Being a headline reader, I read the headline first, gazing downward on the left side, I read the head: ”BEACH MEETS BOHO AT BYRON
BAY.” Okay, that did it, I just had to read the rest of the story to find out
what “boho” meant.
My first scan of the story resulted in … nothing. That
ticked me off; I invested a lot of my time reading to educate myself and what?
Nothing. So I read the story a second time, and this time discovered the phrase
“boho backpacking” (see the insert in the upper right-hand corner of the
picture).
Nothing in the story explained what the hell “boho” meant.
Was it a shortened version of “blow hole”? Did it mean a hiker was crying out
loud, as in bo(o) ho(o)? What? What? I had to find the word online.
“Boho,” it turns out, is an adjective that means “socially
unconventional.” It draws on bohemian and hippie influences.
See? I had to look it up. A person reading a headline should
not have to look up a word. That’s bad headline writing. Worse yet, when the
word isn’t explained in the story, the writer is assuming the reader is
familiar with such esoteric terms. That’s bad writing.
Bad headline writing at the Honolulu Star-Advertiser and bad story writing from the New York Times. But it’s also bad editing
on the part of the Star-Advertiser.
The editor should have read the story carefully before laying it out, and made
a parenthetical explanation of the term – do something like this … “boho (stylishly
bohemian) backpacking.”
Now how hard is that? It makes one’s mind boho-boggle.
2 comments:
Oh my God, Left Field . . . I had to look it up too. I'm with you 110%. This must be some California trend with trying to bring back the sixties because they thought Haight-Ashbury was the be-all, end-all of the hippie movement. Let me tell you, I lived through the hippy movement and it wasn't such big shakes so they need to get over it. I personally liked the suggestion that it represented blow hole. Because that's what all this trendy crap it, blowing smoke!
That's so funny, Pam! Relieved to know I'm not the only one often bamboozled by out local newspaper.
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