Dashboard cookies: a new take on the old heat-wave story

dashboardcookies

So we could debate for days about what constitutes “news” and “journalism.” But sometimes the thing that everyone is talking about — the “news” in a community — has been written about until reporters’ eyes are ready to bleed.

Take a heat wave, for instance. Go to the cooling center. Check. Call the hospitals and the coroner. Check. Catch up with athletes at practices. Check. Find some people with hot jobs. Check. Who’s at the pool? Check.

You get the picture.

Such was the case this past August, when oppressive heat and humidity settled on Springfield like a wet, wooly blanket. We’d been wanting to do some kind of video project about the heat, but didn’t want to do the old fry-an-egg-on-the-sidewalk number. I’d noticed that some colleagues at the Post-Dispatch in St. Louis had tried to bake dashboard cookies in the heat a day or two earlier, and I figured why not give it a whirl here. So I picked up some cookie dough at the store and grabbed my cookie sheets. SJ-R photographer Justin Fowler rigged up a camera inside a car to take photos of the cookies every few seconds for a time-lapse video. I posted occasional updates about the status of the cookies and the temperature inside the car, which essentially became an oven, reaching about 175 degrees inside.

The result was a fun, memorable project that generated buzz and page views for SJ-R.com and got people talking about the heat in a different way (Romenesko even picked it up). The project also served as a means for reminding readers about not leaving pets or loved ones in the car unattended in the heat. Was it journalism? I think so.

Click here to check out the blog entry I wrote about the project, and be sure to click on the time-lapse video.

Police excavate lot after report of foul odor

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I spent more than six hours at this scene, watching as Springfield police, beginning with shovels and then moving to heavy equipment, dug up an entire lot on Wirt Avenue, after a public works crew reported smelling a foul odor upon demolishing a structure. A local woman who went missing in April 2008 last was seen near this neighborhood, and a man who had lived in the house previously had an extensive criminal record. Police wanted to exhaust all avenues to ensure there were no human remains on the property. None were found. It was a fascinating exercise to watch.

Police find nothing in excavated cistern

Nov. 10, 2010

Springfield police detectives and a city public works crew on Wednesday found nothing after excavating an old cistern at 1846 S. Wirt Ave. to try to pinpoint the source of a foul odor.

Police and work crews reached the bottom of the cistern shortly before 10 p.m. Officials said the hole would be filled Friday.

Springfield Deputy Police Chief Cliff Buscher said a squad car would be assigned outside the home to guard the large hole today.

“We’ll have a city crew come by and fill it on Friday,” he said.

Buscher previously had stopped short of calling the probe a death investigation, although detectives and crime scene technicians participated in the excavation.

Public works employees originally went to the property Monday to tear down the red single-story house, which neighbors said had been mostly vacant since a tornado damaged it a few years ago. The crew dislodged the cap on a basement cistern, and workers reported a foul stench coming from inside. Crews notified police and backfilled the basement hole.

Detectives interviewed workers and neighbors afterwards and on Tuesday. They returned to the site Wednesday with a public works backhoe, two dump trucks and about a dozen detectives and crime scene technicians.

Dump trucks hauled away load after load of dirt as crews dug a hole almost as wide as the lot to make it easier for police to get to the cistern.

Detectives entered the hole a little after 5 p.m. Wednesday and started hand digging. They called off the search about five hours later, including a period when they had to take a break to allow water to be pumped out of the hole.

Buscher said he felt police had to check out the odor.

“I’d rather spend the time and the effort checking it out instead of second-guessing it and later find out there was something down there that we didn’t look for,” he said.

The house was one of 41 boarded-up properties the city purchased in August. Most had been cited for weed, grass and solid waste violations over the years.

A man who lived in the house previously has an extensive criminal record, including arrests for domestic battery and unlawful restraint in 2001, battery, driving under the influence, marijuana possession, unlawful use of a weapon, violating orders of protection and animal cruelty. Police did not say he was a suspect in anything associated with the stench at the house.

