Projo Exodus Continues — Reporter Who Wrote About Trudeau’s Physical Appearance Leaves

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Projo Exodus Continues — Reporter Who Wrote About Trudeau’s Physical Appearance Leaves

Canadian Prime Minister
Providence Journal reporter Jacqueline Tempera tweeted this week that “Friday is her last day @projo.” She is just the latest to leave the newspaper. In the past few months Jennifer Bogdan left to go to work for the press office of Governor Gina Raimondo, Sportswriter Tim Britton departed for a national sports site, and Kate Bramson left to serve as policy director for Senate President Dominick Ruggerio.

The Projo which once had a newsroom of 300 plus in the 1980s, now employs between 10 and 15 news reporters.

Tempera may be best known for a controversial article that became global news.

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A front-page story published last July in the Providence Journal about Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau drew ridicule by national and local press for the article’s focus. 

The story by Tempera on Trudeau - in town for the National Governors Association summer meeting - starts off, "Feeling blue? Google three words: Justin Trudeau butt."

Besides the front page story, there was an online video by Tempera focusing on Trudeau's looks. 

In the Providence Journal video Tempera painfully tried to elicit comments from those she interviewed about Trudeau's attractiveness.

The story drew national and local criticism

The HuffPost wrote, “Where to even begin with this one. While U.S. President Donald Trump is in France making the first lady of that country feel weird, a Rhode Island paper has run a front-page story covering Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's visit by talking about his posterior.”

HuffPost went on to write, “It's the sort of comment that would easily split sexists from non-sexists — basically people who aren't the worst — if it were made about a female world leader. But this being about Trudeau, reaction to the Providence Journal story reinforced the difference in how Canadians and Americans view the prime minister."

Meanwhile, former Providence Journal reporter Scott MacKay wrote on Facebook on Friday, “I rarely get exercised at what my alma mater, the Providence Journal does. But today was just too much. The National Governor's Conference is in town. The ProJo splashed across Page One a story about the appearance today of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. The lede of the piece focused not on trade, climate change, fighting terror or his remarks. No, the lede --I kid you not -- was about his ass, or derriere in his native French.”

MacKay, who is a news analyst for RIPR, went on to write, “Then there was a front-page piece about Crimetown - as if we haven't heard enough about this. A quote about Raymond Patriarca.``It was the culture. Everyone loved Raymond. He was good to the community." MacKay went on to write:

Really? What planet is this person on? Patriarca was the czar of a murderous crime syndicate. He created widows, ruined families and corrupted unions and politicians. We are lionizing he and his like? 

All this a day after a columnist conflated voting statistics into some nonsense about the state being ``independent.'' Never mentioning that big reason folks are unaffiliated --this happens all over New England--is because some states allow those voters to participate in either party primary.

All this infotainment. And they wonder why they are slouching toward irrelevance.  Somewhere Michael Metcalf is spinning in his grave. Jim Wyman and Steve Hamblett too."

Leaving Providence Journal
More National Media Comments

From NewsBusters, who assert themselves as "exposing and combating liberal media bias," Curtis Houck blasted the ProJo.

"I wonder if Tempera was singing I Like Big Butts to herself while she was writing this. In all seriousness, what an embarrassment for journalism. And they wonder why people don’t take the establishment, liberal media seriously anymore," wrote Houck. 

In fairness to Tempera, the story was her writing, but the assignment and editing of the story were conducted by others. She will work at MassLIVE next -- "MassLive.com is Western Massachusetts’ most popular local news and information site."


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