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Second-Day Lede
Wednesday, May 19, 2004
  Questions somebody should be asking

This is the most-linked-to item in the Blogosphere today, according to Daypop. For those who prefer not to follow that trendy link, I'll summarize: a childless heterosexual couple married 8 years went through extensive fertility testing, during which doctors discovered they'd never had sex and didn't know what it was. The doctors blamed the couple's religious upbringing. The pair are now being trained in the proper procedure.

Question 1: Why would anyone encourage these people to reproduce?

Next, why is firing live ammunition into the air anybody's tradition for celebrating anything?

Finally, one of the main points made by those who doubt the official story about what happened to Nick Berg and when is this: the executioner is wearing a gold ring, which is forbidden in Islam. That leads us to our last question for today:

Wearing a gold ring is forbidden in Islam, but beheading a hostage isn't?
 
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...another look at the news and the industry that delivers it to us


By Janet Dagley Dagley

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What's a Second-Day Lede?

"Second-day lede" is journalistic jargon for putting a new spin on a story for a second or subsequent news cycle. A 'lede" is the lead sentence of an article, deliberately misspelled to make it more easily recognizable as jargon. Once upon a time, news moved in daily cycles, but now it has become a constant flow of rewrites and "second-day ledes."

Second-Day Lede is also the name of this blog, where you'll find commentary on the news, and especially on the industry that cultivates, harvests, processes, packages, distributes and delivers it to us.

Who's writing this stuff?

A veteran of more news cycles than she'd care to admit, Janet Dagley Dagley entered the profession of journalism as a teenager, covering local government meetings at night for the Dayton Daily News in Ohio, becoming a full-time staff writer at 18 and later moving on to the Orange County Register and Los Angeles Times (Orange County Edition). Over the years she has worked as a freelance writer, editor, and radio producer in the U.S. and Europe. Although she has won numerous awards, she lost both times major metropolitan dailies submitted her work for the Pulitzer Prize in Feature Writing, and also lost on Jeopardy! (though she did win a trip to Hawaii). Most recently, she was editor of AIRSPACE, the journal of the Association of Independents in Radio, a U.S.-based group of public-radio producers, and a member of the AIR Board of Directors. She has been blogging independently at The Dagley Dagley Daily since February, 2003.




Recently on Second-Day Lede...


Lord of the Hats in the Ring?


The News Story that Wasn't


Why Same-Sex Marriage isn't for the Majority, or the States, to Decide


Homophobes Attack Heterosexual Marriage


Truffle-Skin Ballots may be Our Only Hope





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