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Annals of bizarro: Andisheh publicly questions Sunday Paper news editor

Tuesday, December 16th, 2008

On his blog Andy2000.org, former CL senior writer and current freelancer Andisheh Nouraee poses a rather pointed question to the Sunday Paper and its news editor, former CL staff writer Stephanie Ramage:

Ms. Ramage and Sunday Paper management owe the public a clear answer to a simple question: Did Ms. Ramage author a comment to John Sugg’s column using the pseudonym Lazarus?

If so, Nouraee continues:

[S]he has used her position as an editor at Sunday Paper to launch anonymous personal attacks, [and] she’s violating more professional rules and ethics than I can count.

The Lazarus comment, according to Nouraee, contains “several false and slanderous personal and professional allegations about my friend and former CL editor Ken Edelstein.”

The column to which the comment was posted was written by yet another former Loafer, Sugg. His column — in my estimation, anyway — has its own conflict-rich history. (For yet another potential conflict-of-interest that I didn’t address, check out the end of this Atlanta Magazine blog post.)

That brings the total number of former Loafers involved in this imbroglio to FOUR — not counting Sunday Paper Publisher Patrick Best, who’s hardly kept his nose out of the news.

Real Housewives, move over.

Last week’s top posts

Tuesday, December 9th, 2008

1. Ludacris, T.I., Young Jeezy stump for Jim Martin in Atlanta

2. Annals of Bizarro: Sugg dishes on the Loaf in the Sunday Paper

3. SNL parodies Zell Miller and Georgia U.S. Senate race

4. Rapper, Diddy’s cousin sentenced in BMF sting

5. Saxby supporters are at it again

Annals of bizarro: Sugg dishes on the Loaf in the Sunday Paper

Friday, November 28th, 2008

Love him or hate him, former CL Senior Editor John Sugg never fails to get lips a-flappin’ with his firebrand columns — particularly one published today, under the headline “Creative Loafing’s death spiral.”

The column talks about “the demolition of the newspaper’s once-outstanding journalism” (ouch!), how “the content eroded to a state that can only be called pathetic” (egads!) and that “the big losers are the readers” (sorry, guys!).

Other than Sugg’s hyperbolic elegies, I have two issues with his column — the same two issues I had when Sugg presented the column to me three days before it appeared on the Sunday Paper’s website.

My first concern is that Sugg used his column to criticize newspapers, including the Loaf, for “hanging on to printed editions long after consumers were decidedly digital.” Basically, he’s calling out CL for putting so much of its faith (at least in the past) in its print edition. Fair enough. Yet Sugg failed to disclose that he and a crew of fellow talented journalists are currently trying to secure funding for an online-only news organization.

He and the organization arguably could benefit from spreading the online-only gospel. That, to me, is a conflict of interest — one that warranted a full disclosure. I told him so, and he agreed.

My other issue had not to do with the possibility that Sugg might profit from what he printed but, rather, that he didn’t explicitly state that he’d lost money as a result of what he described as “the erratic and impetuous” managerial style of Creative Loafing Inc.’s CEO Ben Eason. Sugg did disclose in the column that he’s a Creative Loafing Inc. shareholder, but he didn’t outright state that Eason’s supposed missteps were a blow to his own finances — or that he might harbor anger toward Eason because of that financial hit.

Anyway, you might be wondering why I read the column days before it appeared in another publication. Sugg had emailed the column to me on Tuesday night, to be printed in next week’s Creative Loafing. But as I had mentioned to him the day before, I and the rest of the staff wanted to print a column about the contributions of former CL Editor Ken Edelstein, who’d just been fired.

I asked Sugg to retool the column. He said he would — but instead wrote an entirely different piece. The original then appeared in the Sunday Paper.

At this point, the conflicts have become so convoluted that, although we’ll be running a column about Edelstein in our next edition, it won’t be written by Sugg. When I told him that, he said he understood the decision. Hey, no hard feelings.

