I'll leave avenues opened by the new technologies to the techies who have been practicing them for the twenty years since I retired. I'll stick to print, because I know it and because I believe solid written journalism will still be around no matter how the product comes to be delivered.
We've routinely done this in all but the A section. Sports has columnists. Business has columnists. Features has columnists. Local has columnists. People get to know them and follow what they think. My idea for editorial columnists is far from new. As editor of The Atlanta Constitution for the first eight years of the 1960s, I managed to write a column on the editorial page seven days a week. In addition to that, the publisher of the paper, Ralph McGill, wrote his signed opinion seven days a week in column one of page one. If we wanted to gain special impact with an editorial on a truly major issue we didn't hesitate to take it out to double-column display on page one, clearly labeled 'An Editorial Opinion."
A lot of editorial pages have gotten to look rote and starchy, and they can be brought alive and bright if we would move back to a more personal conversation with our readers. Been there, done that. Readers like to know who's talking to them even if they violently disagree. Communication with one another has gotten to be more personal and direct, through such modern channels as blogs and emails and, yes, television. As keepers of the central flame of substantive journalism, newspapers need to come back closer to their readers now, tell them who we are, and refresh their spirits with the well-written word.
Eugene Patterson is the former editor and chief executive office of The St. Petersburg Times. He won the 1966 Pulitzer Prize for editorial writing. Email: ECP1015@aol.com