Paper over it

Reading this really well-done article about the newspaper strike of 1962-1963, and it struck me how much more difficult and expensive getting anywhere in life has become.

The Times newsroom, on West 43rd Street, was a bustling, self-contained universe. The managing editor, Turner Catยญledge, would sometimes stand outside his office with binoculars, scanning the immense workspace. The city editor used a loudspeaker to summon dozens of clean-cut reportersโ€”many with college degrees!โ€”to a breaking story.

Now, if you donโ€™t have a degree from an Ivy you stand very little chance of getting a job at the New York Times or any other major newspaper for that matter.

Not sure why this is. Risk aversion? Surely the best journalists donโ€™t come from Ivies only.

I did photojournalism for five years. I know a little about it. From what Iโ€™ve seen, Iโ€™m a better writer than many of those Ivy League-educated standard issue journalists and I have no degree in anything.

I donโ€™t have any real idea why the entry-level requirements in so many fields are so senselessly high now. Iโ€™ve often seen receptionist jobs that require a bachelorโ€™s degree, and even a few that request a masterโ€™s.

No idea why on any of this.

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