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Relaxed section for discussion and debate that doesn't fit anywhere else. Whether it's advice, how your week is going, a link that's at the back of your mind, or something like that, it can likely go here.


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This community's icon was made by Aaron Schneider, under the CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.

founded 2 years ago
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1
 
 

In the past, Beeple had inquired about having Beehaw merchandise. At that time, they thought it would be a good way to raise funds to keep the site going.

Now that our finances are OK I’d like to revisit this idea for the following reasons:

  1. Pure fun and enjoyment.
  2. A way to get attention and draw people to Beehaw.

My brother has been in the professional textile space for 15 years. I asked him what he’d recommend as a merchandise platform and he immediately responded: Printify

If someone wanted to take this on, then they would want to coordinate things with the admin team here at Beehaw.

What are your thoughts?

2
 
 

today's book is Autocracy Inc.

3
 
 

This could be filed in tech, but I don't yet have a story. I have several Google accounts, and they all behave differently. Currently, two of five are giving the option to create fucking videos -- not terribly good ones, mind -- that actually look like researched ideas as opposed to "Pete's depressed and was drunk last night, so let's run it!"

4
 
 

Hey! Not new to Fedi or Lemmy but new to this instance, and just generally disappointed with how other Lemmy instances are moderated compared to, say, mastodon.social. Not sure this Lemmy version is new enough to have PeerTube support, but you can give it a try by following !furbland_channel@cuddly.tube and !furblandalt@cuddly.tube

If you’re an instance admin, just FYI: the PeerTube fix has been backported to 0.19, so I suggest upgrading to the latest 0.19 version if problems do occur. I’m into lots of obscure bootleg stuff, mainly these. Oh, did I mention I’m autistic? :P

Anyways, nice to meet you all! :)

5
 
 

A couple of years ago, I joined a local Discord server with a core group of five who'd get together to see a movie or do a cheese tasting.

(Dune 2 in 5D was a low point, but the homemade cheese was good.)

After some weird Discord bullshit, we rebuilt the server. It's not particularly active, which is surprising given that as of today, four of us are unemployed (after recreating the server, we chose not to advertise it).

I'm the only one idiotic enough to have gone into journalism. One other guy (the only one still working) drives around town for the city hanging utility-cutoff notices on people's doors.

Everyone else was in coding, devops or defense contracting.

And yet, here we all are. When there's this level of unemployment in the span of just 2025 across wildly divergent fields, something has gone wrong.

I'm by far the eldest at 46, so this isn't an age problem, either. It seems unclear how the economy survives when capable people are unable to find work.

6
 
 

It's an interesting thing, finding a field and then watching it disappear.

I never wanted to be rich or famous. I just wanted to go skiing once a year and then head off to Europe every other summer. (Being Swiss, this was an option.)

But the reality of journalism is somewhat different. Especially over the past 30 years. I was committing journalism in college. I was still doing the same in my first three jobs. And then, well ...

I don't want another fucking career. This simply suggests that I'd chosen poorly, but you know what didn't fuck buggy-whip manufacturers over? Ford. They were separate things.

Now, we have this weird environment where "why did anyone want journalism in the first place?" is somehow the question.

As Elon would say -- and has -- let that sink in. As a society, we've been trained via the gutting of education to, well, not care about truth. This is a bad environment in which to want an independent Fourth Estate. Yet here we are.

Everything domestic has gone off the rails, and this means no job opportunities. I can't see how we rebuild this within a single generation, let alone whether we'll try.

News has never made money (as with internet firms, the audience is the money-maker for advertisers, and that has nothing to do with single-copy sales). And the more layers of editors and executives, the worse things look.

I was hoping to be in a nice house with a few trees and a nonabusive spouse by my mid-40s. It really doesn't feel like a lot to ask.

7
 
 

idk where else to post this. my state denied me coverage for healthcare and food share for “making too much,” and now since i can’t acquire insurance elsewhere since i simply can’t afford it, i’m going to lose medication that is currently treating a chronic, life shortening illness. i do not have $509 a month to spend on this drug. and since nobody in my state gives a shit about me i am simply going to go without and suffer the consequences of being unmedicated with my disease.

great.

means testing is immoral and fuck everyone who supports it. you are why i won’t be medicated anymore.

8
 
 

My wife is taking it especially hard.

