The problem isn't election coverage itself, it is the non-stop blabbering about "if this" and "if that" which does not give anyone except political junkies anything of value. All I need to know are the results and then a summary of the affect upon my local area, my state and the nation at large. That could be accomplished easily within the span of one hour the morning/afternoon/evening of election day +1. I do not need 8-10 solid hours of talking heads saying pretty much nothing.
One more thing.....for the past month (or more) we have been subjected to non-stop political ads the vast majority of which are negative. According to the various advertisers we have nobody but crooks, pedophiles, mental incompetents, and shysters running for public office. Nothing irritates me as much as having to watch a string of 5-6 political ads back to back which repeat endlessly, do not provide any useful information and are financed by dark money. It has virtually turned me off to our political system entirely.
Iowa is about to elect a new US Senator that became famous because she ran ads telling people that she grew up castrating pigs on a farm.
Obviously the poor stupid unwashed masses don't get all their info from Faux News Channel, like you.
For the record, and not that it matters, but I don't watch any television news.
I spend enough time online. I don't want to add to that.If you're on this board, you have Internet access. If you have Internet access, you can read the newspaper's website online. Home delivery editions of newspapers typically go to press around 3am, so it should be able to tell you who won.
And for those of us with TiVo they're not going away anytime soon. Even though I can skip over them, I don't think it works like Hopper. I can see what is on screen and that's a lot of what was bad about them.The good thing about all this; on Wednesday morning all these political ads go away and we can rest for awhile (though you know the newschannels are onto 2016 mode as of that moment).
I spend enough time online. I don't want to add to that.
Besides, when my subscription cost went way up, I was told it wass because I could see the web site, which I can't do (for more than a few articles per month) if I don't have a subscription. I told them I didn't want that added cost. Of course, the next year they just went way way up again and I protested and got my subscription cost back down. The simple fact is I have too much stuff to remember to do online and I don't want to add to that. But when I see The Charlotte Observer at the library, I know to look at it for that which is missing from mine. Yes, that too is a waste of time.
Right. But I get what I need at the library, with the news on paper. It'll be a couple of days before I see it, but I will see it.It's not necessary to pay for news websites. There are hundreds that are free, that make their money selling advertising.
Besides, when my subscription cost went way up, I was told it wass because I could see the web site, which I can't do (for more than a few articles per month) if I don't have a subscription. I told them I didn't want that added cost. Of course, the next year they just went way way up again and I protested and got my subscription cost back down.
But the SF Chronicle was never a great paper, and it's now a pitiful ghost of its old self. I feel no obligation to help delay its inevitable extinction.
I would have thought ABC, CBS and NBC would have started election coverage before 10PM, because a lot happened before then. I was switching between CNN and MSNBC most of the evening, even after the networks appeared.
Then, I saw the lousy ratings all 3 got. I guess that's why they started 10PM.
That made me sad. When I was in high school I used to deliver the Chronicle and because we shared a shack with the other two papers of the day I got to take home copies of the Examiner and the News-Leader. Spent almost every evening reading them for one reason or another.
What I loved most about the Chronicle was the columns. Stanton Delaplane and Herb Caen in particular. I still have some of Herb Caen's columns from the time I was in Vietnam (something about a national convention being in town and the gravy for the marina restaurants being stored in Coit Tower).
I guess most newspapers today are but a shadow of their former selves. The husband of my former boss was a reporter for our local newspaper and they didn't pay him squat so I guess that tells a story.
I read the election results at the library this morning in the actual paper and now I can throw out that part of my actual paper. I need a base for my christmas tree and those pages would be ideal.
Here are two ways to access the goodies.
Ignore the newspaper. They are deadline driven and must stop their research to print the paper. Use instead any local full-featured TV station web site. Most of them run comprehensive web sites that pretty much duplicate anything the newspaper would print - except they are not limited by deadline and can continue reporting real time until the election is decided. For instance, last night my local Fox affiliate had their election web site up early in the day and after the local polls closed began posting election results real time. They had every race in the state along with every proposition. They had another page addressing elections of interest outside my state. You get all the numbers without the blah, blah, blah.
If you must use the newspaper then fire up Firefox browser, go to File and click on New Private Window. You will get a second browser page that looks almost identical to the first but it won't keep results of your browsing (such as cookies). Since most subscription-based sites offer a limited number of free accesses and keep cookies to tell when that access has been used this private browser does not record cookies and you can access the cookie tracking websites any number of times.
Personally, I have found newspapers useful only for in-depth reporting. If you only want the scores and don't need the whole background the TV sites are the way to go. For weather information specific to the national as a whole or right down to my local neighborhood I use Weather Underground (www.wunderground.com). It is a free site and can be customized for your locale.
But I didn't miss it. And it was pretty good. The poor girl has to learn how to cope without social media on her boss' ranch.The icing on the cake was when someone actually complained about missing "Selfie" because of election reporting. That proved to me that I shouldn't over-estimate the intelligence of the American electorate.
I did, and I believe I made my choices intelligently. Well, except for some of the judges. I forgot what criteria I had used to select some of them.Complaining about election coverage pre-empting "Selfie"?
Please never vote.