Your Advocate: an editor's blog
As editor of the Victoria Advocate, I want to amplify the readers' voices. I aim to promote transparency about what we do at the newspaper, on our Web site and any other delivery methods. By doing this, I hope to build trust with our readers as we seek to serve our community.
About ChrisCobler


Real Name:
Chris Cobler
Address:
311 E. Constitution St.
Victoria, TX 77901
Gender:
male
Member Since:
September 16, 2007
Last Signed In:
October 07, 2008
Profile Views:
2275
Blog Views:
14216
View Profile
Send a Message
Send To A Friend
Sign Guestbook
Add as a Friend

Previous Posts
Where do you turn for listings about businesses?
Crikey, why did we write about alligator hunting?
Aggies, butterflies, Pandora radio, and keeping Victoria beautiful
What turns regular people into monsters?
What is it about stories involving dogs?
What new technology will change the world?
Be true to your school
Well, at least it's finally raining
Galveston County Daily News team headed to Victoria
National company that hosts Advocate news site is down
Archives
September 07
October 07
November 07
December 07
January 08
February 08
March 08
April 08
May 08
June 08
July 08
August 08
September 08
October 08
Subscribe!
RSS 2.0 feed RSS 2.0
Add to My Yahoo
Add to My Google
Add to Bloglines
Add to My AOL
ChrisCobler - > Your Advocate: an editor's blog -> Why would an unwed father be featured on Father's Day?
Why would an unwed father be featured on Father's Day?
Quite a few readers reacted strongly to Monday's B1 feature on two new fathers. The story idea was to find a dad whose child was born this Father's Day.

As it turns out, both of the fathers at DeTar Hospital were not married to their child's mother. We didn't comment on that fact in the story, but several callers and many online readers did.

To be clear, our intent was not to glorify or to criticize unwed parents. We set out only to find a new father for Father's Day.

According to the most recent national statistic I've found, single mothers accounted for 36 percent of all births nationwide. We're checking for more recent information and for statistics specific to the Crossroads region. My hunch is that the percentage is even higher in our area.

Given that, the odds are good that we'll encounter unwed parents whenever we set out to do such a feature on Father's Day or on New Year's. We understand why some readers might find this societal trend alarming. We also recognize some single parents and their children, such as Aprill Brandon in her blog today, may have a different perspective.

A newspaper tries to portray reality. It's up to all of us -- and a higher authority -- to change society.
Tags: Parenting, Victoria Advocate
posted by ChrisCobler on Tuesday, June 17, 2008 at 12:06 PM
Report a Violation
Viewed 284 times
13 comments from 10 users

1

posted by Grifter on Jun 18, 2008 at 06:24 AM

This is not about your blog but it is about the poll. It doesn't matter if a child has married, divorced, single or unwed parents as long as they have caring parent(s).

 

posted by Ladyinpink on Jun 17, 2008 at 11:02 PM
Bighorn, the answer to your question is YES.  Ive lived those things.  I have health issues right now from doing without for children when I was younger.  I cooked, the children were served and if there wasnt enough, I simply did without.  But get this!  Children area a gift from God.  God loans us children here on earth and along with that comes a certain responsibility.  If the parent or parents choose not to take that responsibility, then its their loss.  I cant begin to count the awesome moments that my first husband missed with his kids when he "disappeared" and hid out because he wasnt paying child support.  And as much bullpoop that my kids dished out over all these years and all that they put me though as a single parent, I wouldnt do it any differently if I had the chance. 
posted by Luminary on Jun 17, 2008 at 09:08 PM


            Well excuse me!  I thought it was a rhetorical question, "why would an unwed father be featured on Father's Day?".

             I should have know somebody would take my response as an opportunity to get up on a soapbox.
posted by Theawesomeonesgirl on Jun 17, 2008 at 08:19 PM

Bighorn,

You say you have been a witness to all those situations where single parents who have to overcome situations they do not know how to handle.

Well have you ever seen a mother whose husband is beating, abusing, or molesting their child, male or female?

Have you ever helped those single mothers who had no choice but to walk away from their abusing husbands for the sake of said children?

Or those single fathers who chose to step up to the plate when their wives ran off with other men?

There are a million situations to account for and not all of those single parents in those situations are that way by choice. Single parents may have, at one point been married, but are now raising their children on their own to protect their children.

What are the circumstances of the situations that you used for your negative examples? You can't pick and chose what you want to acknowledge in this life.

Times change and things change, that is the one thing that is certain in this life.

 

 

posted by bighorn on Jun 17, 2008 at 07:11 PM

Ok, Ok, I'm an old fashioned, close minded fart with no clue what is going on in our society.

Have any of you assisted a single mother dealing with the trials of teen boy feeling his manhood ready to rule the world?

Have you struggled with a friend who is forced to explain female "changes" to his 6th grade daughter because her mother is not around?

Sat in emergency room and watched a woman alone bring in a sick child and struggled to hold herslf together as the doctor treats her child.

Counseled a single mother who is talking to Attorney General about collecting child support, and trying to pay her rent, car payment, and still go to HEB?

I have. But then again, I'm just an old fashioned fart.

When our society began to accept as "ok" for men to father children as a hobby or passion, move on to "better things", and ignore their responsiblities our society began to decline at a rapid rate. A hearty "thank all of you" for confirming my thoughts. I am out of step.

Alll of the other posters "I know people" and "I have friends" arguments win again.

posted by THEMIS on Jun 17, 2008 at 06:39 PM
The issue at hand is not a moral one but a social issue. We as a society have placed parenting equal to issues such as career and hobbies. It is magical thinking to hold that children can be raised in the 45 minutes after work and before night school while parents expand their horizons or engage in another pursuit . Folks tell themselves that to justify the neglect but TYC, TDCJ, drug rehabs, youth homes, 12 step meetings, and other places lost souls end up are full of "you can have it all" moms, and dads who said "no thank you" to the sacrifices it would take to make that possible.
posted by Luminary on Jun 17, 2008 at 06:24 PM

       Why even worry about the people around here who have  their head stuck in the sand and are living in a time warp.  They really are only a very vocal minority.
posted by smidgeon08 on Jun 17, 2008 at 05:01 PM

Pilot, I have never agreed to anything you have ever said.  Today I do.  I have been a single mother for over 25 years and there arent any reason single people cant raise good kids.   A lot of married couples dont.  I hate that the world has the idea that the only kids that go bad come from single parent homes. 

posted by smidgeon08 on Jun 17, 2008 at 04:59 PM
BIghorn, we all know that you are very old school.  In a century of sue happy people, why wouldnt the paper print something about what ever makes news.  Its not the kids fault and lets face it, read the births every Sunday, At least 9 out of 10 babies born are to parents that arent legally married.  And while we are on the subject.  OVer 14 years ago, a close freind was blessed with a beautiful granddaughter.  Everyone in town talked because she was born to ______ and ______.  The couple was legally married, the woman chose to remain with her maiden name......get with the program and stop being a big bully. 
posted by pilot on Jun 17, 2008 at 02:29 PM

 

Why wouldn't an unwed or divorced or widowed father be featured on Father's Day? I could point out Aprill's upbringing in a single parent household(great story today Aprill), or I could point to a couple of dear friends of mine who have done a wonderful job by choice, of raising beautiful, educated and successful in their own right, children, as single parents. It galls me that people will overlook the spirit of a story, and dissect it or unearth facts own their own, regarding the principal of the story, and find details to nitpick or criticize for the sake of  being critical. It was a story about being a father, on Father's Day. That is a daunting task whether you are a brand new father, or coming home to teenagers. Father's day is to celebrate dads, and hardly a time to single one out for his marital status.

posted by RedRage00 on Jun 17, 2008 at 02:01 PM

Bighorn,

Once again, where did the Advocate glorify single parenthood? The story was about a NEW FATHER, not single parenthood. And as far as we know, the 2 people involved are a couple so where again is this single parenthood? The definition of single parent is someone raising their child ALONE....SINGLE.  It didn't look that way by reading the story. Maybe you should read it again.

Why didn't you comment on Aprill's story?

Chris, I can't believe readers actually call and complained about this story...unbelievable.

posted by ChrisCobler on Jun 17, 2008 at 01:31 PM
Bighorn,

That's a pretty good story idea if either or both of the fathers involved is game.

Thanks,

Chris
posted by bighorn on Jun 17, 2008 at 01:21 PM

Chris,

Thanks for addressing your method of searching out this story.I don't agree with the glorifying of single parenthood, especially on Fathers Day. Unfortunately, the fact that both new fathers you located may speak volumes about where our society is headed. For every "April Brandon", I fear there are many more stories with a less than happy outcome.

How about a followup a year from now to note the challenges, hopefully triumphs of the featured "Family"?

1

Leave a Comment
Ground Rules for posting comments:
  • No profanity or personal attacks.
  • Please comment on the subject of the blog post itself.
If you do not follow these rules we will remove your comment. Please keep it civil.

To protect users from spam, we need you to prove that you're a human being.
Please enter the text from the image at left.