9
 
 

we are all susceptible to manipulation tactics, lies, and propaganda. some of us may be more resilient than others, some may have quite the skill at resisting, but if you are an emotionally responsive person than you are not off the hook.

in 2025, i'm sure most Americans consider themselves immune to dangerous and bigoted messaging. "i'd never support Hitler if i lived back then," they claim. but many of them absolutely would have and they cannot see it. they are incapable of making the connection.

take what we are seeing now with how the average American is responding to the rise of modern American fascism and you can easily apply it to pre-nazi Germany. the banality of evil encompasses all walks of life.

i think to myself who would be a nazi if the Holocaust were to happen in America today?

  • Joe Rogan
  • Mark Zuckerberg
  • Jeff Bezos
  • Tim Cook
  • Buzz Aldrin
  • Paula Deen
  • Kelsey Grammer
  • Zachary Levi
  • Taryn Manning
  • Kanye West
  • Amber Rose
  • Kodak Black
  • Kid Rock
  • Lil Pump
  • Sexyy Red

the potential for this list to all be nazis is unfathomably high. All of these people have supported Trump either vocally or by showing up to rallies or helping by visibly associating with the Trump campaign.

the amount of celebrity nazis we would have to deal with would become overwhelming and tiring. idk, it hit me that Hollywood would be filled with open fascists if it were acceptable.

10
 
 

today's book is the voluminous Palo Alto by Malcolm Harris

11
 
 

Our current balance is around $6000 and the average monthly cost to keep us running is $250.

If you'd like to take a closer look at our finances, then you can do it here -> https://opencollective.com/beehaw-collective

All of that being said, is there another service that the Beehaw community could provide with the extra funds?

One example could be to establish a Nonprofit Corporation (501(c)(3)) to create a legally recognized nonprofit with a clear charitable mission: education, health services, housing, etc.

12
 
 

this week's book is Kochland: The Secret History of Koch Industries and Corporate Power in America

13
 
 

I can't believe I'm doing this twice in nine days, but my mom's financial support, while sufficient without any unusual expenses, doesn't extend to months in which life happens.

~~The current situation is this: My 5G internet payment was due Friday, and if I get all the way to disconnection, things get far more expensive.~~ Additionally, my annual prepaid phone service is due this coming Friday ... great timing when mom's payment is on the first.

Essentially, if both of these are shut off, I have no method of contacting the outside world, making me a guy in a van with no means of finding work.

I'm not on any sort of Cadillac plans ... ~~Internet is $50, and there will no doubt be some sort of late fee, but reconnection is $30.~~ My Mint Mobile 5GB plan (the lowest tier) runs $204 for the year. If I do not renew, well, there goes my number.

I'm really freaking out here. I've been offered a few contract gigs over the past few months, but they never get through to actual work, and any sort of payroll work would be garnished to hell due to longstanding debt that I'm just ignoring at this point.

A guy from the burner community has been tipping me off to studies, surveys and such, but the van is not yet cleared out enough to be driveable, though a new friend has helped me make a lot of progress, and apparently "45-year-old childfree homeless guy" is not a target demo (he's in his 20s, so having a very different experience).

I really don't like asking for charity; I'd much rather get paid for doing honest work. But, you know ... any port in a storm. If you have CashApp or Venmo and can spare anything, please DM. I'd rather not lose access to Beehaw just because of shit timing.

Busing it to a place with free Wi-Fi was an option until a few weeks ago, when all two-year passes were canceled because a few people were caught selling them on the black market.

Thanks in advance for any help y'all can provide. This is an amazing community that I'm proud of Beeing part of, and I don't want to say goodbye.

14
 
 

My latest contact for freelance work has gone silent, and I don't really care to keep asking for charity. My design skills are at this point irrelevant, and finding someone to pay me to write is my own problem.

But between those steps lies editing, which is still what I tell people I do, even if I haven't really done so since 2014. It's my identity.

My experience is exclusively in AP Style, but that's nothing the copyed behind me can't fix if we're meandering into Chicago or MLA, APA, what have you.

I've won national awards for my writing, so you won't get some sort of middling treatment.

15
 
 

The more I'm reading about both local LEO preparations (those being shared) and how Street Medics usually interact well with local EMS, the more it feels like options should be as much of a prep concern as safety.

I'm getting a ride there, but should shit go south, well, I'm north. And who knows what those rates will look like if scores of people want to book at the same time?

As I've received both offers for assistance and assistance itself in the past, here we are.

I have CashApp and would be happy to share it via DM. I've just switched from Monday's excitement about entering this world to "oh, fuck."

