Jon Jansen writing for the Freep

Submitted by M-Wolverine on

(As well as doing a Q&A and video segments on website).

Didn't he get the memo?  ;-)

Feel free to ask him why (politely and logically) at:

[email protected]

Section 1

May 30th, 2010 at 2:38 PM ^

That was the first thing.  Before anything else, I thanked him for what he's done for our alma mater.  Before I even saw this message thread.  Here's how it went:

Dear Jon;

 
Thank you very much for all that you've given to our alma mater, the University of Michigan.  Your new association with the Detroit Free Press will no doubt be a great thing for fans of NFL football and the Detroit Lions.
 
But your association with the Free Press also is a bit disturbing to people like me who are still furious over the reporting done by Mark Snyder and Michael Rosenberg of the Free Press; reporting that Jon Chait of The New Republic called "journalistic malpractice" and that Michigan's counsel in the pending NCAA case called "exaggerated if not flatly incorrect."
 
Of course no one blames you for reporting and editorial decisions that you had no part of.  But the Free Press appears determined to defend its indefensible history on this particular story, and to filter out all Free Press criticism.  Will your Free Press association prevent you from speaking out on this issue?  It seems like an important one to me, wherein the Free Press appears to be doing everything in its power to undercut Head Coach Rich Rodriguez, at a time when Coach Rodriguez needs every measure of support from every loyal Michigan alum.
 
Best wishes and Go Blue.
 
Naturally, I left him my full name, telephone number, city, year of graduation from LSA and law school, etc.  You don't have to click on any Free Press link to send Jon Jansen e-mail at that address.  There's no benefit to the Free Press that I can see.  If I were a fan of NFL football or the Detroit Lions (I'm not), I'd think that a column and/or a blog by Jon Jansen would be very interesting.
 
Still, I think it's important to let keep up the messaging with respect to the Free Press.  It works, with your Congressman, it works with "city hall" and it works in the court of public opinion.  Drew Sharp, on his radio gig last week, said that the Free Press' Michigan story was "the most toxic story [he had] seen in [his] career at the Free Press."  He didn't mean it as a compliment to MGoBlog.  I took it as a compliment to MGoBlog. 
 
If Jon Jansen has heard all that he wants to hear about Stretchgate, well, so be it.  If the Freep screens out all of Jansen's e-mail on this, well, I guess that's Jon's business with Freep.com.  If Jon Jansen really doesn't know about all of this (!?), please, somebody, send him a link to MGoBlog.  Jansen ought to know better; he's a smart guy who did some interesting stuff with the local Washington DC media when he was with the Redskins.  I don't expect him to quit the Free Press in protest and solidarity with the Ann Arbor Torch & Pitchfork Club.  I don't even expect him to speak out against Rosenberg, although he might.  (It'd be funny to see the Freep attempt to fire him if he did -- it would be like the Seinfeld episode where Kramer got 'fired' from the company where he was going to work without having a job there.)  What I do expect is that Jon Jansen will learn the lesson that Drew Sharp has undeniably learned -- that this is one of the the most toxic episodes in the Free Press' checkered history.

MGoRob

May 30th, 2010 at 2:39 PM ^

The problem is the Freep employs Rosenberg and Snyder and therefore we have boycotted the entire paper for their agenda-based articles and investigations.  Frankly, if the Freep were to fire both of their asses tomorrow and hire some new writers, then I would slowly go back to reading the paper.  So if the Freep wants to hire Jansen then perhaps he's just the type of person to write "pro" Michigan articles there and provide a more well-rounded journalistic experience.  And that, my friends, is something we can all hope for.

Section 1

May 30th, 2010 at 2:46 PM ^

I think that Jansen's "beat" will be the the NFL and the Lions.  Appropriately so.  But everybody at the Freep answers to an editor, and it might be interesting to know who Jansen's editor is.  Because there was a senior or managing editor who had to sign off on Rosenberg's use of anonyomous sources.  That is, if the Free Press Ethics Policy has any meaning at all.

jg2112

May 30th, 2010 at 2:55 PM ^

If you think about it hard enough (which, shouldn't be hard at all), where Jansen publishes his opinions doesn't matter.

But, you're naive if you don't think he'll impart pro-Michigan information in his stories. And, if you really want to read what he's writing, no doubt dozens of posters on this board will find ways to get the information into the public sphere.

Michigan fans want more even-handed coverage from the Freep, so they hire a Michigan grad to write about the Lions and his personal experience. Michigan fan's reaction: "He Doesn't Get Our Rivalry With the Freep."

Head hurts.

panthera leo fututio

May 30th, 2010 at 6:29 PM ^

My issue with the Freep isn't that their sports articles on the whole tend to have an anti-Michigan slant.  My problem is that they publish poorly researched and demonstrably dishonest articles and then refuse to publish appropriate retractions/follow-ups when they are exposed as such.  Hiring an additional writer with a Michigan background does nothing to address this.

jg2112

May 30th, 2010 at 7:20 PM ^

So, I presume then that you disapproved of the painstaking work that the Freep did uncovering the Kwame Kilpatrick scandals which ultimately proved he was lying under oath, and led to his resignation?

Or, do you not care about that because it didn't affect the football team you cheer for?

As for the Michigan football thing, get over it. Michigan has by their submissions last Monday. You need to as well. if you don't think Sharp and Rosenberg will write pro-Michigan pieces once the team is again successful, you're simply being myopic.

Section 1

May 30th, 2010 at 7:29 PM ^

The Free Press "broke" that story when Michael Stefani violated an order of the Wayne County Circuit Court and gave copies of the incriminating text messages to the newspaper.  Thereafter, the Freep did three things.  They read the texts, published the juicy ones, and then enlisted Herschel Fink to defend the Free Press in court.

Section 1

May 30th, 2010 at 7:38 PM ^

I'm pretty sure he's pro-Sharp, but you never know.  The guy's got a screw loose, to listen to him on the radio, which I do, infrequently, whenever I think he might be slandering Michigan again.

Last week was "cheating" week.  "They're cheaters!" Sharp said on-air.  "Let's just say it; they were cheating.  Cheating, and they got caught!"  This was after David Brandon gave Drew Sharp much, much more courtesy and professionalism than he deserved, in answering Sharp's provocation about "cheating."

panthera leo fututio

May 30th, 2010 at 8:37 PM ^

If you don't think Sharp and Rosenberg will write pro-Michigan pieces once the team is again successful, you're simply being myopic.

The whole point of my post was that I'm not terribly concerned with whether Freep sports articles tend to be either pro- or anti-Michigan, but I am fairly concerned that their editorial staff doesn't seem to find it terribly important to meet basic journalistic standards.

Granted, I haven't followed closely the Freep's handling of many other stories, but I find it difficult to believe that a staff that handled Stretch-gate as poorly as the Freep has would display competence and integrity in everything else it does.

johnvand

May 30th, 2010 at 11:37 PM ^

In both the Kilpatrick and Stretchgate reports, the Freep's methods were to get a hold of information via shady behavior, then file FOIA requests for the stuff they already had.  Making it look like they were good journalists.

There's nothing respectable about that paper.  At all.

mgovictors23

May 30th, 2010 at 3:38 PM ^

Even though I like Jon Jansen, I won't read the Free Press as long as Snyder, Rosenberg, and Sharp work their. If they ever fire them like they should I'll read Jansen's articles.