Coventry Evening Telegraph (1 Viewer)

skybluedan

Well-Known Member
It's dog shit at best , been shit for years don't know why but think since tinternet people can get more reliable ,faster,info , Me I think it's that it's always been shit and there shit reporters are a joke and have been found out
And bring back the pink you cunts
 

mrtrench

Well-Known Member
I can only imagine that they don't pay much - so they don't attract people with the talent to think up investigative or "real" journalism for themselves. They could easily have contacted Red Bull themselves couldn't they? I wouldn't expect them to have insider knowledge such as Malaka, so I have no problem with them taking leads like that and running with them to see if there is a story there - but waiting for someone else to do it and then reporting it is lame in the extreme.

"Five things to do in a Shopping Centre"? FFS... can you imagine the conversation with the editor that ends up with him agreeing to publish?

A few weeks ago in the Times, Matthew Parris wrote an opinion piece about how it has become acceptable to massively under-perform in one's job and I agree with him. We live in a world where expensive products are designed to fail within 2 or 3 years; where you cannot trust any service provider to do their jobs properly or bill you correctly - and if you spot the mistake you can spend hours trying to resolve it with them because they just work off scripts and don't know what to do when something deviates from their cut and paste responses.

It's also very evident in my line of work. I design and build IT systems. In the 80s and 90s every large company built and maintained their own software. It may be different elsewhere, but in the industry I work in that has long gone. The place I work now has cut every job into a hundred different tasks and off-shored them. They no longer pretend they can build a system - and the projects to implement a vendor system cost more than it would to build them from scratch. They measure expenditure success by the absolute salaries they pay rather than efficiency (Salary divided by delivery and quality). Instead of IT staff who understand the technology and the business they put teams in-between who understand neither and peddle bureaucracy. The existing systems are full of errors and rather than fix them they employ people to work around them with manual procedures - because the cost of change has become too big a hurdle, due to the inability to do anything efficiently or quickly and the mounds of paperwork they create. And they accept the inevitable errors and poor customer service as a consequence.

It's a frustrating time to be working.
 

wingy

Well-Known Member
I can only imagine that they don't pay much - so they don't attract people with the talent to think up investigative or "real" journalism for themselves. They could easily have contacted Red Bull themselves couldn't they? I wouldn't expect them to have insider knowledge such as Malaka, so I have no problem with them taking leads like that and running with them to see if there is a story there - but waiting for someone else to do it and then reporting it is lame in the extreme.

"Five things to do in a Shopping Centre"? FFS... can you imagine the conversation with the editor that ends up with him agreeing to publish?

A few weeks ago in the Times, Matthew Parris wrote an opinion piece about how it has become acceptable to massively under-perform in one's job and I agree with him. We live in a world where expensive products are designed to fail within 2 or 3 years; where you cannot trust any service provider to do their jobs properly or bill you correctly - and if you spot the mistake you can spend hours trying to resolve it with them because they just work off scripts and don't know what to do when something deviates from their cut and paste responses.

It's also very evident in my line of work. I design and build IT systems. In the 80s and 90s every large company built and maintained their own software. It may be different elsewhere, but in the industry I work in that has long gone. The place I work now has cut every job into a hundred different tasks and off-shored them. They no longer pretend they can build a system - and the projects to implement a vendor system cost more than it would to build them from scratch. They measure expenditure success by the absolute salaries they pay rather than efficiency (Salary divided by delivery and quality). Instead of IT staff who understand the technology and the business they put teams in-between who understand neither and peddle bureaucracy. The existing systems are full of errors and rather than fix them they employ people to work around them with manual procedures - because the cost of change has become too big a hurdle, due to the inability to do anything efficiently or quickly and the mounds of paperwork they create. And they accept the inevitable errors and poor customer service as a consequence.

It's a frustrating time to be working.
I don't really want to go here but god that approach sounds close to the running of a certain football club I know. :-o
 

Ranjit Bhurpa

Well-Known Member
I can only imagine that they don't pay much - so they don't attract people with the talent to think up investigative or "real" journalism for themselves. They could easily have contacted Red Bull themselves couldn't they? I wouldn't expect them to have insider knowledge such as Malaka, so I have no problem with them taking leads like that and running with them to see if there is a story there - but waiting for someone else to do it and then reporting it is lame in the extreme.

"Five things to do in a Shopping Centre"? FFS... can you imagine the conversation with the editor that ends up with him agreeing to publish?

A few weeks ago in the Times, Matthew Parris wrote an opinion piece about how it has become acceptable to massively under-perform in one's job and I agree with him. We live in a world where expensive products are designed to fail within 2 or 3 years; where you cannot trust any service provider to do their jobs properly or bill you correctly - and if you spot the mistake you can spend hours trying to resolve it with them because they just work off scripts and don't know what to do when something deviates from their cut and paste responses.

It's also very evident in my line of work. I design and build IT systems. In the 80s and 90s every large company built and maintained their own software. It may be different elsewhere, but in the industry I work in that has long gone. The place I work now has cut every job into a hundred different tasks and off-shored them. They no longer pretend they can build a system - and the projects to implement a vendor system cost more than it would to build them from scratch. They measure expenditure success by the absolute salaries they pay rather than efficiency (Salary divided by delivery and quality). Instead of IT staff who understand the technology and the business they put teams in-between who understand neither and peddle bureaucracy. The existing systems are full of errors and rather than fix them they employ people to work around them with manual procedures - because the cost of change has become too big a hurdle, due to the inability to do anything efficiently or quickly and the mounds of paperwork they create. And they accept the inevitable errors and poor customer service as a consequence.

It's a frustrating time to be working.
Well said that man, too much focus on quantity and nowhere near enough on quality.
 

Nick

Administrator
They just employ content writers, I used to have one work for me to just churn content out all day every day. They just find content online, change a few words so it is "unique" and post it.

They will look at what's trending on social media and then try and find content related to jump on it.

It isn't news.
 

dutchman

Well-Known Member
The Telegraph is no different from any other regional edition of the Daily Mirror. They're sent a template from the Liverpool filled mostly with Daily Mirror stories then asked to add or tweak stories with a local slant. And yes, Trinity-Mirror employees are notoriously underpaid compared to others in the same industry.
 

NortonSkyBlue

Well-Known Member
Personally I enjoy the coverage of CCFC on the telegraph web pages, its free, it covers my football team and gives us precedence over the premier sporting club in the city and it is not the fault of Simon Gilbert or the CT that the club is in such a bad state, they just report it as they find it. I have no issue with that.
They have put their head above the parapet and are there to be shot at but on the whole I think they are balanced.
 
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ecky

Well-Known Member
They just employ content writers, I used to have one work for me to just churn content out all day every day. They just find content online, change a few words so it is "unique" and post it.

They will look at what's trending on social media and then try and find content related to jump on it.

It isn't news.
Fake news
 

Travs

Well-Known Member
I have a close relative who is a journalist for the telegraph (a specialist reporter if you like), and some of the "facts" spouted on this thread are wildly inaccurate.

However despite my family loyalty, I must agree that the coverage of CCFC is dire.

It is also incredibly frustrating that Wasps are pushed into such a high profile, however as rightly said, they are owned by the Mirror group, and if Wasps pay for the advertising, they are not going to turn it down.

Yes the click bait type articles on the website are an utter joke, but shouldn't detract that if you take the newspaper on its own, it is on the whole, a decent publication.
 

NortonSkyBlue

Well-Known Member
Ah, for the days when you got home from the match and then went up to the newsagents to get the Pink. Somehow it was even better if you had to wait a few minutes in the dark for the black CET van to pull up, and for a bundle of Pinks tied up with string to be chucked on the pavement with a satisfying thud.

In our area that was about 6 o’clock, so not much more than an hour after the match finished you could read an unpretentious report of all the things that happened in the game, in straightforward chronological order. In the middle pages, you’d get proper articles and interviews about the club, and you’d read them several times because that was your only source of information.
Maybe we were less well informed, but it wasn’t as stressful as today’s minute-by-minute stream of words from every person on the planet, all wasting their time under the illusion that they are influencing events.

I'm not knocking today's journos - to me, most of them are good writers operating in an impossible environment.

Bring back the 20th Century :)
If we were at home I would rush from the game and wait for the Pinks to arrive with a group of about 20 men and boys, get the Final scores and read the stop press to see how the local non league sides had done then turn to the inside page to see how Cov Rugby had fared.
If we were away and I hadn't been I would stroll over to the Newsagent and chew the fat on about the day's result, if I had been to the away game I would be hoping my dad could be arsed to get the Pink for me.
It was an event, it was in fact part of the match day ritual and although we are fed with more instant news feed today it in no way makes up for holding the Pink in your hands and going behind the headline.
I can vividly remember the excitement I felt on the evening of the Willie Carr/Ernie Hunt donkey kick getting to the newsagents on Broad Park Road and reading about a game I had just seen with my own eyes but I got the confirmation I wanted. We had beaten the champions, we were the talk of the day, on match of the day and all over the country kids were doing a "Willie Carr"
 

wingy

Well-Known Member
If we were at home I would rush from the game and wait for the Pinks to arrive with a group of about 20 men and boys, get the Final scores and read the stop press to see how the local non league sides had done then turn to the inside page to see how Cov Rugby had fared.
If we were away and I hadn't been I would stroll over to the Newsagent and chew the fat on about the day's result, if I had been to the away game I would be hoping my dad could be arsed to get the Pink for me.
It was an event, it was in fact part of the match day ritual and although we are fed with more instant news feed today it in no way makes up for holding the Pink in your hands and going behind the headline.
I can vividly remember the excitement I felt on the evening of the Willie Carr/Ernie Hunt donkey kick getting to the newsagents on Broad Park Road and reading about a game I had just seen with my own eyes but I got the confirmation I wanted. We had beaten the champions, we were the talk of the day, on match of the day and all over the country kids were doing a "Willie Carr"
Yeah same here
Used to cycle the two miles into Tile Hill village as it was known back then to be the saviour in a house of six males.
 

rupert_bear

Well-Known Member
Back in the day the "Pink" was sold in most CIU clubs too, many a time Belshaws our local newspaper shop sold out and I would dash up the Coachmakers club to get a copy.
 

wingy

Well-Known Member
That's a worth while campaign I'd back! If we all chip in we can get you a Thai one? Present her to you in the half way line
Only Estonia,Georgian beauties need apply.
Definitely not Russian like Otis's.
 

skyblueinBaku

Well-Known Member
Only Estonia,Georgian beauties need apply.
Definitely not Russian like Otis's.
My wife is Russian, Wingy, but I certainly wouldn't let her get near to you lot!:smuggrin:
 

AVWskyblue

Well-Known Member
Yeah same here
Used to cycle the two miles into Tile Hill village as it was known back then to be the saviour in a house of six males.
Where about in Tile Hill wings? I was born in Lime Grove in 1955

Sent from my 5010X using Tapatalk
 

wingy

Well-Known Member
Where about in Tile Hill wings? I was born in Lime Grove in 1955

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From further out by Rough close scout camp site, just about half a mile from the city boundary.
Lime grove would be somewhere between Jobs lane and Beech Tree Ave at a guess AVW?
 

trevelfarandwide

Well-Known Member
Right then Eugene, can we put you down for the centre spread on all CCFC news and inside information from the previous 7 days? Shouldn't be too difficult, just need to copy and paste from SBT and you'll have more than enough copy. Maybe we could get King Tony covering the Manager's press conferences (one up on the CT) and persuade SW88 to do the match reports? Perhaps Godiva for Editor? Clint looking after distribution from the Albany? Could be onto a winner here.

Winner, winner, chicken dinner...I likes ya moxy kid. ;-) It's a deal, I'll work for a bag of Cheetos and a 5 pack of dodgy imported tobacco a week - plus we can use shitty pink crepe paper off Ebay for materials, I have a drawer full of it in the kitchen. Why, I don't know, it's just there.

If I encounter Timmy at any juncture, however, for an interview or press byte, I cannot promise I won't run him over in my 206. Repeatedly. Eugene Aloitious Barracuda the Third does the job professionally. With pen, or with car. :)
 

AVWskyblue

Well-Known Member
From further out by Rough close scout camp site, just about half a mile from the city boundary.
Lime grove would be somewhere between Jobs lane and Beech Tree Ave at a guess AVW?
Just round the corner from the woodlands pub Wingy

Sent from my 5010X using Tapatalk
 

Ranjit Bhurpa

Well-Known Member
Winner, winner, chicken dinner...I likes ya moxy kid. ;-) It's a deal, I'll work for a bag of Cheetos and a 5 pack of dodgy imported tobacco a week - plus we can use shitty pink crepe paper off Ebay for materials, I have a drawer full of it in the kitchen. Why, I don't know, it's just there.

If I encounter Timmy at any juncture, however, for an interview or press byte, I cannot promise I won't run him over in my 206. Repeatedly. Eugene Aloitious Barracuda the Third does the job professionally. With pen, or with car. :)
LOL like ya style Eugene, careful with the motor though I'm glad I'm not the only one with a kitchen drawer full of all sorts of crap.
 

chiefdave

Well-Known Member
Simon might want to have a word with the headline writers.

Not sure 'I downloaded 1,500 sick child porn pictures - but I'm NOT a paedophile by Simon Gilbert' is what he wants coming up on Google.
 

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