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Re: WEEI gets a ton of publicity



At 09:43 PM 3/28/2001 -0500, you wrote:
>Well Eileen is on shaky ground here as there is a conflict of interest.
>Her husband (Peter May) is a sportswriter for the Globe and is affected by
>the ban.

Umm, I know that's the Globe's spin, but I think it's a bit disingenuous. 
In our industry, lots of us are married to people who work in the same 
business (or even at the same newspaper or radio/TV station).  SO does that 
mean we lose our right to comment on a situation?  As I understand 
journalism ethics, you just issue a disclaimer (which she says she did in 
her article) and proceed.  Just because Eileen has a husband does that mean 
she isn't permitted to have opinions about his occupation (or about her 
own)?  She is a columnist.  She writes opinion pieces.  She is good at it-- 
she won a Pulitzer Prize, in fact.  In this case, she wrote about WEEI and 
about the Globe sportswriters, some of whom appear on radio shows every bit 
as offensive as the ones on WEEI.  Would the column have been spiked if she 
had agreed with the Globe's decision?  Call me cynical, but I doubt it.