Author Archive for Neal

Get Involved! General Interest Meeting Info

Planet Blacksburg is back for another semester and looking to showcase the talents of aspiring student journalists. Develop your portfolio by reporting on the issues that matter to you. Gain valuable experience writing and editing in AP Style. Create video packages and photo galleries to tell more of the story than words alone can. Come our general interest meeting in Shanks to see how you can contribute to the world of convergence media.

What: PlanetBlacksburg.com general interest meeting
When: 6 p.m., Monday, January 21, 2008 (classes are cancelled, but the meeting will still take place)
Where: Shanks 160
Needed: News Editor, News Reporters, Sports Reporters, Feature Writers, Video/Photographers, advertising/PR specialists, and more…

Every semester we get better and with your involvement this can be our best yet. See you Monday.

________________________
Neal Turnage
Executive Editor
Planet Blacksburg
www.planetblacksburg.com
nturnage@vt.edu

ACC Championship Halftime Update


ACC Championship Scrimmage

I’m down in Jacksonville with Brian Sewell, Dave Ruffo and my wife Ashley. The stadium is only at about half capacity. The ratio of Tech fans to BC fans is about 2:1, maybe higher. Most of the fans are concentrated across from the pressbox between the fifty yard line and the goalpost. The place was jumping during Enter Sandman, but nothing like a Hokie home game. Feels like a scrimmage. Tech won the toss and deferred to the second half. I’ll be back at halftime with my impressions of the action so far.

A community project to help heal…

The publisher, Plume, has announced plans for a book to be written about April 16th and the shockwaves it produced. Roland Lazenby and a few of the PB group have taken on this tremendous task. We’ve decided to go forward with this for a number or reasons.

This event has changed our world. Sure, the compass points haven’t changed and the sun will still rise and set on schedule, but believe me, everything’s different. This book is partially an attempt to return a sense of normalcy to our little corner of the world.

People still forget that the reporting you see here is done by 18 to 20-somethings who are closer to this horrible event than most could ever imagine. Reporting on and writing about it has been as therapeutic an activity for us as reading about it has been for others. I hope that the decisions we’ve made in covering it and the articles we’ve written show a higher level of respect and concern for the victims than has been shown by the mainstream media.

There is bound to be criticism for a project of this type. Is it too soon? Will it exploit the people affected? Is it an attempt to cash in on tragedy? Personally, I believe the answer to all those questions is a resounding “NO.”

Though we will have a core group doing the writing, this is very much a community effort. Look around Blacksburg and you’ll see a thriving population of people who are moving on with their lives while still honoring those killed and injured. That being said, there are still people in or just out of the hospital who have a long road to recovery ahead of them. It would be presumptuous to think that our book will help them in any way, but I will do everything in my power to make sure it doesn’t hurt them.

A portion of the proceeds will go to aiding the victims and their families. There are a multitude of scholarships and support programs that have been created in the wake of the 16th and we want to do our part. Another part of the proceeds will go towards journalism programs at Virginia Tech. I truly believe that some of the best reporting done these past two weeks has come from PB, the Collegiate Times, and the Roanoke Times. By supporting Tech’s comm department, we may have a hand in exposing the rest of the world to the upstanding, talented writers, reporters and broadcasters this school produces.

There have been great stories done these past two weeks. Stories of heroism and inspiration have shone brightly from the darkness of the shootings. But there is no way anyone could read every newspaper article or talk to every person affected. Our goal is to produce something that will stand up over time by getting as much right as possible.

Who knows how soon is too soon? Was it too soon for NBC to throw pictures and videos from the killer on the TV and the internet? Was it too soon for documentaries on the incident to pop up on the History Channel? This book will take some time to write. It will take some time to publish. By then l hope the people who matter won’t think it’s too soon.

-Neal Turnage

Our Stance

I was reading some of the comments regarding our Editors’ Note about no longer mentioning the killer on the site and want to clarify some things.

First and foremost, we appreciate all of your feedback and encourage it regardless of your stance on any topic we write about.

Second, our decision does not mean that newsworthy information concerning this situation will not get coverage. We just don’t believe that kowtowing to a killer by reprinting his rants and publishing his photos does much for our readership besides pour salt into the wound. We are Planet Blacksburg. We are Hokies. Our responsibility is to our community. If you want to see the contents of the NBC package, do so. You will just have to look elsewhere.

