US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
    Culture

    Reliving connections with an 'Oscars' hero

    By Manli Ho and John B. Wood ( China Daily ) Updated: 2016-05-27 10:08:57

    Reliving connections with an 'Oscars' hero

    Former Boston Globe Spotlight Team editor Walter "Robby" Robinson (L) reunites with former Globe colleagues Manli Ho and John B. Wood (R) in San Francisco last month.[Photo provided to China Daily]

    Former China Daily journalists catch up with Boston Globe colleagues who found fame with Spotlight.

    "Spotlight", the movie named after the Boston Globe’s Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative team that in the early 2000’s wrote an explosive series on child sexual abuse within the Roman Catholic Church and its attendant cover-up, was a surprise winner at this year’s Academy Awards. But that was not the only surprise.

    Who could imagine that a story about shoe leather journalism, about the drudgery of digging for facts and knocking on doors, about the tedium of finding and poring over thousands of documents, could be depicted with such authenticity and yet be such an immersive and moving experience?

    Certainly not the members of the Spotlight Team, who, when approached by the filmmakers, wondered how a film could be made about a decidedly unglamorous process. "It would be like a film about how sausage is made", Walter "Robby" Robinson, the then head of the Spotlight Team, recalled recently.

    But since then, Robby Robinson and his colleagues "have been struck by lightening", as he put it. For journalists, this well-deserved paean to the professional ethos of a vocation which has been losing ground to the instant gratification Internet age is bittersweet.

    For us, this film is particularly meaningful because we had both worked at the Boston Globe. We and Robby Robinson came to the Globe during the heyday of print journalism, an era when the Washington Post’s Watergate investigations had created aspirations in every young reporter to become a Woodward and Bernstein.

    The Globe Spotlight Team was formed in 1970, modeled after the Times of London’s Insight Team to do investigations and to shine a "spotlight" into dark corners. Their reporters were not subject to a daily deadline, would take months to conduct their investigations, did not talk about what they were working on and were set apart from the rest of the newsroom, thus creating a somewhat mysterious aura. The stories they filed had to adhere to the strictures of journalistic discipline and ethics; they had to be airtight.

    By necessity, the reporters assigned to the Spotlight Team were not the flamboyant stars of the newsroom, nor the competitive self-promoters who needed to see their bylines on the front page every day. Instead, they had to be the solid, dogged, relentless, journeymen reporters, willing to go dark for months on end, and whose egos would not get in the way of the story.

    Even so, it took a confluence of time and events - when sexual abuse was no longer a hidden crime, and the fresh perspective of a new editor who was an outsider - for this story to break. It also took courage to continue to pull at the dangling thread that unraveled the whole piece of cloth, because unlike political or civic institutions, the Catholic Church had exercised centuries of moral authority over generations of the faithful who were raised to believe that it was the voice of God. Although the filmmakers made a valiant effort to show the pervasive hold that the Church had in Boston, and to show the Catholic backgrounds of some of the reporters themselves, it is just not possible to feel the depth of its grip in largely Catholic strongholds like Boston, unless one had seen it firsthand.

    Even non-Catholics felt the powerful culture of the church. One small example: in 1975, one of us, Manli, wrote a full page feature story on life at a Catholic convent. Permission had to be obtained from the Archdiocese of Boston for a reporter to spend three days in the convent and to interview the cloistered nuns who received a special dispensation to break their vow of silence. After the story hit print, it engendered a delirious response, both in the newsroom and in the community at large, carrying an impact that to us seemed so astonishingly outsized, even overshadowing other more serious newsworthy stories. Several readers even wrote in to admonish Manli for writing that it seemed a shame that no one else would be in the convent chapel to hear the beautiful ethereal singing of the praying nuns at dawn every day. "God hears them", one reader wrote.

    At the time, a fellow reporter praised Manli’s writing style, because he claimed, he wrote "AP moron style" in reference to the utilitarian wire service language used by the Associated Press. That reporter was Robby Robinson.

    Previous Page 1 2 Next Page

     
    Editor's Picks
    Hot words

    Most Popular
     
    ...
    黄A无码片内射无码视频| 久久亚洲精品无码播放| 无码精品人妻一区二区三区影院| 亚洲日本va午夜中文字幕久久| 国产羞羞的视频在线观看 国产一级无码视频在线 | 无码专区—VA亚洲V天堂| 中文字幕免费不卡二区| 国产精品ⅴ无码大片在线看 | 免费无遮挡无码永久视频| 五月丁香啪啪中文字幕| 天堂а√在线中文在线最新版| 国产成人无码专区| 国产网红无码精品视频| 无码人妻一区二区三区免费n鬼沢 无码人妻一区二区三区免费看 | 最近2019中文字幕| 中文字幕无码一区二区免费| 久久久久成人精品无码| 99精品人妻无码专区在线视频区| 无码精品视频一区二区三区| 亚洲中文字幕无码永久在线| 久久久久精品国产亚洲AV无码 | 伊人久久无码精品中文字幕| 中文字幕精品亚洲无线码二区| 无码的免费不卡毛片视频| 久久无码av三级| 精选观看中文字幕高清无码| 2024最新热播日韩无码| 狠狠躁狠狠躁东京热无码专区| 欧洲无码一区二区三区在线观看 | 精品人妻系列无码人妻免费视频 | 国产日韩AV免费无码一区二区三区 | 最好看更新中文字幕 | 区三区激情福利综合中文字幕在线一区| 亚洲中文字幕无码久久2020| 欧美日韩国产中文高清视频| 无码人妻精品中文字幕免费东京热| 亚洲毛片av日韩av无码| 日韩精品无码一区二区中文字幕 | 中文字幕av无码一区二区三区电影| 久久精品aⅴ无码中文字字幕不卡| 精品久久久久久中文字幕大豆网|