2020
November
20
Friday

Monitor Daily Podcast

November 20, 2020
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Peter Grier
Washington editor

Amid the tumult of the 2020 post-election period it’s good to stop and take a moment to remember some of the unsung heroes of the vote. There were the many election workers who did their jobs quietly and well amid a pandemic, for instance.

And there was Robin Kemp. She watched those workers count votes. And watched them. And watched some more.

Ms. Kemp is a member of a vanishing breed – local journalists. She’s the founder and sole employee of the Clayton Crescent, an online site that covers Georgia’s Clayton County, a suburban area south of Atlanta.

She started it after being laid off from the local paper last spring.

She was the only journalist to watch Clayton County’s marathon counting of absentee votes, beginning early Nov. 5 and stretching 20 hours. That was when a steady drip of absentee votes pushed Joe Biden closer and closer to President Donald Trump. Finally, it was the count in Clayton that catapulted President-elect Biden into the lead.

And Ms. Kemp was there, bearing witness.

Suddenly her Twitter feed and Facebook posts were drawing worldwide attention. She gained 10,000 followers in a day, up from a few hundred. Foreign news organizations wanted interviews. Money flowed into a GoFundMe site she’d set up in April.

Ms. Kemp knows local journalism is a tough business. But her father worked for CNN and the job is in her blood. She says she hopes to build the Crescent up and hire a small full-time staff.

"The political and geographical oddities of Clayton County, which has a larger population than Pittsburgh, require more than one person to cover it properly," she says in an email. 


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Today’s stories

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A Christian Science Perspective

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A message of love

Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff/File
Scientifically speaking, mist is just particles of water suspended in the air – the result of matter crossing from gas to liquid or vice versa. But it often creates a rare science-meets-art kind of fascination. The atmosphere of mystery that accompanies that loss of perception has long been a favorite of writers and painters, from Charles Dickens to J.M.W. Turner and Claude Monet. From Japan to Sweden and beyond, something about mist makes people want to look closer, hoping to divine something from the haze. – Nick Roll / Staff writer
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Come back Monday, when we’ll have tips for cooking Thanksgiving dinner for smaller gatherings, including a recipe for individual pumpkin pies.

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2020
November
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Friday
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