Third, please don’t forget that we are a 100% volunteer STUDENT organization. 33 lives were lost on Monday. We lost friends in the violence. We lost professors. One of our writers lost a roommate. This is not easy for any of us. Putting our already depleted resources and energy into covering the killer is unhealthy for us physically and emotionally. Leave the investigating to the authorities; leave the personality profiling to the psychologists. If they turn up something interesting, we’ll let you know.

Also, there is plenty of newsworthy activity in our town that we need to get back to covering. The biggest complaint about media is how they overdo it and never report enough good news. Hopefully, we can change that. “Invent the Future”

- Neal Turnage

Moving on…

I don’t want to hear any more about the two-hour window.

Tech administration has been raked over the coals by the media and others over the amount of time it took to alert students to stay indoors.

Information about a suicide note was being leaked all over the internet while the police denied the existence of one. Then all of a sudden, MSNBC gets this snappy package on Wednesday morning from the killer. They claimed to have turned it over to the police, but conveniently had it available for the viewing public later in the day. Was the delay due to the police holding up the video for investigative purposes, or was NBC the reason there were seven hours between the time the video was delivered and the time it aired?

This is why people dont trust the media. When the package airs on television during the six-o’clock news it becomes apparent that the motive for showing it is not to inform, but to garner ratings. I make no assumptions to the contrary and I understand that this is how today’s media environment operates. I fully expect mainstream media to ride this story right into the ground. They’ll uncover every dark secret about the killer and speculate on every detail of his life; tossing question after question out there while offering no real analyses or solutions.

The truth is, for the Hokie Nation the story is not about the killer. It is about telling the story of the victims, their achievements in life and their inspiration in death. It is about the wealth of human talent that was extinguished in one short morning. It is about the triumphs of those who survived the attack and the heroic efforts of those who didn’t. It is about the solidarity of the worldwide community.

We don’t care about the killer. He was a punk coward. A sick, disturbed individual who’s cries for help were not only heard, but answered. He was offered counseling, he was sent away for help, he was on medication. Thousands of people in the country suffer from mental illness in some form or fashion. No one, NO ONE has ever perpetrated this type of heinous act.

Go ahead and show the video. That self-indulgent nonsense sheds little light on the situation. We’ll change the channel.

Go ahead and post the pictures. Posed pictures of an angry little man do not impress us. We’ll look at something else.

Go ahead and do whatever it is you feel the need to do to drive up your ratings and your site hits. As the anger and sorrow subside, so will the morbid interest in the shooter. In time, he will be forgotten.

Call it what you want to call it, but we are not going to devote any more bandwidth to the shooter. NBC did exactly what the killer wanted by airing his message. We refuse to give him that satisfaction.

We at Planet Blacksburg are going to do what the rest of the Hokie Nation is trying so hard to do; we are going to move on.

- Neal Turnage

Unofficial shooting update

We at Planet Blacksburg are in a tough spot when it comes to this kind of coverage. As you may already know, there has been a series of shootings on our campus and all of our writers and contributors are students. This makes it extremely difficult to cover the situation from a safe perspective.

We do have a story up. It’s by Suzanne Higgs who was actually locked down in a classroom while the incident was taking place. I think it is a testament to her dedication to journalism that she would find a way to get all the official information to print.

We can only publish what we know for sure, but in the blog I can tell you a little bit more of what we’ve heard. None of this is confirmed or should be treated as gospel. I just want to help you all understand things from our side.

I was fortunate enough to have not made it to campus when the incidents occured. My wife works in Burruss Hall and through some cosmic coincidence she had to fly to Chicago for a business trip. On any other Monday she would have been in that building and I would have been on campus nearby.

Sitting in the Roanoke Airport with my laptop open, I’ve been communicating with fellow students via email, instant messenger and by phone. I’ve heard that as many as 20 people have been killed. According to my wife, one of her co-workers actually saw two students gunned down.

With that high a number of casualties, we do not know if any PB writers or contributors have been hurt, but we pray for all involved.

We at PB will do what we can to keep you updated on the situation as it unfolds.

Neal Turnage


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