Pubdate: Sat, 25 Apr 2009
Source: Guelph Mercury (CN ON)
Copyright: 2009 Guelph Mercury Newspapers Limited
Contact:  http://news.guelphmercury.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1418
Author: Phil Andrews
Note: Phil Andrews is managing editor of the Guelph Mercury. His 
column appears Saturdays.
Referenced: The Pot-Smokers' Holiday 
http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v09.n471.a05.html
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Marijuana - Canada)

RADICALLY DIFFERENT VIEWS ON PROTESTS

I know a thing or two about how student protests can be covered by 
the media - from the protester perspective.

Twice while bagging an undergraduate degree at Laurentian University, 
I ended up in student protests. One was about the removal of a Canada 
Employment Centre from campus. If I ever knew what the other one was 
about -- and I might not have -- I forget.

I was swept up into the employment centre event when its organizers 
conscripted a group of us from a campus pub. We were cajoled into 
participating in the occupation of a federal office away from the 
school. We were herded onto a bus, briefed on the matter and fed the 
protest plan.

I had no prior knowledge of the matter and only ambivalence about it 
when it was explained to me. But, when the militant types later lost 
their edge, I agreed to be the first student to enter the targeted 
office and was on the local TV news for this act.

I remember engaging in some chanting because the TV cameras were on, 
then getting back on the bus and later watching myself on the news.

The second protest was less taxing. I remember being pulled from a 
cafeteria to demonstrate in front of another TV news crew -- on cue. 
I couldn't pick myself out on the news after that one. But I only 
stayed for the first take of feigned angry chanting and fist-waving 
ordered up by the organizers for the cameras.

It's a sorry record as a protester. But it's interesting background 
for someone who frequently fields requests to have journalists cover 
myriad protests.

Peter Haggert, whom I worked under at three newspapers, more 
profoundly influenced my opinion of such things. He felt news 
organizations too often allowed their reporting resources to be held 
hostage by anyone carrying a protest sign. He sent out journalists to 
cover them. But he did so when their numbers were huge or their 
passion was real or their efforts were impacting a lot of people 
trying to go about their business.

He had no time for covering the lone picket at the local MP's office 
or the like.

I thought of Haggert's protest coverage axioms and my dalliance with 
student activism this week in stewarding and defending coverage 
decisions surrounding the marijuana decriminalization smokefest at 
the University of Guelph Monday.

The 4/20 event - named, at least in part, because it formed part of a 
wide and annual protest each April 20, was well attended. That's one 
of the reasons we covered it. Monday's weather was dreary. Wet. Cold. 
Breezy. When we took in the day's weather, we assumed some sorry 
small lot would take part in the pot party and it might make for a 
rich, ironic, colour story. But our "serious grass fans missed the 
sun" headline was not to be.

Our journalists encountered hundreds of pot puffers. The weed 
advocates danced. They grooved. They took pulls on joints small and 
spectacularly oversized.

A story and photo landed on our Tuesday front page. A slide show of 
the action was our featured multimedia item on the Mercury's website 
for a spell.

Two reader objections reached me. I pointed out to each complainant 
that the protest attracted hundreds of participants locally -- a 
newsworthy and noteworthy size of civil and disobedient gathering. I 
also shared links to national media stories about 4/20 events 
elsewhere. The one on Parliament Hill looked lively too.

I convinced neither of the parties protesting the protesters' 
prominent play that the paper had done the appropriate thing.

Then again, maybe the word is out that back in the day I was quite a 
student radical myself.
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake