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Pratt's Print Boo Boo
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HairForRadio
June 4, 2008, 1:04am Report to Moderator
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Today ... Pratt & Taylor ... 1040 ... 5:40PM ...

David Pratt begins the segment by apologizing for his column in this morning's Province. Two lines which appeared in that column are not his own words. He immediately brings on Paul Chapman, and announces his relationship with the paper is over. No hard feelings, but apparently even a sniff of plagerism (Pratt himself, used the word twice during the segment in referring to his actions) will result in prompt termination.

Is this really the policy in print journalism?

All I can say is Thank God the same doesn't apply to radio. We'd all be serving 30 to life.
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boredop
June 4, 2008, 2:46pm Report to Moderator
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For the record
Jim Jamieson, The Province
Published: Wednesday, June 04, 2008
                                                      
The Province is ending the column written by TEAM 1040 AM sports talk-show host David Pratt after he admitted to plagiarizing some portions of a Sports Illustrated piece written by well-known writer Rick Reilly.

A reader alerted The Province to the plagiarism via e-mail after Pratt's weekly column, called "Pratt's Rant," appeared in Tuesday's editions of the newspaper.

The column, celebrating the winding down of the long career of Hockey Night In Canada play by play man Bob Cole, contained some clear similarities to the Reilly piece about legendary U.S. college basketball coach and broadcaster Al McGuire published in the Sept. 18, 2000, edition of Sports Illustrated.

The most striking was a passage in Reilly's piece: "They say he was born 72 years ago last Thursday, but don't believe it. McGuire dropped straight out of Guys and Dolls with a martini in one hand and a basketball in the other."

Pratt wrote in Tuesday's column in The Province: "Cole was born 75 years ago, but it's more likely he dropped straight out of Guys and Dolls with a martini in one hand and a puck in the other."

"Plagiarism is an affront to the ethical standards of this newspaper," said Province Editor in Chief Wayne Moriarty. "Our readers have to know that the writing in The Province is either original or attributed to the original source. I personally liked David's work, but as a result of this information we can no longer publish his column."

In an interview, Pratt admitted he had taken material from the Reilly column.

"I did it, no question," said Pratt. "It was a mistake. In our [radio] business, lines get used back and forth all the time. That particular line is a pretty famous line and I should have credited Reilly with it and I didn't. It was a stupid mistake and something I regret and I'll make damn sure I'll never do it again.

"I'm looking for stuff from everywhere," added Pratt. "We recycle everything. The sheer amount of volume we produce forces you to constantly be looking for different people's ideas."

© The Vancouver Province 2008
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glennwith2ns
June 4, 2008, 11:13pm Report to Moderator

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Not that he's ever had much credibility    to begin with, but that little stunt blows whatever credibility Pratt might have had out the window.

I notice he seems to be slightly more humble on today's show.
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Radio Savant
June 5, 2008, 12:36am Report to Moderator
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Interesting. A similar situation with Angele Yanor back in 2004 comes to mind. The above article does shed some light on the Province's overly strict (IMHO) plagiarism policies.
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newsbeat
June 5, 2008, 12:45am Report to Moderator

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A simple mistake. No harm done.
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FRED
June 5, 2008, 3:42am Report to Moderator
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Makes you wonder how many other "takes" have been borrowed from the New York and LA newspapers...

I also considered the possiblity of a ratings stunt because of the relationship between the Province and Team, but that would seem to be a stretch.
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sueboy
June 6, 2008, 12:52am Report to Moderator
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Plagiarism is never a simple mistake - It's always a deliberate act.
Pratt stole entire paragraphs from Reilly's column.
Of all the sportswriters to steal from, he picked the most-read columnist in North American.
That was a "simple" act.

Any newspaper in the world would have turfed him for doing that.  
It kills his credibility.
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FRED
June 6, 2008, 3:11am Report to Moderator
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Interesting that both Dan Russell and Jim Mullin did editorials on the subject.   Both had the knives out, but makes you wonder if competing personalities on a rival station should be bothered with it.  There was definately some venom in Russell's rant.

