Meryl Davis's Grandmother is from London, ONT. | Page 2 | Golden Skate

Meryl Davis's Grandmother is from London, ONT.

dorispulaski

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The London Free Press has put out a $3 Canadian book on Virtue & Moir, with lots of pictures (about 40, I think?) for Worlds. Since links to commercial operations are not allowed on GS, I won't post a link, but no one should suppose that the London FP is not publishing articles about V&M, too, in order to fully take advantage of the " make hay while the sun shines" opportunity of having Worlds in London.

I have to agree that Ryan Pyotte did a decent job here-Meryl's Canadian grandma & family are not part of D&W's media bio. If it were, it would have come out for the Olympics, or last year at the GPF in Quebec. It's quite common for Canadian (and for that matter, American) jounalists & commentators to tell us when skaters have roots in their countries, or in countries where they are competing. I'm thinking of Tanith Belbin, Piper Gilles, the Duchesnays, Kharis Ralph (who has Washington, DC, connections), and for that matter, Lukas Kaugars, and whether they have even spent significant time in a country (for example Lucinda Ruh in Japan)

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ImaginaryPogue

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Jun 3, 2009
And if you have ever belonged to the press, SB, I am surprised also at your failure to appreciate the journalistic value of human-interest content. [In another thread discussing such a feature story, your disdain was similar to what you have expressed in this thread.]
Surely you are aware that the most successful model of Olympic coverage was pioneered by Roone Arledge, who significantly increased TV audiences for obscure sports by making viewers care about individual athletes as human beings.

Is he/she the reason we have all those mediocre NBC puff pieces about athletes instead of time dedicated to athletic competition?
 
Joined
Jun 21, 2003
^ No, that would be Dick Ebersol, long-time director of NBC sports. He brought us the "up close and personal" model of Olympic television coverage.

Roone Arledge took over ABC Sports back in the 1960s when ABC was just starting out. As director of sports and later news director for the fledgling network, he is credited with playing a large role in the rise of ABC to a position of parity with the two major networks, NBC and CBS. He is the person who brought college basketball, college football, and track and field to television.

Mr. Arledge also developed the tour de force "Wide World of Sports" (and coined its slogan. "thrill of victory, agony of defeat)." This program trotted the globe to provide coverage of under-publicized sports -- like figure skating. :) Peggy Fleming became a household name in the United States because of being featured repeatedly on these network broadcasts. This marked the first time figure skating had been shown on television, and ushered the sport into the television age.
 

Mrs. P

Uno, Dos, twizzle!
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Is he/she the reason we have all those mediocre NBC puff pieces about athletes instead of time dedicated to athletic competition?

I agree that there's been an abuse of these fluff pieces by television networks for the years, but that's a reflection of the network not Mr. Arledge. I think there has been many really interesting sport feature pieces done over the years. In fact, I'd argue that ABC did some interesting ones when they had the television rights to figure skating coverage.

Back to the subject at hand, I do work at a local newspaper (something I point out for the relevancy of this thread, not because I particularly want to be noted as media; I don't cover figure skating and I come as yr average Jane on these boards). But I too commend Pyotte on this piece. As golden411 said, this is not a piece that came from a news release or a media call. Readers often like to read about connections to their town or community. In fact, one of my colleagues had a story about a man running for John Kerry's Senate seat who is from my city and graduated from one of the local high schools.

And Pyotte also exposes an interesting point -- there's been so much made about the fact that Worlds is in Tessa's hometown and that there's going to be a huge crowd for them, etc. Pyotte actually exposes an interesting angle -- that Charlie and Meryl will also have family and friends in London cheering for them too.

And in relation to my first point, human interest/feature pieces =/= fluff or PR spewl. I have read some amazing sports feature pieces over the years. They require a lot of enterprise (as you won't find them in news releases), reporting and writing skills.

I thought this piece by Pyette was quite well written actually. Let's look:

There wasn’t a hint of cellphones or social media in the summer of 1939 at Bright’s Grove.

But when there was a beautiful woman, this Ava Gardner look-a-like, on the nearby Lake Huron beach, word travelled like a lightning bolt.

Ken Davis, a vacationing teen from Detroit, heard about this vision — 21-year-old Cecile Dennis of London — and went to have a look. There, the 16-year-old spotted another girl, much closer to his 16 years, trying to ride a bicycle.

She crashed and Ken scrambled to her aid. They talked and he discovered she was Cecile Dennis’ younger sister Marian.

