So, I recently applied for a position as an opinion columnist at my school's newspaper. I was not hired, and was rather disappointed. I thought that my sample column was good, but now I am not so sure. The sample column dealt with a campus regulation which forbids students from smoking cigarettes within 30 feet of any building. I have posted it here (changing the name of my current university.) Does it suck, and if so, how badly? I am aware that parts of it suck, but does it suck as a whole, by the standards of a college paper? I am asking for your candid thoughts, but plz not to reply unless you are willing to express your real opinion in a reasonably courteous manner. Obviously I am posting this in the Lounge for a reason. ThxNo-Smoking Regulation is Silly, UnjustBy JeffreyBSGSome of the most revered men in history – Thoreau, Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr. – won their fame by breaking laws which they considered to be unjust. I do not equate myself with these great men, of course; but I do follow their example. Six or seven times a day, I cheerfully violate the ridiculous regulation which prohibits smoking within 30 feet of any building on campus.This no-smoking regulation inflicts a very real injury on ESU smokers. It forces them to smoke their cigarettes in the teeth of the bitter Anywherecounty wind, with no barrier to obstruct, or even weaken, the literally freezing gales which run mercilessly over their faces and exposed hands. ESU smokers are asked to stand idle and unprotected in this almost laceratingly cold wind, rather than relax in the comparatively warm shelter of a building wall.Some might claim, “I don’t care if the smokers do have to stand in the freezing wind! When they smoke their cigarettes near a building, they pollute their fellow Raiders' lungs with secondhand smoke!” But this argument is about as robust as a puddle of cottage cheese, because the dangers of secondhand smoke are reduced to negligibility when the cigarettes are smoked outside. The first major study on the subject, conducted by scientists at Stanford and published in 2007, found that outdoor secondhand smoke is, under reasonable conditions, well-nigh harmless. It is true that if Johnny Hypochondrowicz stands 18 inches away from a smoker and has the smoke from two entire cigarettes blown in his face, he will imbibe as great a quantity of nasty chemicals as if he had sat in a smoky bar for an hour; but Johnny will hardly submit to this, if he is concerned about secondhand smoke. Indeed, simple extrapolation from this statistic reveals that the harm Johnny suffers in passing a few feet away from a smoker, and inhaling a little puff, is virtually nil.Some might claim, “Even if the 30-foot rule doesn’t really confer any meaningful benefit on the health of ESU students, it still discourages them from smoking, and that’s a good thing.” To which I reply, “Where the hell do you get off infringing on my personal freedoms, just to make a public service announcement?” Everyone knows that cigarettes are bad for you; we don’t need a 30-foot rule to tell us that.The truth, ladies and gents, is that the public is prejudiced against smokers, viewing them as ignorant, trashy people whose rights are less important than everyone else’s. This misconception is an unhappy result of the massive anti-smoking campaign which the government and other organizations have undertaken over the past 20 years. This anti-smoking campaign has saved hundreds of thousands of lives, no doubt, and was certainly better done than not; but it has maligned smokers just the same. Contrary to popular belief, smokers can be good, even great, people. The greatest writer in American history (Mark Twain; or William Faulkner, if you prefer) and the greatest statesman of the 20th century (Winston Churchill) both smoked.I myself am neither trashy nor stupid, and I smoke cigarettes for the simple reason that I enjoy them. I do not wish to elaborate on the pleasures of tobacco, but I do assure my readers that there is a reason why more than a billion citizens of the world smoke. And if smoking a cigarette near a building harms no one but the smoker, and in fact does him far less harm than the binge-drinking which thousands of ESU students practice on a weekly basis, then what right has the University to tell that smoker to step 30 feet away from the building, and freeze in the wind?So if you see me smoking a cigarette in that cozy little nook beside the Psychology building, feel free to call me a criminal. I’ll be the warm criminal with the clean conscience.[Edited on January 24, 2009 at 4:41 PM. Reason : fixing typo which was not in actual submission]
1/24/2009 4:37:37 PM
I myself am neither trashy nor stupid
1/24/2009 4:43:40 PM
Personally, I question the subject of your column. I think you could have chosen a better topic than smoking period. I'm an ex-smoker so I can understand your pain but most people don't care & a good number would like to see smoking banished completely. What are the chances that your editors feel that way? I also wonder if criticizing your university and admitting to breaking the "rule" is a good place to start when nobody there knows you. You can go back to the editor thing again on this one. Maybe they support that ban or maybe they're a non-smoker that you "disturbed" one day. I didn't really feel that the article was that bad although there's a lot of differences in university papers. When I was at NCSU, the Technician wasn't anything special and your article would have fit in well (and been better than a lot of the crap that was in it). Then again, maybe your school is known for its Journalism majors.
