|
Eugene
Weekly 25th Anniversary Issue
What
are We Doing Here?
An introspective look at our unique publication
Starting
the Paper
Silver linings in cloudy times
Thanks
for the Memories
Getting
Readers Excited
Your editor reflects on nearly a decade of reader response
EW
Enviro
Self-Study
And
time goes on, and on, and…
Eugene Weekly Timeline
Getting
Readers Excited
Your
editor reflects on nearly a decade of reader response
By
Ted Taylor
What does it take to get people excited in Eugene
and surrounding communities? How about a little sex, a lot of politics?
How about government gone wild, locally and nationally? The stuff
of passionate living is found in these pages, and a lot of that
passion is in the form of reader response.
When I assumed the EW editor-in-chief position
in the summer of 1998, we were running only a handful of letters
each week, and the paper was much smaller in page counts and circulation.
One way we've grown the paper over the past nine-plus years is through
encouraging letters to the editor and guest commentaries.
It's been a wild ride for me, full of surprises
and providing me with a grand education. My previous newspaper job
was managing editor of Ashland's daily paper, a fun little rag in
a community that's uniformly liberal and polite compared to Eugene.
The diversity of opinion here is far greater (along with the level
of cynicism), and the political mix is far more intense and more
unpredictable.
The
Environment
EW pages are so full of environmental stories,
columns and letters that we have become a major environmental publication
in the state. One reason is the paper's mission — unlike other
media in town, we think humanity's impact on the natural world is
the biggest story of our time — and another reason is our
readers' response. Eugene is surrounded by outdoor recreation resources
and is one of the most environmentally aware cities in the world.
It shows in our institutions and our attitudes. And what makes it
all so politically charged is the clash between conventional wisdom
and broader new perspectives. Old timber money still reigns in Lane
County, and developers and polluters are hanging onto as much power
as they can. Read about it every week in EW.
Political
Expression
Our staff writers follow the political trends and
highlights in Lane County and our letter writers fill in the gaps
— they help us define the range of opinions and add nuance
to all the gray areas in the middle. We give priority to letters
and op-eds that advance arguments and keep us on our toes. Our letters
reflect the high level of education and knowledge in our readership
and carry on a tradition of healthy skepticism. In some ways we
are a typical college town when it comes to politics, but intensifying
the debate are influences of UO students and faculty, numerous environmental
and peace organizations and a heritage of feisty counterculture
activism.
The
Role of Violence
Another remarkable ongoing discussion in our pages
revolves around the role of violence in bringing about social and
political change. Eugene area residents are split a dozen ways on
what constitutes violence and when, if ever, it is justifiable in
defense of society or the environment. Some readers are convinced
that our entire planet is being destroyed by polluting corporations
and the military-industrial complex, and acts of sabotage are simply
last-resort acts of self-defense. Other readers say violent acts
are counterproductive and long-term progress will only come through
education, political action and peaceful protest. It's a fundamental
issue that plays out everywhere from playground dynamics to foreign
policy decisions. Eugene has been home to a number of activists
who have turned to arson and other acts of violence to advance political
ideals, so the discussion in our pages has particular local relevance.
And some of our readers have become so inflamed by the debate that
they vandalized our building and left us bomb threats.
The
Joys of Art
Is artistic expression the icing on the cake of
life, or does art define us and give hope for survival as a species?
Either way, art is a driving force in Eugene and fills our pages
each week. The music scene in town is remarkable in its variety
and quality, amazing painters and sculptors abound, and Eugene is
home to many world-class writers and performing artists. Living
artistically is what we do, and being an art critic in Eugene is
fraught with peril, as you might tell from our readers' letters.
Sexy
or Sexist?
One of the biggest controversies to play out on
our pages in recent years had to do with sexual images in our back-pages
advertising. Our readers must have come up with a dozen sides to
the issue. The ads were offensive, demeaning, objectifying, empowering,
expressions of free speech, supporting legitimate businesses, encouraging
prostitution and violence, immoral, pandering, fun, outrageous and
titillating. We heard from worried parents and lonely guys looking
for love. We heard from feminists who were highly offended and feminists
who thought the whole issue was silly. Add Dan Savage and his "Savage
Love" column to the mix, and we have created the liveliest discussions
of sex in media this town has ever seen.
A
Polarized Community?
Lane County and Eugene in particular are often viewed
as polarized, and EW is sometimes accused of provoking controversy
and contributing to the divisiveness. Is it true? Maybe. But in
Eugene, and probably the entire country, our best hope for progress
can be found in encouraging the clash of ideas.
|