Wally's been staying with his grandfather in south Florida because his grandfather didn't want to leave his home, despite Hurricane Wilma, despite no power after the hurricane swept through. Here's Friday's entry (by the way, all headlines and stories at the end made the front page of The New York Times during which time, they couldn't cover Florida) "Return of the Jot:"
Where's the damn Daily Jot? Well we spent yesterday convincing my grandfather, my mom and me, that he couldn't continue to stay in his house. He was going to Mom's for Thanksgiving anyway so yesterday morning when he said he was thinking about leaving early, we packed up some stuff and talked to a few neighbors to make sure they'd keep a watch on his house. He's really not into driving at night, even when it's me driving, or maybe especially when it's me driving. So we headed out first thing this morning and once we got here, we unloaded my car.
I took a shower and sat down to jot.
Opened the e-mails and a lot of "more on Woodward!" I think C.I.'s pretty much covered it this morning with "NYT: Woody sees his shadow and goes back underground."
On Florida, I'll note this:
A Florida businessman has sued Florida Power & Light over Hurricane Wilma's massive blackouts, accusing the state's largest power company of gross negligence in failing to maintain power poles and other equipment. Wilma, which hit Florida on October 24, knocked out electricity to about 3.2 million FPL customers, leaving nearly 6.5 million people without lights, refrigeration or air conditioning, some for weeks.
The lawsuit, filed on Thursday in Broward County Circuit Court, seeks class-action status for the millions of people affected and alleges FPL, a unit of FPL Group Inc., violated a statutory duty to provide electricity.
Hurricane Wilma and the problems that came after was the story the media wasn't interested in.
That's too bad for them because there were a lot of stories there if they wanted to go looking. There were human interest stories and there were tales of alleged graft and dereliction.
I feel sympathy for the victims of Katrina and Rita (and don't consider myself a victim of Wilma) and agree that it's news but as one story after another repeatedly came on the radio in my grandfather's neighborhood, you'd hear a lot of anger that Florida was being ignored.
Was it about chasing down a story or was it about going after what made Anderson Cooper and others stars? Did we run out of sympathy? All the hurricanes hitting at once try our collective patience?
What ingredient was missing in Florida?
Not a high death toll didn't make us "sexy"?
I always thought the news was supposed to be about what was happening. I know that's not what we usually get. But a bunch of Floridians, many elderly, losing their homes, without power, coming together to help one another out, seems to me like there's about fifty stories there.
The national media seems ill equipped to cover more than three stories at a time. Makes you wonder what else goes on in our nation that we don't hear about. Not just in D.C. but all over.
The national media filed on New Orleans and apparently that was their hurricane story.
The people of New Orleans are still being screwed over. It's a story worth covering. It's too bad that when it comes to the people of the United States, we're only worth one story. But hey, Harvard's offering extension classes! And colic might be curable by tea, massage or everything!And "For One Student, A College Career Becomes a Career"! So how could Florida ever hope to compete with those important, must know stories?
the common ills
the daily jot
florida