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Showing posts with label Wegmans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wegmans. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 26, 2017

Trump compares mothers of black athletes to dogs, ignores suffering in Puerto Rico

Cartoonist Randall Enos commenting on President Trump's harsh treatment of African-American pro football players who refuse to stand during the National Anthem, above.
This is from cartoonist Randy Bish. Trump says he's too busy with "this NFL mess" to deal with threats from North Korea that "a rocket attack against the United States is inevitable."

-- HACKENSACK, N.J.

EDITOR'S NOTE: I've updated this post with excerpts from letters to the editor of The Record, commenting on President Trump.

By VICTOR E. SASSON
EDITOR

President Trump is the undisputed King of Insults, but his bitter, racially charged attack on black pro football players is the lowest blow of all.

At another one of his campaign-style rallies on Friday, Trump said of players who kneel during the national anthem:

"Wouldn't you love to see one of those NFL owners, when somebody disrespects our flag, say, 'Get that son of a bitch off the field right now? Out. He's fired. He's fired.'"

The phrase "son of a bitch" was loaded, given Trump's appearance on Friday in the Deep South, his appeal to racists, his defense of white supremacists; and the nation's history of slavery, when white owners deliberately broke apart black families.

A "bitch" is a female dog, so a son of a bitch is a bastard or an illegitimate child.

"Trump ranted about a wide range of issues as usual," Salon.com reported after the Friday night rally, "but singled out NFL players who have chosen to protest police brutality against blacks by not standing for the national anthem...."

Trump's Katrina

An opinion piece in The Daily Beast is calling the humanitarian crisis in Puerto Rico "Trump's Katrina."

"As a dam cracked in Puerto Rico, spreading fear across an already devastated island, Donald Trump was in Alabama, calling a black NFL player a 'son of a bitch,'" Joy-Ann Reid says.

"During a 90-minute rant that veered from incoherence to the raw belligerence we've come to know in the Age of Trump, the madman who is president went after sidelined NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick without calling him by name.

"Trump visited Texas, making a petting zoo of black evacuees and writing his name on a wall," The Daily Beast said.

Yet, Trump hasn't followed through on his promise to visit Puerto Rico, which was devastated by Hurricane Maria.

The likely reason is that Trump doesn't need the support of residents of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands, also hit by the hurricane.

They are U.S. citizens, but they cannot vote for president.


Increasing traffic congestion in North Jersey is among the biggest untold stories in The Record of Woodland Park. Above, rush-hour traffic in Paramus moving sluggishly toward the George Washington Bridge on Monday morning. At Hudson River crossings, toll-booth waits of 60 minutes and 90 minutes are not uncommon.
Afternoon rush-hour traffic crawling along Route 80 west toward Paterson and Wayne. Delays aggravate air pollution and cut worker productivity.


The Record

Trump's racially charged attacks on black football players didn't make the front page of my local daily paper on Saturday, Sunday or Monday.

On The Record's front page on Sunday, the editors ran the first part of a three-part series on NJ Transit, the state's mass-transit agency.

But the series is a colossal waste of space, because no attempt is made to explain why the agency has been unable to provide enough rush-hour seats for bus and rail commuters in the past decade.

The main headline:


"WHERE ARE ALL THE ENGINEERS?"

That should have been:

"WHERE ARE ALL THE SEATS?"

Readers on Trump

In a letter to the editor published today on 8A, Karen Chase of Westwood comments on the war of words between Trump and North Korea, and the "double-dog dare you bombast at the United Nations."

She says "dangerous" heads the list of "negative adjectives" being used to describe Trump.

In another letter, Patricia Adubato of Nutley refers to Trump's retweet of an "edited video showing [him] hitting Hillary Clinton with a golf ball."

"Americans should not accept this behavior. It is time to wake up and hold Donald Trump accountable for his actions as president and leader of the United States."

In a third letter, Eleanor Peed of Park Ridge says:

"It is the height of hypocrisy when a draft dodger in the White House berates football players for exercising First Amendment rights."

Kelly on Clinton

Meanwhile, on Sunday, Columnist Mike Kelly continued to obsess over Hillary Clinton, asking coyly, What if she is right about Russian meddling in the 2016 election that she lost to Trump (Opinion front).

