You, of course, immediately remember Rappler for our investigative reports, especially on flood control corruption and big-time rent-seeking:
Readers, however, have also come to know ordinary people with extraordinary, or simply interesting, stories through Rappler:
Hi, I’m Miriam Grace A. Go, Rappler’s managing editor, and I’d like to introduce you to PEOPLE.
As an official section, People is just months old. As a conscious effort to see what’s inspiring about humanity in the noise, grimness, even monotony of news, People is something Rappler has pursued over the years. (In fact, I realize that, six years ago, in this same month and under a different newsletter, I wrote about our intention to “tell more people stories.”)
People is where you will read about the more personal side of officials and public figures in the news, and the tributes to persons who became part of our own lives when they were living. Check out the Newsmakers and Obituary subsections.
People is also where we have transitioned our old “soft” sections on Entertainment, Lifestyle & Culture, and Sports. So, we are trading concert schedules, movie reviews, and game results for more unique features and thoughtful conversations with Actors, Artists, and Athletes.
The old travelogues will now give way to stories of how people in particular communities live their lives. What used to be occasional contributed opinion pieces now take the form of essays on personal experiences under the series called “Neighbors.” All these new takes on old forms of articles are nestled in the subsection called Human Interest.
The People section also has a regular “Tambay.” Actually, it’s a column by veteran journalist Chito de la Vega that talks about current issues from the point of view of neighborhood folks gathered in a backyard, a sari-sari store, or a barangay bench on a lazy Sunday morning.
Soon, we might even have a subsection on Crimes — not the analyses and investigations that our justice reporters do, but about incidents that show the frailty and vulnerability of men. Perhaps there will someday be a separate space for readers who want to tell their own stories and can tell them well.
There are three things I hope the People coverage will do:
One of the best writers about ordinary people, Rick Bragg, once talked about how he honored his hometown with how he wrote about it: “I have always tried to write of this south beyond clichés and that is why, most often, I have pulled my writing from the memories and stories of my own blood.”
Help us tell more stories about us Filipinos — about the kind of people we are, and the kind of people we want to be.
You send us tips on corruption to investigate, don’t you? Why not point us, too, to inspiring people you know? You can always reach out to us via [email protected].
– Rappler.com