In some 30 hours, it all hits the fan, and I have no idea what to expect.

16
 
 

this week's reading is Doppelganger by Naomi Klein

17
 
 

When I awoke at 3:30 a.m. yesterday, the first thing I did was check the news. And I had a very bad feeling about what was going to happen in Los Angeles the more I learned.

A primary source for me was linking videos and articles on Discord as the day progressed. He's a burner and protest organizer, but we'd not yet met in person.

He added me to the Street Medics server in a newly created role of journalistic observer some months back, and I remember what he said: "We don't need you yet, but you need to be familiar with what we do when the time comes."

Ding! That time is now.

He picked me up midafternoon to let me crash at his place for the night and do my first load of laundry in months.

After a shower, he narrated a livestream of things unfolding in L.A. on his 65-inch TV, pointing out which cops to keep an eye on, next moves and then further projections, the vast majority of which came to pass. Back in his room, he had a three-monitor command center tracking different feeds and switching between them in the living room when he sensed something might be about to happen at a different site.

As we drank and got high, with the protest backdrop, he brought a tub of gear out. He asked whether I had a shirt that says PRESS, and when I said no, well, that was an easy enough problem to fix before the upcoming No Kings Day protest that I'm now going to. He's got bulletproof vests, gas masks ... dude is prepared.

I apparently acquitted myself well enough that he's going to ask his roommate if I can crash in the guest room I occupied last night for the longer term. He's also wrapping a 200-page book that he needs an editor for, and asked me to quote him a price, but I admitted that was well out of my wheelhouse. To be continued ...

The cat, who usually takes a month to warm up to someone new, took to me in about six hours. It was so nice to have a purring floof around again ... she was doing headbutts and the whole nine yards.

At 8 a.m., he knocked on my door to announce he needed to leave for work in 20 minutes, so if I want a maintenance beer before we head out, now's the time.

I down the final beer I brought by as I check the news on my phone ahead of getting the laundry out of the dryer, which he'd started back up sometime earlier. I gather my other things and head out to his truck.

He comes out with one of those green HEB bags, saying "you forgot something." In this bag is five additional beers of his.

As to the housing offer, even if the roommate objects, he's happy to let me park on the street there and avail myself of the facilities as needed.

So, income possibility, about to be thrust firmly into activism by someone who knows what he's doing, relief upon realizing I may not need to brave another Texas summer in an oven, and to be perfectly honest, the easiest interaction I've had on first meeting in years.

Hanging out in his living room was like hanging out with my college roommate from 27 years ago.

🎶There's something happening here. What it is ain't exactly clear. 🎶

18
 
 

this week's reading is The Serviceberry

19
 
 

cross-posted from: https://discuss.online/post/20353095

Currently Lemmy has a decent selection of communities and nearly any post gets a good traction, you easily find yourself in convos and can recognise others if you frequent enough

I don't think this would be the case for long if Lemmy got big, maybe 10% of Reddit is enough

But maybe because of how Lemmy is maintained, instances like beehaw might defederate, again allowing for smaller communities

I don't know, I really like where Lemmy is tbh, bit iffy on the .world situation, donated a bit, Lemmy is nice. Yeah. Lemmy is nice. I like Lemmy.

20
 
 

Buildings aren't big enough for Blade Runner yet, and there's still a veneer of government control.

(ETA: No one's said it yet, but 1984 is so obvious that it wasn't worth mentioning.)

21
 
 

this week's reading is The Quiet Damage: QAnon and the Destruction of the American Family

22
 
 

Nothing huge ... just removing an "n" that made it incorrect. I emailed because it was a bit embarrassing.

But I literally changed an international publication. Not since I changed A1 on The Washington Post as a bystander in 2003 have I felt this.

23
 
 

this week's reading is The Message by Ta-Nehisi Coates

We have lived under a class of people who ruled American culture with a flaming cross for so long that we regularly cease to notice the import of being ruled at all. But they do not. And so the Redeemers of this age look out and see their kingdom besieged by trans Barbies, Muslim mutants, daughters dating daughters, sons trick-or-treating as Wakandan kings. The fear instilled by this rising culture is not for what it does today but what it augurs for tomorrow—a different world in which the boundaries of humanity are not so easily drawn and enforced. In this context, the Mom for Liberty shrieking “Think of the children!” must be taken seriously. What she is saying is that her right to the America she knows, her right to the biggest and greenest of lawns, to the most hulking and sturdiest SUVs, to an arsenal of infinite AR-15s, rests on a hierarchy, on an order, helpfully explained and sanctified by her country’s ideas, art, and methods of education.