But Clinton is far from the only one to make those charges, so Kelly sounds out of touch with multiple investigations, including the main one by Special Counsel Robert Mueller and another by the U.S. Senate.

Governor's race

Staff Writer Dustin Racioppi continues to politicize the race to replace Governor Christie (1A on Monday).

His lead paragraph notes Democrat Phil Murphy overestimated the cost of his plan to offer tuition-free community college. His staff said the proposal would cost half of the $400 million cited by Murphy.

That sounds like a good thing, but Racioppi doesn't think so, saying the original estimate "undercut" the plan, and that it became "ideal campaign fodder" for his challenger, Republican Lt. Gov. Kim Guadagno.

With only about six weeks until the Nov. 7 election, Racioppi continues to quote liberally from the Guadagno campaign's attacks on Murphy without doing any fact checking or asking for rebuttal from the Murphy campaign.

Nor has he reported where she stands on a host of crucial issues.

They include raising the minimum wage, taxing millionaires and wealthy corporations, restoring full funding to NJ Transit (which the Christie administration cut by more than 90%), and expanding bus and rail service.

Wegmans flops

Despite all the pre-opening hype in The Record, a total of only 200 people lined up for Sunday's 7 a.m. grand opening of the 108,000-square-foot Wegmans supermarket in Montvale (Local front on Monday).

Instead of running photos of crowded aisles, the Woodland Park daily had to stage photos of small groups of cheering customers and employees.

Fearing a repeat of the mob of 24,000 that showed up for the opening of another Wegmans in Hanover, Montvale's mayor warned shoppers not to camp out in the store's parking lot.

But only 400 to 500 people entered the store in the 15 minutes after the doors opened, the newspaper said.

The opening of a Wegmans in Bergen County is about a decade overdue.

And a new Wegmans in a town on the New York State border is a non-event for residents of Hackensack and many other parts of Bergen who are happy with a wide selection of supermarkets and warehouse clubs much closer to their homes.

'My favorite paper'

Bob Leafe, a professional photographer in Hackensack, has been using a community message board called HackensackNow.org to catalog numerous typos, errors and other production problems in The Record.

His well-read entries appear under this heading:

My favorite paper is not having a good day

Monday, September 18, 2017

On Clinton, food shopping and more, my local newspaper delivers a warped reality

A BRIDGE TOO FAR: This is what the project to replace the Midtown Bridge linking Hackensack and Bogota looked like on Saturday, above and below.
NOVEMBER OPENING: Officials of Bergen County, owner of the bridge, closed the two-lane Hackensack River span on March 16, and said the work would take about 242 days. The new bridge is scheduled to open "on or about" Nov. 13.

Gannett lays off a dozen more
 at The Record, other papers

-- HACKENSACK, N.J.
I've updated this report with a comment about Montvale's controversial decision to approve a zoning change for the construction of a Wegmans supermarket, first proposed more than 5 years ago. See "comments" section at the end of the post.

By VICTOR E. SASSON
EDITOR

I'm still shaking my head in disbelief over The Record's double-barreled assault on Hillary Clinton, and her book on the 2016 presidential campaign she lost to serial liar and con man Donald J. Trump. 

The Opinion front of my local daily newspaper was covered on Sunday with two negative pieces on Clinton, one by Carl Golden, who is identified as a "guest writer," and the other by Columnist Mike Kelly.

Golden's piece is no surprise coming from a former journalist who served as the mouthpiece for two of the worst governors New Jersey has ever had -- Republicans Tom Kean and Christie Whitman -- but the Woodland Park daily concealed his background. 

New low for Kelly

Readers already know about Kelly's deep conservatism, and his persistent criticism of then-President Obama in pieces he wrote during the 2016 campaign based on interviews with unemployed factory workers.

But his Sunday column is a new low in misogyny for Kelly, who likens the Democrats to the fictional Corleone crime family.

What a laugh riot. 

Inexplicably, Kelly compares Democrats to family patriarch Michael Corleone, saying they "want out of the Clinton 'family'" just as the gangster wanted out of plotting murders and bribing politicians.

