Pete Hahnloser

Green energy/tech reporter, burner, raver, graphic artist and vandweller.

  • 139 Posts
  • 502 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 6th, 2023

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  • Sadly, “you’ll never work in this city again” has been true for my entire career. What are you going to do? Walk across Main Street to the other paper?

    But it has never been an editor’s job to “push back on the folks who write articles,” which I thought would be the worst part of that sentence; literally, rewriting is what editors do. We don’t push back on staff, we push back on copy. A minor omission here, a glaring hole there, and – as a last resort – spiking a story until questions are answered.

    No one has felt any job security in this industry for at least 15 years. “You can’t say that” probably cuts both ways at this point.



  • This really isn’t all that surprising.

    I do want to set the record straight that Reed headed GateHouse before the reverse merger with Gannett (GH parent New Media Investment Group bought Gannett and took the name). I’ve worked for some inspiring leaders. I also worked for Mike Reed.

    Without getting too deep into the Reeds, consolidation was always going to come for the AP. Fewer members, lower dues; we touched on this just past the election with the layoff thread. But the structure of the AP is such that while most of what you’re running comes from dedicated national beat reporters (I’m looking at you, Marcia Dunn [who’s likely retired by now]) and state bureaus, when someone goes on a rampage and holes himself up in a department store in Bumfuck, Wash., the Bumfuck Daily Bugle sends copy and art to Seattle, where it then gets moved along to members while a reporter heads to the scene.

    You’re not getting that from Reuters. They’ll eventually get there should the story blow up.

    This is a stupid optics decision for shareholders. What Gannett should really be doing is ripping off the Band-Aid and ceasing to run wire copy decided on in Austin on dead trees nationwide.



  • You put forth some profound questions well above my pay grade.

    I prefer to view it as “what can I do to help myself and others?” I started out in journalism wanting to change the world. Then I hit my 20s. Then the buyouts accelerated.

    And I can’t change the world by rewriting press releases. It keeps my belly full, and I believe in what I do, but Jan. 20 looms large.

    Here’s the thing: The education system was intentionally gutted starting in the '80s to make critical thinking feel too hard, leading to where you’re at. If you want to screw the man, put in the effort to cultivate your own selection of news sources. It’s some upfront time, but then like a minute to add or remove sources.

    I’ve never really lived anywhere my vote counted at the federal level, but downballot races are important because that state rep starts up the ladder. Whether your presidential pick matters is relevant and perhaps feeling fruitless now, but 10, 20, 30 years down the line, who you picked for school board could be running in a federal election because you supported them, alongside those in your community.

    What can we do right now? This is going to be a dark period with some oncoming trains presenting as the light at the end of the tunnel. What we can do is vote people in at the bottom so they can eventually rise to the top.


  • Not saying you’re among them, but I think a lot of people neglect the ability of RSS to essentially roll your own morning paper from several disparate sources. Most of what I post on here is just waiting for me in a tab each morning … I have sections broken down into tech, news, politics, science and more.

    When a source stops being useful, I remove it. Anytime I run into a good piece from a new source, I attempt to subscribe (usually with success). This keeps my feed from calcifying, and Beehaw is often how I run into new things.