Paper News and Benevolent Littering
The LATimes just hired a hot sports columnist who will write about sports, and its influence on fashion culture and politics.
The columnist, named LA Granderson, first got the idea to become a writer by sifting through waste in search of words assembled just so:
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Further Reading:
LA Times snags LZ Granderson as new sports and culture columnist: poynter.org
This work by AJ Fish is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
The columnist, named LA Granderson, first got the idea to become a writer by sifting through waste in search of words assembled just so:
Granderson has nothing against traditional sports columns. Growing up in Michigan and sifting through garbage cans as a kid to find copies of the Detroit Free Press to read the legendary Mitch Albom, Granderson always wanted to be a sports columnist for a newspaper. But his career has carried him — quite successfully, it should be noted — to other things: television (mostly on ESPN), some newspaper work, radio, websites and even a little acting.Paper news is now expensive. Friends in L.A. who get the Sunday paper, please litter benevolently! The rich who can afford it should take care to not dispose of it all into the recycling bin. Leave gems on public transit seats. In laundromats, on dentist coffee tables. Make it terrestrially viral. You could inspire a future sports columnist.
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Further Reading:
LA Times snags LZ Granderson as new sports and culture columnist: poynter.org
This work by AJ Fish is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.