“That’s how my grandmother and grandfather met,” Meryl Davis said.

And that’s where the 2013 world figure skating championships, which begin in a week and a half at London’s Budweiser Gardens, takes a rather interesting twist.

London is Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir country. The Olympic ice dance champs are the face of these hometown worlds.

But the city and this area also holds a special place in the heart of Davis, who, along with fellow Michigan native and partner Charlie White, stand as the greatest threat to the Canadians reign.

A few things that stood out.
1.) Pyette obeys the ultimate rule of journalism "show don't tell" in his lead off here. In stead of pointing out that Cecile Dennis were just "beautiful" he specifically mention that she looked like Ava Gardner. (Of course many readers will know Ava Gardner as she was a popular Hollywood actress). That has a little bit of context---she wasn't only pretty -- she had the looks of a movie star. It also provides context -- in 1939, Ava Gardner was the height of her success, so a comparison to her made sense and made sense why Ken Davis wanted to meet her, which provided the venue to met his soon-to-be wife -- the younger sister. A moment of happenstance.

2.) Why should readers care? He captures it right here: "London is Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir country. The Olympic ice dance champs are the face of these hometown worlds.
But the city and this area also holds a special place in the heart of Davis, who, along with fellow Michigan native and partner Charlie White, stand as the greatest threat to the Canadians reign." Again context -- he explains (as I noted) that people know London as V/M territory, yet Davis has a tie to the area as well.
3.) I just love some of the details he captured in this piece. For example:

Paul Davis said his mother and daughter are bound, not just by similarity in looks, but by books. When Meryl went off to Sochi, Russia, for the Grand Prix final this season, she and Marian read, and discussed, Lord Tennyson’s famous Charge of the Light Brigade poem. The work revolves around the Battle of Balaclava fought in the vicinity of the 2014 Olympic site.

“That’s the kind of thing they talk about,” Paul said.

History and family are always hot topics.

In London, they will merge for Meryl Davis.

I mean seriously, you are not going to find this detail in a news release. So many details in such a short paragraph -- Meryl and Marian's strong relationship, that they look alike and they share a love for literature (plus they enjoy reading literature in context!). This is good reporting on Pyette's part. He had to take the time to interview these people and not only that he managed to capture the most important points and put it together in this story. Also I really like the ending -- he doesn't go to the typical-end-with-a-quote technique but rather ends with a simple declarative sentence that says it all.

Thanks for humoring my analysis -- this is probably way too boring for most of you, but I felt as a fellow journalist that he needed to be given more credit then he was being given.
 
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Skater Boy

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Feb 24, 2012
Wow, you know you are big and important when stories like this become news (doesn't help London is relatively small) LOL. It's almost like what did Justin B eat last night by looking in the garbage.
 

Mrs. P

Uno, Dos, twizzle!
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Dec 27, 2009
Wow, you know you are big and important when stories like this become news (doesn't help London is relatively small) LOL. It's almost like what did Justin B eat last night by looking in the garbage.

And I'm not sure where you live but to most, a city of 366,000+ people is hardly a small town! No this is not a breaking news piece, it's a feature. Are there more pressing things to write about? Sure. But in the context of Pyette's job, this is a reasonable story to write about on his beat:

Ryan Pyette has been a sports reporter for The London Free Press since 2001. He previously worked for the Sun papers in Calgary and Winnipeg. He has covered two Olympics and proudly displays a massive 1999 World Professional Chuckwagon Association writer-of-the-year plaque at his work station. He is originally from Sault Ste. Marie.

I am absolutely confused why people are trashing this guy. At least the guy is trying to find interesting angles rather than the same tired articles us fans see all the time.
 

ice coverage

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^ No, that would be Dick Ebersol, long-time director of NBC sports. He brought us the "up close and personal" model of Olympic television coverage.

For better or worse, Arledge was the pioneer of "up close and personal." Ebersol, who had been Arledge's protege at ABC, continued the model at NBC. :yes:

"Arledge expanded Olympics broadcasts beyond the competition by including personal profiles of athletes, a style echoed today since his protege, Dick Ebersol, runs NBC Sports, which now broadcasts the Olympic Games."

"A protege of the late great ABC exec Roone Arledge, Ebersol first cut his teeth as a researcher for that network's coverage of the 1968 Mexico City Games, and he would hone Arledge's "up, close and personal" approach to storytelling as the Summer and Winter Olympics shifted from being an ABC signature TV event and a fleeting CBS attraction to an NBC mainstay."