P.S. — Note to SP editors: Your headline for Sugg’s column (and the column itself) alludes to CL’s “strategy” to “rip off articles and blogs from real content producers and paste them onto CL Web sites.” You seem to be referring to a sidebar on our website’s home page, where we link to stories we find interesting in other publications. The whole thing takes less than 5 percent of the staff’s time. It’s called “aggregation,” and it’s practiced by the New York Times, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, and, to a greater extent, Talking Points Memo and the Daily Beast. Wake up to the Internetz!

John Sugg on CNN last night

Monday, March 31st, 2008

Creative Loafing columnist and firebrand preacher John Sugg was on CNN last night.

Here he is sitting next to Neal Boortz discussing the college student who asked Chelsea Clinton a question about Monica Lewinsky last week.

What’s wrong with this picture?

Friday, January 25th, 2008

John Sugg retired today

What’s wrong with this picture?

It’s John Sugg’s desk, but he ain’t at it. After 13 years at CL, John retired today.

He’s still going to write for us, which is great.

But we won’t be seeing him every day, which really sucks.

Sen. Eric Johnson, Fresh Loaf enthusiast

Monday, January 21st, 2008

The influence of Fresh Loaf reaches the highest levels of government, as evident from a brief exchange I had with Sen. Eric Johnson, R-The Garden of Good and Evil, after Wednesday’s Senate committee hearing about the statewide water plan.

After chatting for a moment — and wondering if the gentleman from Savannah was going to pummel me for our paper’s past jabs — Johnson said, “I love Creative Loafing. Don’t always with agree with it in terms of ideology, but it’s a great read. I read Fresh Loaf every day.”

So do we get the credit for your sleek cranium, senator?

Atlanta blogs today: Sayonara, Sugg

Wednesday, January 16th, 2008

Please start with a research project focused on creating the Flying Suit from the Jetsons. Not only would that be super cool, but I predict massive benefit to our current transportation mess.

— flackattack at Tondee’s Tavern, on what he wants soon-to-be-sorta-former CLer John Sugg to research once he starts his think tank.

—–

excluding gas spent to drive home from south carolina for christmas, i have put $30 worth of fuel in my vehicle this month. my average weekly fuel bill prior to the switch was more than $110.
i have finished one full book, read the first half of the old testament and begun an detailed commentary on the gospel of john.

— James at the arc of time has given up driving for MARTA.

—–

Several blocks of Glenwood just inside I-285 were shut down with dozens of police cars blocking access to Glenwood from side streets and parking lots. A police helicopter was still circling overhead.

— Decatur-DeKalb on this morning’s killings of two DeKalb County police officers responding to a report of a suspicious person. The suspects have not been caught.

Mayor where?

Monday, July 2nd, 2007

From 11 Alive:

Howard Dean, Chairman of the Democratic National Committee, announced Monday his intention to nominate Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin as a permanent convention co-chair.

Apparently, doing nothing while crime balloons and the police department implodes isn’t keeping our mayor busy enough.

Hey, Time magazine, it’s still not too late to run a correction.

Atlanta blogs today: Obama’s bathroom

Friday, April 13th, 2007

Far from being “redundant” in the way the critics imply, the streetcar closes a long-existing gap in rail service.

– Joe Winter at Joeventures.com addressing critics of Peachtree Street streetcar. Creative Loafing’s Mara Shalhoup wrote about the streetcar last week.

What makes the AJC think anybody wants to hear an Atlanta newspaper’s opinion about whether Don Imus, a New York radio host, should be fired?

– Rusty at Radical Georgia Moderate, on the AJC’s editorial disapproval of now-unemployed host Don Imus.

CL’s John Sugg explained yesterday that the AJC’s outrage at bigotted radio commentary is like the pot calling the kettle nappy.

I also found out yesterday that the members of Obama’s campaign from Illinois were in need of a press area for Saturday’s rally, and as luck would have it, my office happens to be the best location (Yipee!). And my office is also the closest bathroom location so if the Senator feels compelled to relieve himself …I am right there…LOL (ok, so I am pushing my luck here).

– Angee at NewKarma in Atlanta, an Obama campaign volunteer apparently eager to have the senator from Illinois use her office toilet. The audaciously hopeful Obama will be in Atlanta on Saturday. Information about the event is here.