Stabbing melee leaves city man dead

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One of the most memorable interviews I’ve ever done with a witness. Mr. Collier’s eyes were swollen shut from the beating he took in the fight. He was missing teeth and spitting blood, and he talked to me inside his all-but-empty trailer, which had no running water or heat. He became upset and started crying, and I recall him saying to me, “I used to be a good-looking dude,” as he talked about the melee and pulled out a family photo album to show me. Meanwhile, random people were milling around outside the trailer and up and down the street. I actually texted another reporter to drive by and check on me.

Stabbing melee leaves city man dead

Oct. 5, 2010

A melee involving a knife, a tire iron and a meat hook that resulted in the stabbing death of a Springfield man Monday night may have stemmed from an earlier fight at a mobile home down the block, according to a man who lives there.

Neighbors and the Sangamon County coroner identified the victim as Jacob Folder, 25. He was pronounced dead at 12:07 a.m. Tuesday while in surgery at St. John’s Hospital. An autopsy indicated the cause of death was a stab wound to the upper body.

In all, there were five victims, according to Sangamon County sheriff’s investigators.

The fight, which happened at a house in the 100 block of South Livingston Street, came to the attention of police about 10:30 p.m., when a Springfield police officer tried to pull over a speeding car. The driver at first would not stop. When he did, he told the officer he was on his way to the hospital with Folder, who’d been stabbed and needed medical attention.

The other victims, who are in their late 30s and early 40s, went to hospitals by ambulance and in private vehicles. Their conditions were not available Tuesday evening, although authorities said one had been treated and released. Not all of them were stabbed.

No details were available about what prompted the melee, how many attackers were involved or the nature of all the victims’ injuries.

Gary Collier, 39, who said he moved into a trailer on Livingston after being released from prison in August, told The State Journal-Register the attack probably stemmed from an earlier dispute at his home in which he, too, was attacked. Collier suffered a broken bone around his eye, broken ribs and cuts on his face.

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Black Friday shopping fun

blackfriday

As I’ve said before, covering Black Friday shopping madness in Springfield is one of my favorite assignments. Yes, it’s cold. Yes, it’s the middle of the night. But there is such a feeling of excitement and fun in the air that I can’t help but enjoy being out and about with some of central Illinois’ most hard-core bargain hunters. I absolutely love it.

The last several years I’ve blogged Black Friday throughout the night, updating readers on the length of lines, posting photos and talking to shoppers about what they’re after and how they’re holding up in the cold. Two years ago I used a laptop. Last year I was able to blog solely using my smart phone. This year I’ll be using an iPad and Cover It Live, which I’m really looking forward to because it will enable me to post real-time updates and also chat with readers throughout the night. Check in at SJ-R.com closer to Black Friday for more details.

This is the newspaper story that resulted from last year’s Black Friday live-blogging.

Black Friday trumps Thanksgiving for some shoppers

Nov. 26, 2010

If you want to talk about folks who take their Black Friday shopping serious, meet the four women who were at the front of the Springfield Toys R Us line Thursday night – Desiree Embree, Darcy Miller, Jessica Hamblin and Teage Marcum.

Embree, of Riverton, and Miller, of Petersburg, are sisters. Hamblin, of Oakford, and Marcum, of San Jose, are sisters, too. Neither pair knew the other pair until they got acquainted standing in line overnight, but they got along so well you would have thought they’d known each other a lifetime. They all got to the store about 5 p.m. Thursday to wait for its 10 p.m. opening and special sales.

Embree technically was the first in line.

Asked what she was hoping to buy, she replied: “Zhu Zhu Pets. … Give me a second – I’ll get my list here. Zhu Zhu Pets, the Crayola stuff, Bugsby stuff, Aquasand …

“That’s what I’m getting here. I’ve got a list for all my other stores, too,” she said.

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