I for one am not ashamed to say that in both the Arledge and Ebersol eras, "up close and personal" pieces were effective at drawing my attention to unfamiliar athletes in unfamiliar sports. :popcorn:
Not sayin' that every single one was an Emmy-worthy masterpiece of storytelling, but IMHO, some of them were very well-produced. :points:

I can understand that a longtime fan of a certain sport might find an UCaP piece a completely superfluous "introduction" to an Olympic athlete whom he/she already knows very well. But if the fan truly loves the sport in question, I hope that he/she would consider that the UCaP piece might gain new interest and respect for the sport during the Olympic event and maybe even well beyond.

Thanks for humoring my analysis -- this is probably way too boring for most of you, but I felt as a fellow journalist that he needed to be given more credit then he was being given.

:agree: Thanks for taking the time to share your excellent analysis, Mrs. P. Loved it! :bow:
 

shan

Rinkside
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Nov 13, 2005
I am surprised at the negative reaction to this rather innocuous article (both on this forum and in the comments following the article itself).
 

Mrs. P

Uno, Dos, twizzle!
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I think part of the issue is that people, for whatever reason, take an article as a be-all, end-all to a person's coverage. I constantly have to explain sources and people I write about that a story, in most cases, in never the last word or thought on the subject. There's a reason why newspapers are known as the "first draft of history."

For the record I did a search on Ryan's articles about Virtue and Moir: http://www.lfpress.com/search?cx=01...heart-for-american-skaters&ss=6176j1448502j43

Among those articles are plenty of articles about Carmen and it's evolution over the season so I thnk the people who are complaining about the lack of V/M articles either aren't making the effort to search for them (as they are not familiar with Ryan's work) or total ubers offended at the idea that a Canadian writer is writing about their rivals.
 
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Joined
Aug 16, 2009
I thought this piece by Pyette was quite well written actually. Let's look:

A few things that stood out.
1.) Pyette obeys the ultimate rule of journalism "show don't tell" in his lead off here. In stead of pointing out that Cecile Dennis were just "beautiful" he specifically mention that she looked like Ava Gardner. (Of course many readers will know Ava Gardner as she was a popular Hollywood actress). That has a little bit of context---she wasn't only pretty -- she had the looks of a movie star. It also provides context -- in 1939, Ava Gardner was the height of her success, so a comparison to her made sense and made sense why Ken Davis wanted to meet her, which provided the venue to met his soon-to-be wife -- the younger sister. A moment of happenstance.

2.) Why should readers care? He captures it right here: "London is Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir country. The Olympic ice dance champs are the face of these hometown worlds.
But the city and this area also holds a special place in the heart of Davis, who, along with fellow Michigan native and partner Charlie White, stand as the greatest threat to the Canadians reign." Again context -- he explains (as I noted) that people know London as V/M territory, yet Davis has a tie to the area as well.
3.) I just love some of the details he captured in this piece.

I mean seriously, you are not going to find this detail in a news release. So many details in such a short paragraph -- Meryl and Marian's strong relationship, that they look alike and they share a love for literature (plus they enjoy reading literature in context!). This is good reporting on Pyette's part. He had to take the time to interview these people and not only that he managed to capture the most important points and put it together in this story. Also I really like the ending -- he doesn't go to the typical-end-with-a-quote technique but rather ends with a simple declarative sentence that says it all.

Thanks for humoring my analysis -- this is probably way too boring for most of you, but I felt as a fellow journalist that he needed to be given more credit then he was being given.

I like your analysis very much. I had noticed the good and lively writing of the piece (I commented on it earlier), especially the introduction, but you really broke it down into details and helped me see even more in the piece. You demonstrate that journalism doesn't consist just of one kind of article--it isn't just reports of important events. Profiles give readers a more in-depth look at the participants of events, making for better-informed readers.
 

ice coverage

avatar credit: @miyan5605
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For the record I did a search on Ryan's articles about Virtue and Moir: http://www.lfpress.com/search?cx=01...heart-for-american-skaters&ss=6176j1448502j43

Among those articles are plenty of articles about Carmen and it's evolution over the season so I thnk the people who are complaining about the lack of V/M articles either aren't making the effort to search for them (as they are not familiar with Ryan's work) or total ubers offended at the idea that a Canadian writer is writing about their rivals.

