Sunday, June 19, 2005

When Answers Are E-Mailed

The question "Should direct quotations be edited?" is one, as I have said before, that seems to split journalists right down the middle. One side maintains that "we shouldn't make people look stupid," while the correct side considers the question analogous to "Should history be altered?"

I put it this way in "Lapsing Into a Comma":

This doesn't mean we need to reproduce every um, every er, every cough; it doesn't mean a reporter's transcription errors can't be corrected; and it certainly doesn't mean that stories should attempt to re-create dialect (plenty of literate people pronounce should have as "should of"). But it does mean that a reader should be able to watch a TV interview and read the same interview in the newspaper and not notice discrepancies in word choice.

The pronunciation issue is just one of the complexities within the bigger question. What about quotes from written material? If the Senate subcommittee's report refers to "the President," are we at liberty to make that "the president"? It's a slightly closer call than changing a spoken "ain't" to "isn't," but I think the answer is still no. The attribution "the panel wrote" should introduce what the panel actually wrote.

Now then: What about written material of a less-formal nature? More and more these days, instead of making a phone call, a reporter will ask a source a question by e-mail. If Deep Throat '05 writes, "dood that documnet, thats the smokin gun!!!!!," what do you quote your source as saying?

My answer may surprise you:

"That document, that's the smoking gun," the source said.

E-mail is the medium, not the message, and informality in spelling, capitalization and punctuation in e-mailed answers is akin to pronunciation in spoken answers. All this, for me, hinges on the verb "said." Whether you must disclose "said in an e-mail interview" is an issue for your publication's masters (Do you say "said in a telephone interview"?), but once you frame your quote in terms of "said" rather than "wrote," you become a literate transcriber rather than a photocopier. More controversially, perhaps, I would extend this liberty even to "said in a news release." If Acme announces news about "WILE E. COYOTE" in a release, go ahead and make it "Wile E. Coyote," as long as you're saying "the spokesman said" or "the company said" rather than "the news release said."

That news-release guideline is an exception to my general advice, which is to treat documents as sacred when they are intended to be read by an audience other than the reporter. When you're quoting an e-mail to yourself, you're quoting the writer of the e-mail, you should use the verb "said," and you should follow your publication's style; when you're quoting an e-mail from Enron felon No. 1 to Enron felon No. 2, you're quoting the e-mail, you should use the verb "wrote," and you shouldn't change things.

3 comments:

Eric "Babe" Morse said...

I've always imagined this rule existed somewhere in the Left-wing Media Conspiracy Guidebook: "...use of sic is reserved for letters and opinions with which we disagree, so as to make the speaker look like an ignoramus."

Related: Who names her kid Wile? Seriously, you're just asking for trouble there.
Unless it's Darth Wile. That'd be cool.

Bill said...

I'm not a big fan of "stated." If a company can't "say," it can't "state" either.

Doug said...

Good, practical advice, Bill. Just after I'd noted a bit of style fascism over on my blog regarding the fiddling among papers with how the British memo spelled al Qaida (or is that Qaeda?).

As for the "company said" thing -- I've never been all that bothered by the chorus line argument against companies saying things. After all, would you write in a lede: "General Motors said in a release Friday that it would lay off ...? No, you'd say General Motors said Friday that it would lay off ... and then explain elsewhere where the info came from. Sticking mindlessly to this misguided rule that companies can't "say" things is foolish, as long as the phrasing is not overused as an excuse not to go find real people to comment. (And as Jack Cappon noted, stated "is the instant mark of a wooden writer." Others have noted it imparts a tone of veracity.)