Does a columnist owe it to his readers to let them know if he is actually writing new material?
Writing a weekly column can be a chore. If you’re trying to do it on top of working a full-time job, meeting family obligations and trying to live a balanced life, sometimes it can be downright oppressive.
I bring this up having just finished teaching two intensive January-term courses on column writing. Each course met from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday, with two finished columns due by midnight on Friday. Writing two columns a week can be daunting, particularly to those who have never written a column before.
To give students in each class some perspective, I remind them that from 1935 until 1962, Eleanor Roosevelt wrote her “My Day” column. She did this while being first lady of the United States, helping to draft the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and doing other stuff that involved being Eleanor Roosevelt. Until 1961, she wrote six columns a week. In 1962, she cut back to three columns a week until September. She died in November 1962.
Not every column was a literary masterpiece, but they were reportedly widely read and influential. I remind students of this not to shame them, but to encourage them to find their inner Eleanor Roosevelt if they want to write columns regularly.
Near as I can tell, Roosevelt never recycled any of her columns and tried to pass them off as new to leverage her time. That technique is tempting to me as I am now writing the 1,152nd “The Right Thing” column.
Shortly after ChatGPT became available, there was a spate of articles that appeared by writers who acknowledged they were produced by ChatGPT as a way of showing what the bot could do. But doing that quickly became a gimmick and cliched.
There are enough Right Thing columns floating around the internet that I can easily ask ChatGPT to write a column on a particular topic at a particular length in the style of Jeffrey Seglin’s Right Thing column. As research, I tried this and ChatGPT kicked something out in 12.3 seconds. So on those weeks when I am feeling particularly overwhelmed or just plain lazy, why not recycle something I wrote years ago or have ChatGPT write my column for me, a task it can do far more quickly than I can?
As tempting as either might be, each would be wrong unless I told the readers that that was exactly what I was doing. I do revisit topics I’ve written about before if it seems relevant to do so, but I always disclose that I’m doing so to readers and I’ve never just run the same column that ran years ago.
And while ChatGPT can point out copy that is serviceable, it can’t draw from the same experiences I have nor make the same judgments I try to make each week when trying to wrestle with some issue or another.
If the weekly column feels like too much of a chore to write or procrastination seems to be winning out, the right thing is to hunker down and write. It’s a privilege to be able to write for you each week and that, for now, is motivation enough to assure you that the words I use are both new and my own.
Jeffrey L. Seglin, author of The Simple Art of Business Etiquette: How to Rise to the Top by Playing Nice, is a senior lecturer in public policy and director of the communications program at Harvard's Kennedy School. He is also the administrator of www.jeffreyseglin.com, a blog focused on ethical issues.
Do you have ethical questions that you need to have answered? Send them to jeffreyseglin@gmail.com.
Follow him on Twitter @jseglin.
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