1/24/2009 4:50:26 PM
1/24/2009 5:14:00 PM
^^Thank you. Interestingly enough, out of all the reasons for my rejection that I thought of, the ones you mentioned never really entered my mind. I am not a diplomat (that is why I am studying mathematics) but maybe you are right, maybe I should have been a little (or lot) more diplomatic in my choice of topics.My school is rather like NCSU (a huge school with lots of engineering majors) but the quality of the paper is a little higher.^hehe[Edited on January 24, 2009 at 5:15 PM. Reason : /]
1/24/2009 5:14:33 PM
the thing that bugs me about it is your tone.i may be the only one who feels this way, but to me you sound smug and self-important and that can turn readers off.also using the whole "many great men smoke" deal is really far stretched for me bc it was such a different time then, it just seems silly to even say and lessens your credibilityanyways, my constructive criticism is this: consider your audience. WHO are you writing for and how can you change your tone or writing style to accomodate these people.
1/24/2009 5:21:11 PM
"Silly" seems too silly of a word to put in the title, even if it's an opinion column. Its one of those words that stands out and sticks in your head while you're reading the rest of the column, except in this case I don't think it helps your case. Honestly, I wouldn't take your column seriously after reading the title, and would read the rest of the column with a black mark on it without wanting to really read it. But that's just my opinion and I've never written for a school newspaper, so take it for what you think its worth.
1/24/2009 5:23:27 PM
monkeys eat stuff..
1/24/2009 5:24:01 PM
1/24/2009 5:28:16 PM
Exactly, most people don't care about this
1/24/2009 5:35:44 PM
As soon as I saw the title of the article, I didn't even need to read the article to arrive at my gut-conclusion: the subject!As a member of student senate, I have actually sat through hours of debate over the "smoking within 30 feet issue" which involved nearly 100 different college-student voices. Sure, the article was written well-- but for interviewing purposes and "showing your stuff" you'd want to steer clear from controversial issues. For one thing, you've got folks with opinions all over the map on the smoking topic-- environmentalists, health freaks, non-smokers, smoking-haters, ex-smokers, and of course the smokers themselves. Then, you'll just get the people who don't like that you think your "above the rules"Alas, this is politics. (and news media in all shapes and sizes are political by their very nature) I'm sorry you didn't get the job, but you can at least learn, improve and succeed going forward. For that I applaud you!
1/24/2009 5:38:10 PM
Wow, I feel like a stupid son of a bitch.I asked the Opinions editor if it would be offensive to write a column like this. She said "Yeah, but if you make your point..." I see now that it would have been wiser to have focused on the "Yeah", rather than the "but if you make your point."Oh well, I have learned some valuable lessons. Mainly I have learned that A.
1/24/2009 5:49:21 PM
I always thought the 30 foot rule is pretty stupid and i don't even smoke. Apparently a lot of people are really big pussies and even the slightest hint of cigarette smoke in the air dries out their sensitive pussies. Even though they are exposed in an outdoor environment to higher concentrations of car exhaust and other air pollutants supposedly 2nd hand smoke in an outdoor environment still gives them "asthma attacks". Personally unless i get right up in someones face i never even notice cig smoke from outdoor smokers. Usually smokers have teh decency to not smoke right in the doorway of a building so i don't by the "wah wah it goes in the building argument either.
1/24/2009 6:16:31 PM
Bad subject. From someone who deals with air quality for a living, I have to admit I would be fairly biased while reading a paper about someone who breaks a rule like this on their campus. However, if you really dont like the rule, you follow it until you overturn it, or at least if you are going to break it, you certainly dont use that as part of your article imo.Im not sure which Stanford report you have read, but I have read a study for work they did in 2007 as well (im pretty sure its the exact same report since a few of the key things you said match some of the articles words) that stated nearly the exact opposite. You are twisting their report to meet your needs. It is at work so I dont have it on me now but a quick google search helped me out some through an article that was written about the study. Im only going to paste a few paragraphs, but based on the fact that you referenced it, if I was reading your paper I would have tried to look up or google the paper myself and I would have found that the report you are using to support your idea is not really all that supportive of you which is a pretty big negative when trying to write a critical piece:
1/24/2009 6:35:55 PM
i scanned the thread...so this may have been said but,smokers are a minority, so you're looking for sympathy from a very small group which is probably the biggest reason the piece wasn't runalso i agree with the comment about tone. something about it was off. but kudos to you for seeking advice and opinions... it may be after the fact but it looks like most of it was constructive
1/24/2009 6:45:41 PM
also, your use of commas seems to be completely random. and your writing sounds forced, as a bad writer trying to sound good.
