GLENDALE AND ITS ARMENIAN SMOKERS
Kevin Roderick
LA Observed
http://www.laobserved.com/archive/2008/08 /glendale_and_its_armenian.php
Aug 22 2008
CA
The Pasadena Weekly has run a surprising commentary by editor Kevin
Uhrich in response to a controversy over whether a Glendale city
official referred to residents of Armenian heritage being opposed to
an anti-smoking ordinance. The paper says its reporter got some stuff
wrong, and the story mushroomed. The named players are Glendale Mayor
John Drayman, Councilman Dave Weaver and PW reporter Carl Kozlowski.
it appears that from the end of June until today we've been the only
ones to own up to myriad mistakes made in figuring out exactly who
said what and why in the ongoing debate over smoking in Glendale:
from the overly talkative Weaver to the inattentive reporter to his
lazy editor to the apparently always unreachable Drayman to those who
claimed to be offended by Weaver's ethnically insensitive remarks,
and all of it finally set in stone by competing newspapers, one of
which apparently didn't know who it was looking at during one council
meeting, and another that misspelled the name of at least one person
intimately involved in all of this -- me.
I say all that not to bust the chops of any of my overworked and
underpaid news brethren but to point out that sometimes things we could
never imagine happening actually do happen, even to the best of us,
including the usually spot-on reporter in this case, Carl Kozlowski.
But back to Weaver's remarks: Who was he really talking about when
referring to "one segment of the population?" Latinos? Women? African
Americans? Asians? The Knights of Columbus?
Or could Weaver have been referring to the city's Armenian community,
which amounts to roughly 70,000 people, or 40 percent of Glendale's
population?
"You know who I'm talking about," Weaver told Carl.
"No, I don't. Are you talking about Armenians?" Carl pressed.
To that Weaver emitted a noise, what Carl described as a growl, yet
he still did not give a straight answer. Not a yes or a no or an in
between -- just a growl.
Editor and reporter went on a local Glendale TV show to discuss the
story, covered today in the Glendale News-Press.
Kevin Roderick
LA Observed
http://www.laobserved.com/archive/2008/08 /glendale_and_its_armenian.php
Aug 22 2008
CA
The Pasadena Weekly has run a surprising commentary by editor Kevin
Uhrich in response to a controversy over whether a Glendale city
official referred to residents of Armenian heritage being opposed to
an anti-smoking ordinance. The paper says its reporter got some stuff
wrong, and the story mushroomed. The named players are Glendale Mayor
John Drayman, Councilman Dave Weaver and PW reporter Carl Kozlowski.
it appears that from the end of June until today we've been the only
ones to own up to myriad mistakes made in figuring out exactly who
said what and why in the ongoing debate over smoking in Glendale:
from the overly talkative Weaver to the inattentive reporter to his
lazy editor to the apparently always unreachable Drayman to those who
claimed to be offended by Weaver's ethnically insensitive remarks,
and all of it finally set in stone by competing newspapers, one of
which apparently didn't know who it was looking at during one council
meeting, and another that misspelled the name of at least one person
intimately involved in all of this -- me.
I say all that not to bust the chops of any of my overworked and
underpaid news brethren but to point out that sometimes things we could
never imagine happening actually do happen, even to the best of us,
including the usually spot-on reporter in this case, Carl Kozlowski.
But back to Weaver's remarks: Who was he really talking about when
referring to "one segment of the population?" Latinos? Women? African
Americans? Asians? The Knights of Columbus?
Or could Weaver have been referring to the city's Armenian community,
which amounts to roughly 70,000 people, or 40 percent of Glendale's
population?
"You know who I'm talking about," Weaver told Carl.
"No, I don't. Are you talking about Armenians?" Carl pressed.
To that Weaver emitted a noise, what Carl described as a growl, yet
he still did not give a straight answer. Not a yes or a no or an in
between -- just a growl.
Editor and reporter went on a local Glendale TV show to discuss the
story, covered today in the Glendale News-Press.