Cheers to that, I guess

LETTITOR_preview (3)

By Chandler Walter, Editor-in-Chief

 

So weā€™ve made it a full 26 issues and Iā€™ve yet to spend a Lettitor entirely devoted to explaining my sign off.

It seems to be an ongoing tradition here at the Other Press for the Editor-in-Chief to, at some point in their year-long tenure, dedicate a entire article to that very topicā€¦ so here we are.

I donā€™t know if itā€™s simply a product of a past captain of this printed ship drawing a blank on what to write about some hectic week in years past, but I would be lying if I said that didnā€™t factor into my reasoning on this cloudy Monday afternoon.

Plus, seeing as Iā€™m writing this while cramped in the back-end of a TransLink SkyTrain, there isnā€™t much Wi-Fi around with which to delve into any well-research topic.

So, again, here we are.

When I was a young, eager contributor at this paper, full of spirit and half-baked humour article ideas, I noticed that the Lettitors prefacing each and every issue always had a sign off by the reigning Editor-in-Chief. I decided to do some digging and found that, while they differed depending on what editor had been in the byline, they remained constant throughout any one editorā€™s time leading the paperā€”a full 30 issues (usually, unless thereā€™s a coup, of course).

Suffice it to say that I was a little put off by the sheer commitment a person needed to agree to if they were to ever become EICā€”not accounting for the emails, editing, production work, conference organizing, and actual writing an EIC also has on their plateā€”but the thought of signing off with the exact same little phrase each week was what was terrifying to me.

When I realized I was in line for the job, panic quickly sunk in. How do I go about finding the proper sign-off? Would it be plagiarism to use Kurt Vonenegutā€™s ā€œSo it goes,ā€ even though an Editor-In-Chief had used it three years prior? (Looking at you, Jacey.) Is this seriously something I should be worrying this much about?

Iā€™ve spent two years in Langaraā€™s Journalism program, three with the Other Press, and a little more than half a year working as a staff writer with an online news publication. Itā€™s not much of a resume, Iā€™ll give you that, but itā€™s what Iā€™ve got. I wonā€™t pretend to speak as an expert on the industry, or even as someone with all the answers when it comes to the Other Press. What I do know, however, after spending some time in all these different newsrooms, and around all these various writers, is that one thing remains constant: Journalists can appreciate a cold drink after a long day.

So I left it at that. Short, simple, and occasionally sweet (though sometimes bitter if you happen to be a fan of IPAs), just like a good piece of journalism should be.

 

Cheers,

 

Chandler Walter