The "mistake" and subsequent firing also made no impact on the regular appearance of Province Editor Paul Chapman on the P&T show.
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boomer
June 6, 2008, 5:41am Report to Moderator
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You reap the seed you sew.  Sorry Pratt- You should have listened to your Grade 9 English teacher.  Plagerism is never acceptable --  it is the instrument of weak and uneducated parasites.

You should be ashamed of yourself
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tighthead
June 6, 2008, 5:47am Report to Moderator
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Pratt has to own this, but the Province also gets what it deserves for giving someone like Pratt a column - and I say that as a fan of his radio work.  His columns were bad, and he hadn't learned the craft.
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mikedup
June 6, 2008, 2:48pm Report to Moderator

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Russell Piles On
By William Houston
Globe & Mail

June 6

It's been a bad week for David Pratt, co-host of the afternoon drive-time show on Vancouver's Team 1040 all-sports radio station.

He was fired as a weekly columnist for the Vancouver Province newspaper after he was caught lifting a line from an eight-year-old Sports Illustrated column by Rick Reilly.

In a piece about Hockey Night play-by-play announcer Bob Cole, Pratt wrote: "Cole was born 75 years ago, but it's more likely he dropped straight out of Guys and Dolls with a martini in one hand and a puck in the other."

Reilly, on basketball coach and broadcaster Al McGuire, wrote: "They say he was born 72 years ago ... but don't believe it. McGuire dropped straight out of Guys and Dolls with a martini in one hand and a basketball in the other."

Pratt acknowledged the breach, apologized, and was quoted as saying that in radio, "we recycle everything. The sheer amount of volume we produce forces you to constantly be looking for different people's ideas."

That remark angered Dan Russell, host of a sports talk show on rival CKNW.

He described Pratt's stating the appropriation of ideas is common in broadcasting as "a weak attempt to excuse himself by throwing other radio people under the bus."

He added: "Evidently, this is something he's made a career of, looking for different people's ideas. Today, it finally came back and it bit him in his leather pants."

Russell said there was little sympathy for Pratt in the Vancouver media. "I suppose if Pratt had even once checked his ego in at the door, maybe some people would cut him some slack."

In an interview yesterday, Pratt was contrite and reiterated he wasn't clear on the rules pertaining to plagiarism in print journalism. Pratt, a 35-year radio veteran, had been writing the column for four years.

As for Russell's comments, he said: "It doesn't surprise me that Russell would do that. That's kind of what he does. What can I say? I apologized until I'm blue in the face. There's clearly a higher standard in print and I'm not a print guy."
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Digicart
June 6, 2008, 5:34pm Report to Moderator
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So, thanks to Pratt's indiscretion, he got mentioned on the NW Major Sports at noon, and again on Sportstalk.   He had a "dismissal" column in the Province, followed by an apology piece.   Now, a William Houston column in the Globe...

ALL DURING THE LAST DAYS OF RATINGS.

I'd say, he's earning his paycheque...AGAIN.
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itinerate_professional
June 6, 2008, 9:15pm Report to Moderator
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Imagine that. A sports reporter admitting that his craft is so cliche ridden that he thought it was fair game to lift a quip from a well-known magazine columnist, and then pleading ignorance about a "higher standard" in print journalism. Apparently he wanted to get out of the office before noon. What a joke.
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OpenMike
June 6, 2008, 10:26pm Report to Moderator
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Quoted from Digicart
So, thanks to Pratt's indiscretion, he got mentioned on the NW Major Sports at noon, and again on Sportstalk.   He had a "dismissal" column in the Province, followed by an apology piece.   Now, a William Houston column in the Globe...

ALL DURING THE LAST DAYS OF RATINGS.

I'd say, he's earning his paycheque...AGAIN.


A real stretch to think this is some sort of ratings stunt primarily because Pratt looks like a real tool on this one.  
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Pilot
June 6, 2008, 10:35pm Report to Moderator
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I'm not a fan of Pratt at all as I think his arrogance is too much to take and hope this puts it back in check, however, give me a break. Sports guys use cliche's all the time. Do they ever have to use the original author of them? If they tell a joke, does it have to be original or do they say they got it off the internet? Unless it's been trademarked, there's really nothing wrong with it. With that being said, I believe that any sports guy that can be original and creative will go further than lazy guys like Pratt (althugh he's done pretty well for himself).
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