24
 
 

More specifically:

  1. How do you feel the platform performs compared to corporate ones?
  2. How do you feel moderation is handled?
  3. Do you believe the people of Beehaw (admins, moderators and users) could do a better job? If so, then why?
25
 
 

Interesting week - 8/23/2008

As you've likely sauntered this way from my wife's blog, there's no need to rehash the news about the cat, beyond: We have a new one. It's older than we thought. It's quite sweet and already fixed and declawed. I can now step onto the porch for a cigarette unmolested.

("An Unmolested Cigarette" -- where's Gore when you need him? [I mean Al Gore, not Gore Vidal. {If that's not funny to you, probably nothing I say will be. (It's been entirely too long since I nested brackets so far that it cycled back to parens.)}])

No, the news of the week revolves around work. Somehow, I find myself, through deed, not word, sliding inexorably toward some sort of quasi-management position in which I become a dotted line to the editor on the org chart. Well, as one of the deskers mentioned this week, we're really all dotted-lined to him, by virtue of the fact that our boss does nothing.

But it's a special breed of nothing. One that, in fact, makes me realize that Scott Adams did not actually exaggerate when he created Wally. My boss actually walks around, coffee mug in hand, from tiny office to tiny office, talking to people about things they have no interest in hearing. What could be worse? Well, when he's done traipsing about, he returns to his office. The one I share with him. The man cannot say anything once. A classic example of this would be "You probably want to do this, because, you see, you probably want to do this." Given a set [N], "this" is the same thing for all N. He also seems to have been sick on that day in kindergarten wherein the concept of the "inside voice" is imparted.

This includes the phone conversations he has with the girls and parents involved with the soccer team he coaches. In the office. On deadline. With me in there.

Anyway, he's been working there since 1979, and short of the Iranian hostage crisis and Skylab falling, the only other thing of note that I'm aware of from that year was being born. He's the fixture sort of co-worker, the one that won't get fired for any reason.

Not that he hasn't really been giving it the college try in the past week.

One of the deskers (we'll call him "Greg") is on vacation, and has been for the past two weeks. This is not, inherently, a problem. However, he is responsible for doing the bulk of the features work, some of which must be done on Mondays. Our intrepid boss failed to schedule anyone for the past two Mondays, and last week, one of my co-workers (we'll call her "Dawn") sucked it up and said, "I'll come in on Monday." She works Tuesday through Saturday, and we have a moratorium on overtime.

Because said boss was on vacation until after Greg started vacation, it was a decision that had to be made without a supervisor around. In the end, no harm, no foul. But as Dawn looked to Week Two of six days, with a young son, no less (not that I want one, but she never makes excuses about missing work for her son; quite the reverse, so I respect her), I offered to take her Saturday shift this week. She wanted time off, and I wanted overtime.

We ran it past the boss, who wasn't quite sure why any overtime was necessary. Explaining that the need to cover 11 shifts with two people has a nasty remainder didn't quite clear things up for him, and the idea that he, as the only exempt employee in the department, cover the fucking shift himself was simply a nonstarter.

The compromise was that I'd try to shave some hours off during the week, given that layoffs are in the immediate future, and I'd rather not walk in looking like I was wearing a shirt from Target. A house-brand shirt from Target.

That was the end of last week.

On Monday, I came in and another co-worker (let's say, "Phil") was quite irritated with our boss because on Sunday, he showed up fully five hours late because whatever soccer tournament his girls were in, they won the first game, and he simply had to stick around for the next one.

So Phil has to report to the editor that our boss didn't show up until 7 p.m. on Sunday (here, I gently remind the reader that we're a morning newspaper with an 11:45 p.m. deadline). After I hear this story, Dawn also reports that the boss didn't show up until 4:30 on Saturday. (Sundays, if you haven't noticed wherever you may reside, are large papers. And contrary to popular belief, gnomes and elves do not produce said paper.) Whoever's running the Sunday paper is supposed to be in by 2 p.m. (When I've been running Sundays, I haven't come in until 3 or so, but that's because I spend the square root of zero hours walking around with a coffee mug.)

So, the boss fuckup trifecta is in play. Not avoiding OT in his department and showing up, in aggregate, 8 hours late. Any further tricks up your sleeve there, boss?

Well, the city editor comes into my office on Monday and says, "So I assume [boss] talked to you about the election package." Tuesday was our primary election. "Umm, no," I said. "You're joking," he said. "Did you really expect a different answer?" I countered. The look on his face said no, he didn't expect it, but he was sure as hell hoping for it. From there came a litany of the sorts of language romantically ascribed to newsrooms, even though we can't smoke at our desks and the bottle in the bottom drawer is no longer allowed.

Ah, yes, the election package graphics agate boxes. The boss did come in on Tuesday, his day shudder off, and offered to come in between 9 and 11 if we needed him to fill in the agate. He figured it would take about 20 minutes. Phil told him that we'd manage just fine.

Between working on the wire pages and the live coverage, I ask Phil if he can get me a copy of the page templates, because there are a few bits of wheel reinvention that we engage in every night that I'd prefer to have automated. He's thrilled that someone else wants to take up the task, so he points me to the template, I make the changes, and then we wait for a few days for live pages to propagate.

Meanwhile, Election Night proceeds apace, and I'm done with my inside pages around 11. Phil asks if I can fill in the agate. He's still working on A1, so of course I say I can help. And then I discover that all the data the reporters were supposed to have collected for the agate weren't collected. And then I discover that what was collected came from different sources. And then, I discover that the city editor, who was supposed to compile the rest, you know, down to the fucking state Lands Commissioner, was instead posting stories to the Web. (We're a Web-first publication, don'tchaknow.)

Seventy-five minutes of aggregating, formatting and inputting ensues. The only things that keep my blood pressure in the healthy range are a smoke break and the knowledge that I'm being paid professional overtime wages to do basic data entry.

We blow clear through deadline, and by the time Phil's A1 is done and my agate is good to go, we're 45 minutes past deadline. What this means is: A1 and the agate did not get proofed. Once again, the front page of the paper and the only clump of data people would care to read did not get a second read. This is what we like to call "amateur hour."

Now, Phil and I have egg on our faces (him more so than me, thankfully) because the boss had offered to come in. But we only realized our shortfall at the tail end of his "available" time, and regardless, the roaming coffee mug would have slowed us down more than anything else. Thank god upper management knows this to be the case.

Meanwhile, on Tuesday, it surfaces that, in the face of layoffs, my brilliant boss decides to tell a room full of people who don't work in the newsroom that he hopes lucrative buyouts are in the offing, because "I'm done with this job." One of these people reports directly to the circulation manager, who immediately passes off the information to the editor. Bad move. He's acting like he wants to be fired, and when buyouts are offered, they go to people who have been performing at least satisfactorily. Which is to say, he'd more likely be fired with no severance than get a buyout (and they're almost guaranteed to be skimpy, anyway).

So Wednesday rolls around. I talk with Dawn and Phil, asking if they'd talked with the editor about the clusterfuck, recently in progress, on Election Night. No, they haven't, but if I'd like to get a word in, feel free.

I go into the editor's office, having already on Monday told him about the OT situation and how I'd try to limit it, to which I got that sort of knowing sigh of, "Of course your boss won't work it. Don't worry, there won't be a witch hunt." (quote not verbatim)

Under advisement, I mention that I'm "concerned" about how Tuesday night went. This is true within PC guidelines, but my bigger concern is that we actually have our shit together for, oh, say, the actual presidential election.

The editor says he understands my concerns, and could I e-mail him those and any suggestions I might have?

I don't really know when I snapped. It might have been right before working on the templates, or it could have been the hour-plus I spent on agate. But what ensued as an email was not what a copyeditor would write, it was what the news editor should write:

As we discussed, there was some confusion on the night of the primaries as to responsibilities for compiling numbers and a couple of other rough patches that resulted in the paper being 45 minutes late to press without the front page or results data being proofed.

As to the data collecting itself, it would be helpful, looking ahead to the general election, to specify a single source for tabular figures that would be our source for state figures. Different people were using AP results, county website results and secretary of state website results. Even if the data had been gathered in time to avoid being late, it would have been nigh impossible to get them double-checked efficiently. Judging from the amount of time it took me to compile and enter roughly 75% of the results table, roughly an hour and 15 minutes, this stage could be expected to take 2 hours in full. I would recommend a specific cut-off time where results are printed out and entered, with the printouts retained for checking, instead of having two people visit the same Web site.

Hopefully, the AP will have graphics and/or tables ready to go for national elections. If that's not the case, or if we're planning on doing our own formatting on that, then that's more time that needs to be taken into consideration. And worst-case scenario, we have a third-straight election without a clear winner in at least one top race.

