FC: Article about Daily Collegian 'Sandusky's Imprint' retrospective...

Midnighter

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From Poynter.org. I did not know about this until today. Tread lightly - you might spontaneously combust...oh - and Sara Ganim is involved. Below the link/article is a link to the actual project. Again, tread lightly.

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The 10-year anniversary of the Jerry Sandusky indictments challenged Penn State journalists to dig deep and stand by their work​

Staffers at The Daily Collegian remained committed to educating current students and giving voice to sexual assault survivors​

The Daily Collegian examined the lasting impact of the Jerry Sandusky indictments a decade after they were handed down. (Photo by Lindsey Toomer/Daily Collegian)
By: Barbara Allen

December 30, 2021

The Penn State community loves to talk football — unless it’s about Jerry Sandusky.

That’s what students at The Daily Collegian learned in the process of working on their semester-long special project, “Sandusky’s Imprint.”

I spent Labor Day weekend in Happy Valley, the nickname for State College, Pennsylvania, where Penn State’s campus sprawls throughout a beautiful natural landscape. I got to train about 20 Collegian students, and then worked with them on a weekly basis to see their project through. Their work culminated Dec. 6 in an online presentation that showcased their work to their colleagues, department personnel and Poynter leadership.


A screenshot from The Daily Collegian’s project. “We Are” is a riff on the “We Are/Penn State” call-out heard often at football games. Here’s an ESPN video on the history of the phrase.

Student journalists in the Poynter College Media Project were selected through an application process in the spring of 2021 that asked them to propose an investigation that centered on a problem or issue facing their campus. Dozens of student media outlets applied, and seven were selected for the program, which provided custom project planning, ongoing support from Poynter personnel and a slate of high-profile speakers. They included four-time Pulitzer winner David Barstow, Atlantic staff writer Ed Yong and Sara Ganim, who broke the Sandusky story as a young reporter.

The project was supported by a grant from the Charles Koch Foundation.

Penn State Daily Collegian editor-in-chief Jade Campos introduced her project to the webinar participants by outlining who Sandusky was — “since we were all about 10” when a grand jury alleged that the Penn State defensive coordinator had groomed and then sexually abused and assaulted male children for decades.

“We wanted to really look at not just recounting all of the events but also how has the university changed,” Campos said. “Has the university learned this lesson since then? Has the community changed a lot since then? So a lot of our stories revolve around not just recapping.”

It was important to the team to examine how the university’s administration has changed, and if there are different policies in place for reporting on sexual assualt.
They also prominently showcased on their website resources for survivors of sexual assault.

“Another one of our goals (was to) … give voices to some of these survivors of sexual abuse and how they feel coming up in the university (community) — how much their lives have changed and been impacted,” Campos said.

She said she was particularly proud of the video “How the Patriot-News broke the Jerry Sandusky sex abuse case,” an effort that won The Patriot-News a Pulitzer Prize via reporter Sara Ganim.

“It was an incredibly hard process,” Campos said of reporting on this project. “There were so many times during the semester where it was like, ‘OK, is this actually going to be able to happen?’ Because people care so much about Penn State football and so this is a really hard topic for a lot of people.

“And since all of us were so young, and maybe don’t come from Penn State families, you don’t really understand the impact it had on people who were there and who are living in state college or work at Penn State now.”

Campos said plenty of people expressed anger that the students were reporting on this topic. One reporter contacted 23 store owners about how things in State College had changed over the last 10 years; three were willing to go on the record.
The vitriol continued after the stories were published.
“We’ve had several people say, ‘This is really good reporting,’ but the majority of our response has been really negative,” Campos said.
She offered this advice for other students attempting a contentious project.
“You need to be really confident in what you’re doing in order to stand by it, because we have a lot of people telling us that we’re wrong and we shouldn’t have done this. But I think we’re really confident in our mission statement: to educate the current Penn State community who probably doesn’t know a lot about what happened, (and) making sure that the university doesn’t just sweep this under the rug because it feels like, after all this time, they just want to forget about it, but it shouldn’t be something to be forgotten.”

Campos said it was also important to practice journalism fundamentals so when those hateful comments came in, reporters would know they were in the right.
“Feel really confident about why you’re doing something, and why you’re moving forward with something. Stay steadfast to that because there’s going to be a lot of people who are going to criticize you.”
Campos said other students involved included Andrew Porterfield, digital managing editor and webpage designer; Becky Marcinko, managing editor; Ben McClary, videographer and page graphic designer; Carson Schultz, page graphic designer; Lily LaRegina, photographer and photo editor; reporters Will Aguirre, Courtney Benedetto, Ella Castronuovo, Phoebe Cykosky, James Engel, Olivia Estright, Jeremiah Hassel, Julia Mertes, Max Ralph, Spencer Ripchik, and Megan Swift; and reporting contributors Seth Engle, Colton Lucas and Justin Morganstein.

“I know we are only college students, but we worked really hard and we know what we’re talking about.”