And Pyette has just published a new article about Virtue/Moir:

Virtue says they're ready to rock the Bud
By Ryan Pyette, The London Free Press
Tuesday, March 5, 2013 10:23:00 EST PM
http://www.lfpress.com/2013/03/05/virtue-says-theyre-ready-to-rock-the-bud
 

shan

Rinkside
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Nov 13, 2005
Well thank goodness he wrote an article about V/M. I hope that pacifies fans.
 

ice coverage

avatar credit: @miyan5605
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^^ Disagree with the sarcasm from CAS, who has ignored the major factor that Pyette's story was published TEN DAYS before Rosewater's.

An alternate -- and in my opinion, far more plausible explanation -- is that through his own enterprise reporting, Pyette did in fact "break" the story (on Mar 1) that Davis has Canadian roots, and in the London area, no less.
My (unverified) assumption would be that after reading Pyette's story, the USOC and/or Rosewater (with or without the encouragement of Davis/White's agent at IMG) wanted to jump on the bandwagon.
This kind of copycat journalism is very common practice -- in hard news, in sports, in entertainment, in any kind of news.

LOL, with ten days for additional reporting, any journalist worth his/her salt darn well should have been able to "trump" Pyette's original reporting with something extra (as Rosewater did by obtaining the enjoyable photos of the grandparents, for instance).
Pyette still has my admiration for being the first (by a long shot) to report a new and interesting narrative that is relevant both to Worlds in London and to Davis. :points:
[And no, I am not an agent for Pyette or for the LFP. ;)]

My own gut reaction is to wonder why the USOC/Rosewater were so SLOW to come up with their own version of the story. (But to be fair, it is possible that the marked delay could be chalked up to a necessary dependency on the very busy Davis to provide the photos of her grandparents. I believe I recognize the pic of her young cousin from a very old Davis tweet before a competition way in the past -- maybe even during a previous season.)

(BTW, I hope that the tweet from D/W's agent was a no-brainer. It's hardly rocket science to use social media to promote a client.)
 

dorispulaski

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Country
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If Davis were doing this sort of thing nefariously, it would have been reported before the last Olympics or just before last year's GPF in Quebec. It looks to me like Pyette broke the story, especially because the date on the USFSA report is 10 days after his.

What this shows is that USFSA isn't a big news agency. It had the option to run a news site (icenetwork), and instead turned the whole kit & kaboodle over to Major League Baseball (MLB).

If you want to find something nefarious, how the heck is it that Marie Bowness of Canada is the tech specialist for two successive Worlds in ice dance? Talk about severe unfair advantage there, given that the single most important person for setting levels in the tech specialist. And that these placements of tech panels are done direcly by Cinquanta with the assistance of the head of figure skating, Dave Dore of Canada, with some suggestions by the federation holding the championships, Canada.

2012
http://www.isuresults.com/results/wc2012/SEG011OF.HTM

2013
http://www.isuresults.com/results/wc2013/SEG007OF.HTM
 
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KKonas

Medalist
Joined
Oct 31, 2009
If Davis were doing this sort of thing nefariously, it would have been reported before the last Olympics or just before last year's GPF in Quebec. It looks to me like Pyette broke the story, especially because the date on the USFSA report is 10 days after his.

What this shows is that USFSA isn't a big news agency. It had the option to run a news site (icenetwork), and instead turned the whole kit & kaboodle over to Major League Baseball (MLB).

If you want to find something nefarious, how the heck is it that Marie Bowness of Canada is the tech specialist for two successive Worlds in ice dance? Talk about severe unfair advantage there, given that the single most important person for setting levels in the tech specialist. And that these placements of tech panels are done direcly by Cinquanta with the assistance of the head of figure skating, Dave Dore of Canada, with some suggestions by the federation holding the championships, Canada.

2012
http://www.isuresults.com/results/wc2012/SEG011OF.HTM

2013
http://www.isuresults.com/results/wc2013/SEG007OF.HTM

I think you said it here re how Bowness may have gotten 2 Worlds in a row, but Judy Blumberg is no pushover and you still need 2 to agree. Let's hope all is fair.
 

dorispulaski

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Country
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I'm hoping that both teams will skate beautifully, and there will be no controversial calls either way. then whichever team wins, I'll be happy.

I wasn't particularly happy with the judging at the free dance at Worlds last year, so when anyone is back from that panel, I'm not crazy about it.
 
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