Prior to Temple, David Boardman was executive editor and senior vice president of 'The Seattle Times'.
Photo by Joseph V. Labolito
Most journalists have a notepad in their back pocket and a pen in hand at all times especially when public figures speak at their local press club.
What a politician says during an appearance at a local press club is usually fair game for journalists. It s common to see newsworthy quotes on a journalist s Twitter feed for public consumption, especially as election day draws near.
But, in Philly, that s not the case, as David Boardman, dean of the School of Media and Communication, said in an op-ed for The Philadelphia Inquirer.
Philadelphia s infamous press club, The Pen and Pencil, routinely hosts and encourages off-the-record conversations between reporters and politicians. Since Boardman relocated to Philadelphia from Seattle, he has questioned this practice and is pushing for other journalists to do the same.
The P&P's policy strikes me as a vestige from another era, where reporters and politicians routinely kept each other's secrets, Boardman wrote. Philly journalists, it's time to enter the 21st century. Next time a politician speaks at your club, take out those pens and pencils and smartphones proudly and let the rest of us in on the conversation.
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