 

Nohow

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Oct 25, 2021
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From Poynter.org. I did not know about this until today. Tread lightly - you might spontaneously combust...oh - and Sara Ganim is involved. Below the link/article is a link to the actual project. Again, tread lightly.

---


The 10-year anniversary of the Jerry Sandusky indictments challenged Penn State journalists to dig deep and stand by their work​

Staffers at The Daily Collegian remained committed to educating current students and giving voice to sexual assault survivors​

The Daily Collegian examined the lasting impact of the Jerry Sandusky indictments a decade after they were handed down. (Photo by Lindsey Toomer/Daily Collegian)
By: Barbara Allen

December 30, 2021
The Penn State community loves to talk football — unless it’s about Jerry Sandusky.

That’s what students at The Daily Collegian learned in the process of working on their semester-long special project, “Sandusky’s Imprint.”

I spent Labor Day weekend in Happy Valley, the nickname for State College, Pennsylvania, where Penn State’s campus sprawls throughout a beautiful natural landscape. I got to train about 20 Collegian students, and then worked with them on a weekly basis to see their project through. Their work culminated Dec. 6 in an online presentation that showcased their work to their colleagues, department personnel and Poynter leadership.


A screenshot from The Daily Collegian’s project. “We Are” is a riff on the “We Are/Penn State” call-out heard often at football games. Here’s an ESPN video on the history of the phrase.

Student journalists in the Poynter College Media Project were selected through an application process in the spring of 2021 that asked them to propose an investigation that centered on a problem or issue facing their campus. Dozens of student media outlets applied, and seven were selected for the program, which provided custom project planning, ongoing support from Poynter personnel and a slate of high-profile speakers. They included four-time Pulitzer winner David Barstow, Atlantic staff writer Ed Yong and Sara Ganim, who broke the Sandusky story as a young reporter.

The project was supported by a grant from the Charles Koch Foundation.

Penn State Daily Collegian editor-in-chief Jade Campos introduced her project to the webinar participants by outlining who Sandusky was — “since we were all about 10” when a grand jury alleged that the Penn State defensive coordinator had groomed and then sexually abused and assaulted male children for decades.

“We wanted to really look at not just recounting all of the events but also how has the university changed,” Campos said. “Has the university learned this lesson since then? Has the community changed a lot since then? So a lot of our stories revolve around not just recapping.”

It was important to the team to examine how the university’s administration has changed, and if there are different policies in place for reporting on sexual assualt.
They also prominently showcased on their website resources for survivors of sexual assault.

“Another one of our goals (was to) … give voices to some of these survivors of sexual abuse and how they feel coming up in the university (community) — how much their lives have changed and been impacted,” Campos said.

She said she was particularly proud of the video “How the Patriot-News broke the Jerry Sandusky sex abuse case,” an effort that won The Patriot-News a Pulitzer Prize via reporter Sara Ganim.

“It was an incredibly hard process,” Campos said of reporting on this project. “There were so many times during the semester where it was like, ‘OK, is this actually going to be able to happen?’ Because people care so much about Penn State football and so this is a really hard topic for a lot of people.

“And since all of us were so young, and maybe don’t come from Penn State families, you don’t really understand the impact it had on people who were there and who are living in state college or work at Penn State now.”

Campos said plenty of people expressed anger that the students were reporting on this topic. One reporter contacted 23 store owners about how things in State College had changed over the last 10 years; three were willing to go on the record.
The vitriol continued after the stories were published.
“We’ve had several people say, ‘This is really good reporting,’ but the majority of our response has been really negative,” Campos said.
She offered this advice for other students attempting a contentious project.
“You need to be really confident in what you’re doing in order to stand by it, because we have a lot of people telling us that we’re wrong and we shouldn’t have done this. But I think we’re really confident in our mission statement: to educate the current Penn State community who probably doesn’t know a lot about what happened, (and) making sure that the university doesn’t just sweep this under the rug because it feels like, after all this time, they just want to forget about it, but it shouldn’t be something to be forgotten.”

Campos said it was also important to practice journalism fundamentals so when those hateful comments came in, reporters would know they were in the right.
“Feel really confident about why you’re doing something, and why you’re moving forward with something. Stay steadfast to that because there’s going to be a lot of people who are going to criticize you.”
Campos said other students involved included Andrew Porterfield, digital managing editor and webpage designer; Becky Marcinko, managing editor; Ben McClary, videographer and page graphic designer; Carson Schultz, page graphic designer; Lily LaRegina, photographer and photo editor; reporters Will Aguirre, Courtney Benedetto, Ella Castronuovo, Phoebe Cykosky, James Engel, Olivia Estright, Jeremiah Hassel, Julia Mertes, Max Ralph, Spencer Ripchik, and Megan Swift; and reporting contributors Seth Engle, Colton Lucas and Justin Morganstein.

“I know we are only college students, but we worked really hard and we know what we’re talking about.”

An exercise in self flagellation courtesy of the Koch bros.
 

GrimReaper

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Oct 12, 2021
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“I know we are only college students, but we worked really hard and we know what we’re talking about.”

