Kuang_Grade wrote:It is something completely else for the Mainichi to take work that has been going on for years and then act like this someone on staff created Pulitzer prize winning piece about some 8 year old heroin addict that turned out to be completely made up ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janet_Cooke ) and tosses the entire staff under a bus while higher ups (whose job was supposedly to keep their eyes open for problems) just stand around talking about how shocked they are about this and then seek to toss all of the previous work down an internet memory hole Orwell style.
If they are this lackluster in their support of their own product (even if reprinted from somewhere else), I can only imagine how completely feeble their overall reporting is. If they clearly don't trust their staff, why should anyone trust anything they publish.
The paper is not necessarily throwing the staff under the bus. If Wai Wai has been cancelled then all affected staff would be out of work, wouldn't they? Unless they can be re-assigned but I presume in this case there is nowhere else to re-assign them to. By the way, there are scapegoats in every situation. I can think of many sports teams that have ditched their coach or GM for no other reasons than to appear like they are vresponding to some incident. politicians do it all the time and so do businesses.