Nonsensical

Hillary Clinton is never going to run for office again, so his premise makes no sense.

"And just as the party is trying to reshape itself, here comes Hillary Clinton with a memoir that practically demands Democrats stop and look backward at the goat rodeo that was her campaign, " Kelly insists (Sunday's Opinion front).

"Goat rodeo"? What the F is that? We know Kelly is no prose master, but how obscure can you get?

Clinton has plenty to complain about -- from Russian meddling in the election to millions of Democrats and Bernie Sanders supporters either not bothering to vote or voting for Trump.

Then, there was her victory in the popular vote, but her loss to Trump in the antiquated Electoral College.

Yes. She was robbed.

Grocery wars?

The Record's two-part series, "GROCERY WARS," on Page 1 today and Sunday is just window dressing for shameless pandering to Wegmans, a supermarket chain that is expected to advertise heavily in the newspaper.

On Sunday, Staff Writer Joan Verdon reported breathlessly that Wegmans, which is opening a store in Montvale next week, has a "cult-like following," but could face tough competition in Bergen County.

Verdon's first three paragraphs are just bad journalism:

First, she reports company Chairman Danny Wegmans "fell in love" with the family farm on the site, and "dreamed" of the DePieros continuing to run the farm and its "down home" store even after the new supermarket opened.

But Verdon knows that hasn't been in the cards for a couple of years, so why does she try to soften readers' hearts with this sentimental claptrap?

Far-off Montvale

If you read to the end of her story, you find out the chairman of Wegmans picked the borough on the New York State border, instead of central Bergen County, because "I was trying to get near my sister," who lives in Suffern, N.Y., and "wanted a store near her."

Give me a break. 

Does Danny Wegmans really expect residents of Hackensack to drive nearly 17 miles on the congested Garden State Parkway and pay tolls to shop at a 108,000-square-foot behemoth he put near his sister's house?

I visited an even bigger Wegmans in Woodbridge in 2011 and 2012, and was shocked at the high prices for fresh, wild-caught fish, and at the mediocre prepared food:

Do we need a Wegmans in Bergen County?


Truth is, we already have two Costco Wholesales, two Whole Foods Markets and plenty of ShopRites and H Marts in Bergen County, and we don't really need Wegmans.

The long-delayed opening of Wegmans might be a shot in the arm for the paper's advertising department, but it's a non-event for tens of thousands of food shoppers.

The Montvale Wegmans was first proposed more than 5 years ago.

More flawed coverage

Sunday's paper also included a special section called "New Jersey Eats" or what the cover said are "51 restaurants you must try."

This is hardly an exhaustive list, missing many of my and, I am sure, your favorites.

Bergen County, the paper's home, is lumped into "North Jersey," and only 7 Bergen restaurants are featured.

But Morris County gets two full pages in the 12-page section.

Dumb column

Staff Writer John Cichowski has been banging out the Road Warrior column for 14 years, and he long ago ran out of anything to say about his commuting beat.

More evidence of his column being on life support was Sunday's pathetic piece on "parking karma." 

He claims a Maryland woman, Beverly Silverberg, can "almost always find a parking space" near where she and her husband are going, whether in Rehobeth Beach, Del., or even Manhattan.

What incredible B.S.

More layoffs

Unfortunately, Cichowski and Kelly survived the latest layoffs at North Jersey Media Group, which publishes The Record, Herald News, (201) magazine and about 20 weekly newspapers.

"Newspaper giant Gannett staged a 'mini bloodbath'" at NJMG last Thursday, Keith J. Kelly reported in the New York Post.

About a dozen people were laid off at The Record, the second-largest daily in New Jersey, and other newspapers.

Among them was John Brennan, a news and onetime sports reporter with 30 years' experience who covered the Meadowlands, including the incomplete Xanadu shopping and entertainment complex.

Two editors, Debra Lynn Vial and Carla Baranauckas; and Heather Zwain, a fashion writer, also were laid off.

Those layoffs are on top of about 350 others in two previous waves since Gannett bought NJMG from the Borg family for $40 million in July 2016.

See: A 'mini bloodbath'