While
I am in the tilting at windows and then giving up mood (see entry on how Instagram
will not help eliminate an impostor: http://telefrieden.blogspot.com/2020/07/what-do-facebook-and-outdoor-swimming.html),
let us consider my multi-decade experience notifying the New York Times
of unquestionable publishing errors.
For some
unknown reason, my bucket list includes persuading the Times to acknowledge
a publication error about which I informed them. I have identified five errors, most recently
a report on a United Kingdom government Covid-19 employment subsidy reported as
being paid in Euros, not Pounds. See https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/12/business/the-week-in-business-what-a-biden-economy-could-look-like.html
and scroll down to Looking to Britain.
Other
reported errors include:
The use of interbank exchange rates minus 2% for estimating
tourist costs while traveling abroad by numerous article in the Sunday Travel
section;
A report in the March 1, 2020 Sketchbook that the MEV-1 satellite
repair vehicle will latch onto the Intelsat 901 bird for a few day and not the
anticipated five years; see https://www.northropgrumman.com/space/space-logistics-services/mission-extension-vehicle/;
https://spacenews.com/northrop-grummans-mev-1-servicer-docks-with-intelsat-satellite/;
https://spacenews.com/northrop-grummans-mev-1-servicer-docks-with-intelsat-satellite/;
The failure to update national average gas prices to reflect
a 30+ cent drop during the severe economic downturn as the pandemic took effect;
and
The failure to update the sea water temperature chart in the
weather section (a March, 2020 trip to the Outer Banks of North Carolina had
temps in the 60s not 50s as reported).
The Times
never acknowledged any of the mistakes.
I did have one instance where staffer, with righteous indignation, reported
the use of the “official” interbank rate as discounted 2%. I tried to explain that private travelers
never get a bank rate, much less a further 2% reduction. But of course what would I possible know that
this guy did not already know? Some time
later, the Times stopped reporting the actual exchange rate used to
estimate a tourist costs.
Over the
years I have reduced by Times bucket list goal from a published op-ed,
to an official correction prompted by my notification. This small dose of humble pie reminds me of a
life lesson: Lower your expectations.
Lower them a second time and be pleasantly surprised that things turn
out better than anticipated.
Good
advice.