Paying attention to the obvious
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The obvious gets a bad rap. You know the obvious, don鈥檛 you? It鈥檚 standing there 鈥 see, right there in front of you, plain as day, breathing heavily and looking like the world鈥檚 biggest wallflower. The obvious always hangs around with its close friends, the normal and the commonplace. Nice guys. Nobody gives them a second thought.
Every once in a while, however, it is worth looking directly at the obvious and asking, where鈥檇 you come from? I recently noticed these obvious things, for instance: Almost everybody stays in their lanes when they drive. Water out of the tap is fairly tasty. Public libraries 鈥 what a concept! Also: Walking along a sidewalk is a fun, safe workout. And most people seem happy most of the time.
Not exactly news flashes. The drama is in the things that don鈥檛 work and people who are upset. But if you are always looking at the dysfunctional or bizarre, you can miss the big stuff: the awesome deep of the night sky, the skillful way birds dart through traffic, the huge majority of people in the world鈥檚 trouble spots who just send their kids to school and go to work.
I have long advocated that news articles not just report the new and exciting but restate the obvious and basic: What exactly is a credit default swap? Who are the Taliban? We news people sometimes forget how important the non-new is. It is most of what is happening. To my chagrin, a former editor at the Boston Globe, Matt Storin, dubbed don鈥檛-forget-the-obvious the 鈥淵emma rule.鈥 Not exactly a glorious journalistic legacy, but I鈥檒l take it.
Around the house, I鈥檝e won acclaim for being able to follow assembly directions for lamps and other consumer durables. Part A goes into Slot B. Obvious. And, yes, boring.
One of the most famous obvious things was the round world. Long before 1492, mariners sailed to the horizon and returned to tell the tale. Another obvious thing was the way every school kid looking at a map saw that South America could snuggle under West Africa, indicating they once were stuck together. The round Earth and continental drift were common sense long before they were scientific dogma.
A great story about the obvious is told by Everett Martin. Mr. Martin is a retired journalist who lives on Cape Cod. He had a full and adventurous career with The Wall Street Journal, Time magazine, and other publications, starting out in Boston in the 1950s with the Monitor. It was late summer 1954.
鈥淚t was a quiet day, and late in the afternoon I put in a call to Ed Mills at the State House to see if he was sending in any copy,鈥 Martin recalls. 鈥淗e told me that it was very quiet there 鈥 just a lot of trees down in the Commons and he heard that the steeple of the Old North Church had blown off. I was astounded. Sitting in our fortress building (Monitor headquarters), we didn't even know that one of the worst hurricanes ever to hit Boston had roared through.鈥
This was back when the Monitor had the staff and circulation to cover local Boston news, as well as news of the wider world, which was and remains its speciality. There was a common assumption, Martin said, that the Monitor didn鈥檛 cover natural disasters 鈥 though it had done a bang-up job covering the Great Depression, World War II, Korea, and plenty of other disasters.
Martin and photographer Gordon Converse went after the story, and they did it in a Monitor way. Among the headlines: 鈥Buzzards Bay Cottagers Act as a Team in Meeting Post-Storm Challenge,鈥 and 鈥淩adar Proves Accuracy in Tracing Storm Course.鈥 If you ignore the obvious, you miss stories of human resilience and ingenuity. It鈥檚 the way we鈥檝e covered the Haiti earthquake, the east Asian tsunami, and many other disasters since then.
Two weeks after Martin and Converse hit the road, another big hurricane was approaching. This time, Martin recalled, 鈥渢he newsroom was filled with dedicated hurricane hunters.鈥
John Yemma is the editor of 鈥海角大神.