In all of the exchanges among, between, citing Spanier, Curley, Schultz, or Paterno was there any mention of a need to protect the football program? No. So you don't know what you're talking about.
 

PrtLng Lion

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Oct 14, 2021
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I'm not going to read the article because I know it'll jack up my blood pressure. I have no doubt these students haven't the slightest clue what really went down. Someone please point them to Ray Blehar, John Ziegler, Wendy Silverwood, or others who have actually dissected this disaster and know the BOT was the ringleader of the circus that pinned this on Paterno, Spanier, and Schultz.
 
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NittPicker

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Who's paying Ganim? Let's see her bank statements. I'm serious.
Some Harrisburg pols played Ganim to write the story as they wanted it to be written. They wanted as much diversion as possible so the public wouldn't notice they themselves were neck deep in the Second Mile cesspool. Somehow Ganim won a local reporting Pulitzer which she parlayed into a CNN gig which consisted mainly of reporting from where bad weather was occurring. I have no idea what sort of contract she had but apparently the CNN honchos realized a Pulitzer doesn't mean someone is actually a good reporter. Maybe she wanted to move on or maybe CNN chose not to renew.
 

AvgUser

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Oct 7, 2021
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I've just listened to Zeigler's episode 12 of "With the Benefit of Hindsight". This is the podcast where he exposes five claimants who collectively received north of $30M. Zeigler has counter evidence through interviews with GF, Fiances, firends, etc that dispute the claimant stories. These young Collegian journalists who claim to work so hard need to listen to that podcast, and then write a story asking how PSU and Ira Lubert gave away all that cash with no questions asked. It is disgraceful (as is their 'hard work' to date).
 

PSU73

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Oct 12, 2021
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I did not read anything except to scan the original post. The item below is where I stopped. Our University officials, past and present, are responsible for this.
It amazes me how they, then and now, allow the University to be defamed repeatedly and it blows me away that certain students today have been imprinted with it and even propagate it. Where's Ohio State, Michigan, Michigan State in their minds. The scale of abuse and the cover-up's by those universities?

1640973581035.png
 

Big_O

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Oct 12, 2021
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I just take things like this with a grain of salt. Probably most these people involved in the project are journalism or liberal arts students who are not used to doing real research and tend to be totally clueless about most things. I just consider the source when evaluating a piece like this and then put it on ignore. I have dealt with these type of people over my lifetime trying to explain things in simple terms so they could get the story at least half right, and usually most of the facts given to them are either left out or distorted so they are unrecognizable. Then to fill in the gaps related to their inability to understand what they had been told, they just make things up that they think in their own minds should be true, and then draw their own conclusion which is the opposite of what the situation really is. I call it a MSU piece (Make $h!+ Up). Unfortunately a lot of these people are incapable of understanding a watered down, somewhat complex issue and the resultant piece is just plain gobbledygook.
 
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Midnighter

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I just take things like this with a grain of salt. Probably most these people involved in the project are journalism or liberal arts students who are not used to doing real research and tend to be totally clueless about most things. I just consider the source when evaluating a piece like this and then put it on ignore. I have dealt with these type of people over my lifetime trying to explain things in simple terms so they could get the story at least half right, and usually most of the facts given to them are either left out or distorted so they are unrecognizable. Then to fill in the gaps related to their inability to understand what they had been told, they just make things up that they think in their own minds should be true, and then draw their own conclusion which is the opposite of what the situation really is. I call it a MSU piece (Make $h!+ Up). Unfortunately a lot of these people are incapable of understanding a watered down, somewhat complex issue and the resultant piece is just plain gobbledygook.

This is great for you but there is a lot of coverage with this in addition to some big names attached. You can expect one of these every ten years or so until someone at Penn State puts a stop to this nonsense.
 

MacNit

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Oct 12, 2021
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I did not read anything except to scan the original post. The item below is where I stopped. Our University officials, past and present, are responsible for this.
It amazes me how they, then and now, allow the University to be defamed repeatedly and it blows me away that certain students today have been imprinted with it and even propagate it. Where's Ohio State, Michigan, Michigan State in their minds. The scale of abuse and the cover-up's by those universities?

View attachment 171306
Amazingly stupid…and they are damaging their own PERSONAL BRAND…they should transfer to O$U…bet they would not be allowed to write about sexual abuse there though.
 
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PSUJam

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Her husband does okay financially and she has nothing better to do.
She has to wonder why all of her friends that were leaking her info killed her career by not continuing to leak her info about other topics.
 

Nits1989

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Oct 29, 2021
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The general take on things:

Penn State: horrible, worst ever. Politicians said so, media said so, even the school said so.

Ohio State, Michigan, Michigan State: not talked about in the same way, if at all.

Totally irrational, illogical. Maddening. Its so unfair, but the older I get, I see blatant unfairness that never really gets questioned or corrected.
 

91Joe95

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Oct 6, 2021
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She has to wonder why all of her friends that were leaking her info killed her career by not continuing to leak her info about other topics.

Her DA vacation buddy lost her license to practice law.
 
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