My first day of employment in a newspaper office was in mid-August 1963 as a copy boy at the Minneapolis Morning Tribune. I've been working in some form for KSTP radio continuously since September 1983.
As I've covered and commented on ballgames, I've always had confidence that the news side across the way and the TV newsroom downstairs were going to be allowed to take on important and interesting issues to the best of their ability.
I've always had confidence that there were ownerships willing to say, "Yes, we're going to go with it, even if it costs us some readers or viewers or advertisers."
It was a great moment in Twin Cities journalism in November 2014, when KSTP owner Stan Hubbard was scheduled for an appearance at Augsburg. It was in the middle of the "Pointergate" brouhaha — then-Minneapolis mayor Betsy Hodges was alleged to be making "gang signs" in a photo — and outsiders wondered if Hubbard would show up.
Are you kidding me? He faced down the protesters demanding an "apology," reinforcing to them that an independent newsroom was more important than noise.
I don't think newspapers and TV stations should be out there on their own in occasionally sacrificing profit and standing up to the noise; it should be all major businesses, and particularly those of high visibility.
Or to put it more clearly: My view is that major league sports leagues and teams — which have fed gluttonously at the public trough — should be expected to take fair-minded stands, even when those might cut into profits.
There are situations hanging over the NFL and Major League Baseball today that show both leagues and all 62 teams to be hostages to a fraction of the billions that they might lose, to have shriveled in fear of the noise.
The situations are very much different, even if the reaction of the leagues has been the same: