The Boston Globe today fronts an article that demonstrates the flaws of imposing a facile story idea on a complicated situation. Under the headline, “For now, laid off and loving it,” Jenn Abelson interviews some recently unemployed people who are finding more time to go to museums and de-stress/decompress. And while everyone loves a silver lining (yes, spending time with family is a good thing), the article’s artificial constraints are more cloying and problematic. Here’s an anecdotal snippet about software designer David Adler, who recently got laid off:
It was shocking. And scary.
Until it wasn’t. Adler has quickly learned to appreciate some aspects of his unexpected unemployment.
The 42-year-old spends his days doting on his 6-month-old daughter, visiting museums with his family, and preparing for a possible exhibit of his photos at a local coffee shop in Dedham. Living off savings, unemployment, and severance packages, Adler knows he has to get a job eventually and has started the search. But for now, he’s cherishing every moment. “It’s our first child and I love watching her grow,” Adler said. “And it’s nice to have time off and get in touch with my old hobbies.”
It’s neat that Adler is able to spend time with his first child and catch up with old hobbies. It’s also a bit obtuse of the Globe to publish an article that will read to some like a foreign-language news report, particularly to those laid-off people who can’t afford to take the time to visit a museum because, perhaps, they’re on the verge of being evicted. Take this passage about “the grim task of making ends meet”:
Despite the grim task of making ends meet (firing the nanny, bailing on Whole Foods, applying for unemployment), there is a newly forming society of people who are making the best of being laid off. They are rediscovering hobbies. They are greeting kids at the school bus. They are remembering what daylight actually looks like.
On the one hand, there’s a size-of-the-universe problem. Abelson seems to have limited her interviewing to those who at least superficially might fit into the “laid off and loving it” category—i.e., those for whom being laid off doesn’t mean not being able to make rent or pay one’s telephone bill. Her subjects are downsizing from ski vacations and cab rides. While that socio-economic distinction is an understood and unmentioned bottom line of the article, it’s a fact that nevertheless grates, because it seems to belittle actual poverty. At the very least, it serves as a handy wall between the story and a much larger reality.
But in addition to this, Abelson’s piece connects this group of people by means of, at best, an artificial rubric. I’m curious to know how many of the three laid-off people she interviewed actually feel the sentiment “laid off and loving it.” I would suspect not all, or any, of them. I know few people who are that simplistic about their own lives. But Abelson’s studiedly rosy outlook keeps all her subjects conveniently in topical line, reducing people’s situations to fit the story idea. That’s hardly useful for anyone, laid-off or not, who might read it.
It’s one thing to write a thoughtful article exploring the positive ways that people are trying to cope with being laid off. That’s a super-broad category that spans different socio-economic strata, though—not just the college-educated professional class.
At article’s end, we hear about a forty-six-year-old woman who lost her $95,000 job designing teacher professional development training. After a recent week at home with her three-year-old, we are told that she has started missing her job—well, “Almost,” the article concludes. It’s a shame that we don’t know if it’s Abelson adding that afterthought, or the woman herself; that uncertainty also emblematizes the methodological problems of the article, which takes slimly reported anecdotes and shapes them to fit an exceedingly simplistic thesis. Without deeper interviews or more allotted newspaper inches, Abelson’s story is a superficial trend piece at best.

In more than 20 years in journalism, I've never come across a rule stating that a situation must be universally applicable before it is newsworthy. There's a little thing called the slice of life story that's just as valid and appealing today as it ever was.
If the reporter didn't make up the people and the circumstances, and will choose to assume the reporter did not, then these people actually exist and are actually enjoying being laid-off.
That means these experiences are part of our world and part of this recession. Isn't it our job to relate those perhaps overlooked experiences to our readers? Or are we to suppress experiences that don't fit with our worldview or our standards of sympathy for the less fortunate?
Oh, sure, you could sprinkle some more gloom and doom in there, but don't you think anyone reading a newspaper today already know how tough things are?
And with all due respect to those in desperate circumstances, that some are of the means to be able to weather a layoff is -- despite the obvious disdain evident in your criticism -- actually a good thing. Would that we all be in such circumstances when the pink slip comes floating down from the high tower. We should look at the people in this article and try to divine how they got to the point where they could withstand this storm and benefit from it, rather than try to shuffle them off into a dark corner where we don't have to see them as we return to our mouse-like fretting over life's vicissitudes.
This story, while not sophisticated or comprehensive by any measure, is a different take on the rather gray portrait of the frantic unemployed clawing for purchase in the very unfair game of life. It illuminates a small corner of our world, not the entire globe. And that's okay. It does not, to me, need to be a massive national trend, complete with economic analysis and piles of statistics, for such a slice-of-life story to be worth a few inches in the daily paper.
Criticism fail.
#1 Posted by Mke, CJR on Tue 24 Feb 2009 at 12:05 PM
@Mke: I agree. There's certainly merit to articles that "illuminate[] a small corner of our world, not the entire globe," as you say, and not every story on lifestyle trends can or should be deeply reported in an analytical or number-of-inches sense. And I'm not saying that people who are enjoying being laid off don't exist or shouldn't be covered. But I think that this article, as with many a trend piece, pushes a rubric over any actually meaningful storytelling of different people's experiences--which runs the risk of simplifying or streamlining those experiences to fit the story--and that, in my opinion, is a problem.
#2 Posted by Jane Kim, CJR on Tue 24 Feb 2009 at 02:15 PM
The implicit assumption is that all of these people will be gainfully employed again reasonably soon. They're the lucky ones. I bet a lot of these middle class professionals who are enjoying their unemployment are also in pretty dire financial straights. Everyone is overextended these days.
What's obnoxious about this article is that it's discussing a privileged minority for whom unemployment probably represents an unpaid leave of absence, not the end of their careers or their permanent exit from the middle class.
#3 Posted by Lindsay Beyerstein, CJR on Wed 25 Feb 2009 at 09:35 PM
Lindsay, is the job of journalists, then, only to report on a specific class of people in a specific set of circumstances reacting in a specific way? Who gets to decide which classes, which people, which circumstances, which reactions? And how are those decisions made?
No, the job of journalism is to reflect and explain the world happening around us so that we can become more informed citizens and contribute more fully to the public debate.
The criticism present in the original article and your response seems to focus less on the methodology behind the article, which is where true press criticism should focus, and more on class-based discomfort with the fortunes of those capable of weathering a layoff relatively intact.
Of course there are plenty of people whose teeth are being knocked out by this economy, and the media should tell their stories with vigor and compassion.
But, as I noted above, unless this reporter manufactured these anecdotes during an idle afternoon at the country club, these are real people having a real reaction to being laid off, and their story is as valid, if less common, than is that of the factory worker or office aide or, well, journalist who's been laid off with fewer prospects for recovery.
You say the story is "obnoxious" because it relates the stories of a "privileged minority." I see an unexpected story about a group of people who either heeded the advice of generations of financial planners to lay in cash for a rainy day or otherwise have the means to survive for a while without a job, and are making the best of a bad situation.
If you get to decide what I read, I miss out on a hopeful glimpse into post-layoff life as I contemplate the possibility of the end of my own career. Moreover, an entire class of people, successful, well-organized and optimistic about the future, vanish into the midst as if they never existed. Journalistic genocide, that is.
Is that what we really want journalism to be about?
#4 Posted by Mike, CJR on Thu 26 Feb 2009 at 11:19 AM
The problem here is that Abelson's article represents the Globe's tendency to emphasize this type of writing over serious, in-depth, and interesting news. While a situation need not "..be universally applicable before it is newsworthy" as @Mke says, it is the writer's responsibility to tell an informative and thorough story, and the paper's responsibility to encourage this type of thoughtful reporting. Neither occurs in this case. This tendency is the reason they are killing the City Weekly section and as much as it pains to me to send them page views, today's cover story in the G section is another case-in-point: http://www.boston.com/lifestyle/fashion/articles/2009/02/26/does_this_recession_make_me_look_dumpy/. Thanks @Jane Kim for bringing this problem to light.
#5 Posted by jt, CJR on Thu 26 Feb 2009 at 11:49 AM
So what makes this story un-thorough, jt? How do you tell the story of "laid-off and loving it" people in a more complete and thorough way? I'd really like to hear how you think this story would be improved, other than in the scrapping of it entirely (which I continue to argue is more the interest than anything else).
The story is informative enough for me ... there's a handful of people in the city where I live (if I were to live in that city) who are having a reaction to being laid off that I'm not sure I would have expected. Interesting. Now, what's on the next page?
It's not a topic that drives public policy (except to dismantle the argument that everyone needs a handout). It doesn't hold government accountable (unless its to take it to task for allowing people to be independent). It doesn't require a deep political, social, technological or spiritual navel-gazing enterprise to determine why these people are having the reaction they're having ... they likely worked hard enough to have good jobs, saved money and are making a deliberate decision to get off the train for a bit and smell the roses. What more do you want the reporter to do?
I maintain my argument that the criticism of this piece has more to do with the fact that it doesn't perpetuate the misery in an appropriately compassionate way. It doesn't toe the party line that everyone needs a handout to get through this thing, and doesn't tell a story that uplifts and glorifies the poor at the expense of the wicked rich.
#6 Posted by Mike, CJR on Fri 27 Feb 2009 at 12:26 AM
"Unemployment? More like Fun Enjoyment" you should check it out!
http://www.printfection.com/thewin
#7 Posted by for teh win, CJR on Wed 25 Mar 2009 at 06:16 PM