One good way to handle division of labors on the desk would be to have the entire front page (and inside election pages, ideally a couple without ads) designed in advance, with the results breakout boxes duplicated on a separate document that houses the full agate. If the formatting is properly in place, this would mean results would simply be pasted twice, and once the breakouts are done, they can replace the dummied boxes when A1 and other pages are released.

Pre-designed packages can hem in reporters to a certain length; however, on deadline on election night, there's rarely time to write the Great American Novel, and jumps and wire can be adjusted accordingly, anyway.

The other thing I would recommend, especially in light of 2000 and 2004, is a significant extension of deadline. While we may only need 45 minutes, wiggle room would help us avoid the dreaded question heds. Accordingly, I'd suggest moving the budget meeting back by an hour or two.

Just as a suggestion, here's how I might see a three-person desk working: First reader/data compiler. First reads happen before data need to be compiled, so this makes sense as a progressive position for the evening. A1/Election designer/inside proofer. Proofs inside pages, then gives second reads on stories for the page, paginates election coverage and places completed graphics and breakout boxes. Inside designer/final proofer. Gives first reads on and paginates wire pages. Since those can be done earlier in the shift, this person can then shift to proofing on A1/Election coverage and ultimately checks data figures from the printouts provided by the compiler.

I anticipate senior editors would also be available for final looks.

These are just my suggestions from running election coverage in the past, adapted for our situation. Since some people will be looking to us to tell them what happened in the election, I think at least three sets of eyes are key on this important issue.

Hope I haven't overstepped my bounds on this.

I've been management before, and I don't like it, but in the absence of competent management, I know how to run election coverage. In fact, after sending the e-mail, it occurred to me that I've never had a general that I didn't run. I was managing editor in 2000, news editor in 2004, and I know how to cover an election. Presidential election nights are one of the things that reaffirm my love for this industry.

So, that e-mail gone, the week's just a downhill slide, right?

I came in on Thursday a half-hour late, as per the terms of shaving hours off. No one talks to me, not even my loquacious boss. I mention to him that I'd setup new quick keys for myself for horizontal scaling, and here I find out why I'm a pariah. The new style sheets? They're in effect. And I made a rather large error in saving the document with the character stylesheet set to Drop Cap, which means everything is now coming in as ITC Garamond (kerned out to 50, no less), and there's not a damn thing you can do about it.

It took me 20 minutes to figure it out, and once that was done, all was well. Phil even calmed down after cussing a blue streak that would make a sailor blush. Amazing what happens when you own up to your fuckup, apologize and tell everyone it's your fault, not Phil's. In fact, 20 minutes after I came up with the solution, he was back to normal. Funny how adults act.

So I figure, this is it for the week. It's downhill from here.

This afternoon, I come in, and of course, the big news on the wire is the speculation about Obama's running mate. We put the paper to bed around 10, and the wife's not off of work yet, so I walk home.

And I'm home for about 20 minutes before I check the wire from home, and, sure as shit, a Democratic source has finalized Biden as Obama's running mate. This is 40 minutes before our true deadline. I've cracked open a beer and am ready to settle in.

But this simply won't do. We can't have wild conjecture when the confirmation has happened with 40 minutes to spare. So after getting nowhere trying to call people at the office, I convince the wife to drive me into work, where nobody happens to be (on the news side, anyway).

I walk into prepress and ask if it's too late to replate (black only) on A1 and A8 (thank god the pages married and that's where the story and refer were, and thank god we already had a mug of Biden ready to go). The answer? You need to stop the press.

Thankfully, this wasn't entirely true, as I walked into the pressroom and they were finalizing plates to get ready to go. So I shout out (everyone's wearing earplugs), "REPLATE - I need a replate -- BLACK ONLY -- on A1 and 8." They took it in stride, and after five minutes back in the newsroom, I've pumped out a new black for A1 and 8, and we then wait 15 minutes for it to go to the negative for final proofing.

I look it over as the press guy's watching, and I look at him and say, "Let's run it." With a bit more joy than text can convey -- and wildly above my pay grade.

I've never stopped the press, and I've been doing this for nearly seven years.

So, new stylesheets, a dictum on election coverage and a replate. Not the week I was expecting, but if you want an adrenaline rush, stop the press sometime. It makes you feel like you've made a difference, and sometimes, that's the validation you need.

Now, let's hope they get it in register.

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