn’t. Now I had read about his work in National Geographic, but the truth is couldn’t remember whether the Journal had run a wire story on the initial findings. It’s the sort of geeky science story I love, but there are a lot of those stories floating around out there. As an editor, you are constantly getting second-guessed and critiqued on what you ran and didn’t run, and you get used to it. But this was a different bird altogether. I didn’t know: Had we missed the research story of the year?
This morning, I made my way to the third floor, where our microfilm machine resides, and I started looking through past editions. And on Feb. 8, 2006, there was the story on Page 2, complete with a photo. Phew.
This isn’t to say that our coverage is perfect or that each and every day it is in perfect harmony with our readers think is the most important news of the day. That’s impossible. But what we strive to do is to give a snapshot of the world, from the mountains of Northwest New Guinea to Northwest North Carolina.
And for those who didn’t make it to the talk last night, here’s a slide show of what they found.
Your host is Ken Otterbourg, the managing editor at the Winston-Salem Journal. It's a forum to discuss the media, from