Of my earthly possessions, one of my favorites is a USA Today newspaper box where I keep my old clips stored. In the window of the box is a copy of the paper’s first edition, printed on Sept. 15, 1982.
It wasn’t a great day for news. Princess Grace died in a car crash in Monaco. On the same day, a massive charter plane crashed en route from Spain to New York. Somehow, out of 382 passengers, 327 lived.
The paper took a calculated — and vilified — stance on the headline. “Miracle:” it began, “327 survive.”
Competing papers had a field day with us. Between our short stories, color photographs and full-page weather forecasts, we gained a reputation we’d never shake: Journalism Light.
Today, here were the top headlines from the Thanksgiving weekend:
- California’s fire contained; search for bodies continues
- Trump thanks himself for low oil prices
- MLB wants $5,000 donation back after senator’s comments
- Amway Coaches Poll: Georgia up to No. 4, Ohio State rises to 6
- Snow: 650+ flights axed on post-T’giving Sunday
- 49ers cut LB arrested on domestic violence charge
- Travelers scramble to get home ahead of blizzard
- 2 killed in shooting outside Orlando pizza eatery
Notice anything missing? Miracles.
Scratch that. Forget miracles. Simply find a positive story in the headlines.
After being eviscerated by The New York Times, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal and innumerable competitors, USA Today retreated from its unofficial editorial policy of putting at least one “bright” — a simply positive story — in its front pages.
What a mistake. If imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, then our decision to mimic the competition’s dour worldview was tantamount to a journalistic blowjob.
Well, screw the “No news is (going to be) good news” theorem. Particularly now, the idea that grimaces trump grins has left the media in lockstep with the nation’s fixation on sadness and anger. If anything, USA Today should make it editorially mandatory to note there is good in the world still.
To that end, The HB offers The Silver Linings Journal, outlining when media coverage is actually warranted: