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Snark for snark's sake

What is the difference between edgy and objectionable?

Clark Hoyt posed that question in his Sunday New York Times column about a shopping columnist who took random and snarky potshots at J.C. Penney and its customers.

It's a question that every journalist deals with sooner or later. (And then, they have to make the case to their editor.) You have a good, sarcastic idea and an easy subject and boom, you've written what you think is a clever, maybe even funny, barb directed at someone. You like it. Other writers in the cube like it. You're feeling cutting edge and insightful at the same time.

Sometimes, if you're particularly talented, it goes fine. More often it falls flat and, worse, is mean-spirited and inappropriate.  

When we err -- and we do -- I've heard variations of three rationales: "I was just having some fun," "I was trying not to be boring," and "Everyone I know talks like this." Wrong, wrong and wrong.

Bill Keller, NYT editor, says, "The key, I guess, is to imagine that you are writing for an audience with a broad range of views and experiences, and to write with respect for them."

Me, I say, imagine someone is writing this about you, personally. Is it funny and insightful then? If so, maybe we'll publish it. If not, start over.

Update: See what I mean?

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Allen Johnson

August 24, 2009 - 4:43 pm EDT

I saw that piece. The Times critic certainly seemed to go out of her way to be snooty and condescending.
(Maybe she was trying to channel Simon Cowell.)
But she seemed genuinely shaken by the criticism from bloggers and her own editors.
She appears better equipped at giving sharp critiques than taking them.

Illiterati

August 25, 2009 - 11:17 am EDT

Remember a few years ago when Graydon Carter said that irony is dead? I think snark has jumped the shark. (Jumping the shark has jumped the shark, but that's for another post.)

I lived in the belly of the beast (aka NYC) for more years than I'd like to remember, and trust me, there are plenty of people who haven't seen a size 2 since they were in Garanimals. Back in the 90s, the standard line when a chain store opened in Midtown was "the Disneyfication of Times Square." Since then, writers have been stuck in this "fat middle America" rut. If Cintra Wilson (who is usually a very fine freelancer writer) is to be derided for anything regarding her column, it should be for lazy writing.

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