1/24/2009 7:05:09 PM
1/24/2009 7:29:20 PM
As someone also guilty of this...too many commas!And like others have said, you should pick a safe topic for a job interview writing.
1/24/2009 8:39:08 PM
1/24/2009 8:43:16 PM
^^^I am not that fucking dumb V He said "The way I read this, and I could be way wrong," so I'm pretty sure he actually thought that was what I meant. But I see your point, certainly.[Edited on January 24, 2009 at 9:06 PM. Reason : /]
1/24/2009 8:44:26 PM
^^ LOL nazi germany is on the same level as smoking outside!! I never knew. i was referring to this law/rule and this situation. are you really that thickheaded?^ and i think the more important thing to take from his statement is not that he is saying you are that dumb, but rather he is pointing out that the way it is written easily leaves it open to be interpreted the way he read it.[Edited on January 24, 2009 at 8:57 PM. Reason : x]
1/24/2009 8:51:42 PM
Just a couple things.First of all, you use the word both, which is exclusive to two people. I hope/assume you know that Faulkner and Twain/Clemens are not the same people, but when you use the word "both" and then talk about three people (Twain/Faulkner/Churchill) it is at the very least grammatically confusing. [/tangent]Anyway, as to the article. It seems to be written well, but this is one of those topics that you will NEVER change anyones' opinion on. People who already agree with you will be like "Fuck yeah!" and those who already disagree will just think you're coming off as whiny.Comparing your struggle to Thoreau, Gandhi, or Martin Luther King Jr. is just ludicris. It comes off way too BridgetSPKesque. I mean, if I think sleeping with children is OK, should I keep doing it in my struggle to protest against this "ridiculous regulation?" I know you qualified your argument, saying you do not equate yourself with these people, but just by bringing their names up you have already tried to create a bond with them.But like other people said, you probably just pissed off the people who do the hiring.
1/24/2009 9:34:42 PM
1/24/2009 9:52:00 PM
I don't think the subject is what hurt you.I think the tone (extremely self-righteous), the total lack of context (university campuses can, in fact, impede on your personal freedoms), no credible research (you didn't cite your sources, AND you didn't even bother mentioning the origins of the regulation), and complete lack of a concluding stance (you enjoying smoking is not a based position to support removing the regulation) are what got you denied.Opinion columns are supposed to be persuasive, well founded, and insightful. Your column was none of these. There are several angles you could have pursued: why 30 feet, what are the health detriments of having to stand so far away from shelter in inclement weather, or comparisons to other public spaces without the regulation? Lots of objective opportunity there.
1/24/2009 10:07:43 PM
some of the comparisons are baffling....first the ones with Thoreau, Gandhi and MLK and then to say that great people like Churchill and Twain smoked...none of this has anything to do with the rule and just felt way out of place.
1/24/2009 10:37:13 PM
1/24/2009 11:09:59 PM
1/24/2009 11:32:11 PM
you are right, I am afraid
1/24/2009 11:41:46 PM
1/25/2009 4:20:03 AM
A couple more hints: (1) William Faulkner's pen name was NOT Mark Twain. I mean, come on, dude. that's pretty bad.(2) You really do need to lose the smug, self-righteous tone throughout your writing. at least until you can overcome these crippling issues you seem to have with logical fallacies and straight-up factual errors.(3) don't ever use the term, "well-nigh". Just ... don't.(4) East Stroudsburg University? They dont have an engineering program ....[Edited on January 25, 2009 at 5:02 AM. Reason : ]
1/25/2009 4:59:26 AM
You are a hell of a person to be talking about "smug, self-righteous tone" I asked for courteous criticism, and everybody up until you was willing to provide it. But for some reason, you decided to be downright malicious. Fuck off.
1/25/2009 11:26:56 AM
As someone who has actually worked as an opinion editor:1) You use of first person - I personally found first-person columns to be baneful, and would generally exhort writers not to use it. (In fact, were it come down to a choice between someone who used it and someone who didn't, I'd easily take the person who didn't.) It's rare that you actually need to invoke it, and generally when you do it sounds self-absorbed and petty. Which, generally when college op-ed writers use it, it does end up being self-absorbed and petty. No reader needs to be told, "I think" or "I feel" - you're the writer, you have a byline, this is obvious. A good writer is able to make their argument without invoking themselves.2) Your comparison of what many perceive to be a minor inconvenience (or even a welcome one, depending upon their point of view), to an epic struggle warranting civil disobedience. It makes the whole thing come across as silly.3) Your tone in making the argument is a little too casual - see, for example, your except:
1/25/2009 11:43:18 AM
DID NOT READ
1/25/2009 12:05:31 PM
1/25/2009 12:49:39 PM
why all the effort to change the school you're at? you realize you already posted that on here?
1/25/2009 1:03:51 PM
^^^^These are all intelligent points; thank you. I will certainly keep them in mind in my future work. I am inclined to agree with you and Noen: if I had approached the subject differently, I might have pulled it off. But anyway, by now I see that there is so much wrong with the column that you are just hammering more nails into a coffin that is already securely fastened shut.^If ANYONE is rejected for a job and makes a thread about it, they rarely give the name of the company which rejected them. It's just not a good idea. And yes, I know I have already given the name of my school elsewhere, but only in a single post, which probably not everyone read; and just because it is posted elsewhere does not mean it should be screamed out now. [Edited on January 25, 2009 at 1:37 PM. Reason : /]
1/25/2009 1:17:45 PM
Your tone has a sense of entitlement to it which is an immediate turn off. Comparing your feelings of injustice and discrimination to Gandhi and MLK is ridiculous. Using the word silly is a poor choice when you are trying to write about a topic that has serious health consequences.
1/25/2009 2:52:23 PM
as a non-smoker who doesnt mind smoking (and even gave it a shot for a few weeks), i have to agree that it was the tone. opinion columns are often somewhat controversial or at least can be from time to time. i just didnt agree with much of it and have to say that...
1/25/2009 5:13:20 PM
I like your article. It's above and beyond most things I've read in the Technician. However, your unpopular stand on a controversial issue may be what got you canned.If you wrote an anti-recycling article backed up by real evidence, you probably would get canned too.I imagine they want people who will toe the line and do what they say, rather than independent thinkers.
1/25/2009 5:39:26 PM
backing it up with much strong evidence than presented here though is key for a persuasion piece imo[Edited on January 25, 2009 at 5:50 PM. Reason : x]
1/25/2009 5:50:02 PM
^^I totally disagree. Opinion columns are supposed to be insight and controversial in some sense.
1/25/2009 7:02:04 PM
Oh, hell with it. Yes, I probably am a very easily offended, defensive and self-important person. I don't have a problem with criticism, and I don't deny that he made good points; but he went out of his way not to be courteous. V well, I've edited it all out, anyway[Edited on January 25, 2009 at 7:31 PM. Reason : /]
1/25/2009 7:22:41 PM
I'm pretty sure the ESU remark was a bit of sarcasm.His reply was in the same tone as your article .
1/25/2009 7:29:25 PM
Oh, and thanks, Vix, by the way.
1/25/2009 9:24:24 PM
i dont see how my tone in offering criticism was either smug or self-righteous.i was being straight-up and to the point. as a persuasive article, it sucked on many levels. sorry if i didnt sugar-coat it or handle your writer's ego with kid gloves. you wanted to "figure out why" you didnt get the job. I'm giving you my opinion. I've had my columns published on UWire, so for whatever that's worth, you can take my opinion or leave it.
1/26/2009 10:54:46 AM
I repeat that I felt you went out of your way not to be courteous. Perhaps we can agree to disagree about that. I have also had columns published on U-Wire, incidentally, so it's not like my writers ego (which I admit to) is totally baseless.On the real, thank you for the basic nature of your reply.
1/26/2009 11:22:51 AM
i want to pose a question about your smoking in the cold complaint....why would anyone care about someone having to stand in the cold when they are doing so to fill their lungs with smoke? doesn't it seem kind of ironic to complain about the exposure of the elements?i'm not trying to move on to the subject of smoking, just saying that it isn't a very good argument. and even though this is supposed to be an opinion piece, it reads more like a persuasive work instead.
1/26/2009 1:03:27 PM
i agree...1. tone2. tone3. tone4. too many damn commas5. subject & POVdid i mention tone?
1/26/2009 1:36:20 PM
was more of his tone than anything ^ said
1/26/2009 1:46:08 PM
set em up
1/26/2009 2:57:01 PM