Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Read any guy's lit lately?

Just read a great piece by NPR's Linda Holmes. The title of the column is "Women are not Marshmallow Peeps, and other reasons there's no 'chick lit.'" The best line, IMHO, is this:
But at this point, I think the only solution is to stay away from the term "chick lit" as much as humanly possible, because it's become a term that means "by and about women, and not something you need to take seriously...."
And her other great point: Why don't we categorize books about men as "guy's lit"? Just something to ponder.

Friday, August 20, 2010

Its a cute blog

I found this today. It's got some interesting stuff. (And yes, I know I left out the apostrophe in the headline. I did it on purpose.)

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

Get the lead out

Why am I surprised by anything anymore? I spotted a very silly error in Scott Turow's op-ed column in today's New York Times. Turow writes:
The measure was never ratified by the Legislature, while her offer of $1,000 lead directly to her conviction for bribery in the Illinois courts.
The past tense of "lead" is "led." It's not an error that spell-check will catch, so you have to actually proofread your work. "What's proofreading?" you ask? It's a long-forgotten skill that, if practiced correctly, might save you from embarrassment.

Monday, August 16, 2010

Good edit


Update: Just in time for the beginning of the school year, my online friend Mark Johnson photo-shopped this fix of the misspelling on a North Carolina road.

Very cool, mark.

Saturday, August 14, 2010

Hot hot wheels wheels


My son has had this Hot Wheels toy for over a year, but I just noticed the error on the box yesterday. Does that mean my copy editing skills are declining, or that I'm just less cranky?

Click on the photo and look on the left for the typo. You see why every office needs a copy editor.

Friday, August 13, 2010

What about dad?


I was struck by the juxtaposition of two stories in The New York Times earlier this week. One was a magazine article about stock car racer Dale Earnhardt Jr., the other a sports feature on New York Liberty power forward Taj McWilliams-Franklin. Both were well done, but they also replayed old stereotypes about what is expected of mothers and fathers in our society.

The McWilliams-Franklin story focused on how her travel schedule impacted her relationship with her daughters. It was part of the Times' series "Motherhood in Play." The Earnhardt piece discussed how Junior missed out on a relationship with his father, also a racing superstar.

These two ideas seem related, no? Yet why is there never a story on how pro sports affects fatherhood? The McWilliams-Franklin story told readers that 11 mothers play in the WNBA. I know it must be difficult for their families, but isn't it also difficult for all the families of fathers who play in the NBA?

The WNBA story actually quoted a social psychologist saying the following about the fact that McWilliams-Franklin's youngest daughter is cared for by the girl's father. "The ideal arrangement if you have to leave a young child is to leave it with a relative." Really? You mean, somebody like the kid's dad?

The stories seem to say that men being away from their families is the norm, although it may result in missed relationships, but women being away is abnormal. Subtle sexism is still sexism.


Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Headline here


My mom found this in the Chapel Hill News. Click on the image and look under the photo to see the error. In case you were wondering, the author's name is Mark Zimmerman.

Unfortunately, it's a fairly common mistake, probably because we don't have enough copy editors looking at pages. And the copy editors we do have don't have the time to do their work properly.

Read the entire column online.

Did you spell check that one?



This comes from Southern Guilford County in North Carolina. That's North Carolina, home of the Tra Heels, Woofpack and Bule Divels. Read the story.