Writing Boots

On communication, professional and otherwise.

Speechwriter wants to herd fellow colleagues in U.K. Good luck!

05.11.2009 by David Murray // Leave a Comment

British freelance speechwriter Brian Jenner is trying to organize speechwriters in his country into a UK Speechwriters' Guild to establish industry standards, share trends, offer professional development courses and "persuade UK business leaders, professional speakers and politicians of
the great value which specialist speechwriters can bring to their
commercial and public life."

An ambitious move in a place where the speechwriting profession is even more amorphous than it is in North America. Whatever Brian achieves with this venture will benefit us all, so I wish him luck and offer my support.

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Newspapers without copy editors and proofreaders—blogs in print

05.11.2009 by David Murray // 4 Comments

If you're going to be snotty book-reviewer type, you've got to have the facts right.

Alas, Heller McAlpin had one fact dramatically wrong when she declared yesterday in the lead of her Boston Globe review of Christopher Buckley's memoir, Losing Mum and Pup:

Oh boy, William F. Buckley Jr. must be rolling in his Sharon, Conn., grave. … [H]is only son, Christopher, came
out in a Daily Beast column this past fall with, “Sorry, Dad, I’m
Voting for Obama”—a defection that led to his readily accepted
resignation from the New Republic, the conservative magazine his father
started in 1955 and for which dad wrote 5,600 columns.

Well if he wasn't rolling at the Obama vote, he was rolling at his magazine, The National Review being mixed up with the liberal magazine, The New Republic (whose founders were probably also rolling, albeit to the left).

Those who would cast stones at McAlpin have obviously never had a similar brain cramp.

No, the problem is a lack of copy editors. This is the kind of mistake that almost surely would have been caught by a pair of well-educated, well-trained fresh eyes—the kind that newspapers have been laying off in droves. (Getting their asses kicked by blogs and freewheeling online media, newspapers respond by cutting one of the job functions that distinguish themselves from blogs and online media.)

As a young writer I laughed at some of the copy editors and proofreaders who I worked with. Behind their backs, I called them the placekickers of the editorial football team. I pointed out that they're often misfits, with nervous ticks and odd rashes. And I denigrated their contribution as trivial.

I don't do that anymore.

Immature people characterize quality control as "anal." Immature societies do too.

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The part of the Drew Peterson story that matters

05.09.2009 by David Murray // Leave a Comment

For four months I explored how authorities in Bolingbrook, Will County,
and at the Illinois State Police managed to let a screaming woman slip
silently through the cracks. So why couldn't I tear myself away from a
week-old Sports Illustrated to watch the Drew Peterson arrest coverage? Asked, and answered in my latest HuffPo.

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