Feature Article

From the Editor

By Larry Platt

I LIKE THE INQUIRER'S CRAIG LABAN, and I respect his work. That’s why I approached him about a year ago to see if he’d ever be interested in reviewing restaurants for us.

And I believe that, all things being equal, a publication should strive to keep the identity of its restaurant critic anonymous. Until now, we’ve always extended the Inquirer the courtesy of respecting LaBan’s anonymity, as the paper and other media outlets have respected that of our reviewers.

But now Craig LaBan is front and center in a news story — as staff writer Steve Volk so expertly chronicles in “High Steaks,” about the legal throwdown between the critic and Alex Plotkin, of Chops steakhouse. As a result, I’ve decided to show what LaBan looks like.

I do this because, as Zack Stalberg, former editor of the Daily News, points out in Volk’s story, anonymity for LaBan has become something of a gimmick. He shows up in disguise to public book readings, making those of us who have extended the courtesy of anonymity to him complicit in his publicity stunts. Moreover, most everyone in the restaurant community knows what he looks like anyway. (In fact, we’re not the first to out his image; the Chestnut Hill Local and a magazine named Real Philly have already published photos of him.) But mostly, we’re running a shot of LaBan because this whole debate about his anonymity just smacks of so much self-importance. Listen, the guy eats meals and writes about them. He’s not Valerie Plame, okay? If Volk’s compelling story leaves us with one big-picture takeaway, let it be an acknowledgment that with all the problems in this world and city, none of us should take a couple of steaks quite this seriously.


FIRST, LET’S GET THE DISCLAIMER out of the way. We like kids. We’re pro-kids. We’re not channeling the spirit of Paul Lynde in Bye Bye Birdie, wringing our hands about “these kids today.”

Instead, with this cover and in Tom McGrath’s terrific essay "Bad Parents," we’re laying blame where it belongs: The problem isn’t with the kids. The problem is with us.

By that, I mean this current generation of parents. We screwed up, guys. Tom Brokaw was right: There was a Greatest Generation, and they were our parents. They raised us in precisely the way McGrath prescribes: by modeling character for us. And by being unequivocal when it came to ours.

But all that changed. Perhaps owing to the natural inclination of one generation to rebel against its predecessor, we stopped making demands of our kids, except where it came to their achievement; we started confusing what they did with who they are. It was a mistake our parents wouldn’t have made.

I know this because my folks were part of that Greatest Generation. (In fact, McGrath references my dad in his piece.) Okay, so Dad wasn’t exactly a military hero, having protected the shores of Seattle from Japanese attack in World War II. His style of parenting was laissez-faire, yet laden with messages about right and wrong. I thought of this while on the tennis court the other day. On the court next to me, I witnessed a certifiable brat-in-training. This pip-squeak kid — he must have been nine years old — stalked the court, berating his instructor (“What the fuck is that?” he shrieked when the coach’s shot landed too short for his liking) while strutting like he was the next coming of John McEnroe. Behaviorally, he kind of was. But here’s the rub: His proud papa was right there, beaming from the sidelines. Would my dad have let me talk and act like that? Hardly. And not because he was a harsh disciplinarian. No, because through the eloquence of his example, he exhibited respect, reasonableness and a moderate demeanor. He was, in short, an adult. That’s what’s changed, and it’s what McGrath so skillfully teases out: Once upon a time, our parents weren’t our peers.

Originally published in Philadelphia magazine, September 2007
 

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User comments

re Labaan
Posted by nipsey | Aug. 22, 2007 at 6:30 PM
COMMENT:
thanks for the explanation. thanks for admitting you are rescinding your respect for other journalists. thanks for providing the magzine over the years, but I'll cancel my subscription. thanks
LaBan
Posted by Andrew | Aug. 24, 2007 at 6:36 PM
COMMENT:
Your statement in defense of publishing a photo of Craig LaBan has to be the most asinine, the most ludicrous, absolutely the most stupid statement by anyone since the last statement by the Liar in The White House. It takes the cake, to use an apt cliché. Whether or not people respect LaBan's opinions and go by them--I don't even read them--what the reader knows is that as long as he is unrecognized and, therefore, anonymous, the service he gets in a restaurant is the same service that the rest of us get, the food he gets is the same quality that the rest of us get. But, once his face is known, the service and the quality of food will be different--and well you know, as you take childish delight and glee in showing off how clever you are. If you doubt this, think (if that is possible) for one moment about what kind of service, food quality, and welcome you get at your favorite restaurant, cafe, bar, whore house. Will it be the same as the one(s) that I would get should
Excuses are not justification
Posted by Michael | Aug. 26, 2007 at 4:30 PM
COMMENT:
The only person "taking steaks quite this seriously" was a restaurateur who seemingly has more money than talent. When called on it, he responded by filing a lawsuit that is obviously nothing less than greymail. Further, your assertion that "most everyone in the restaurant community knows what he looks like" has no basis in fact, and your claims that others have published pictures provide no justification for you to further the cause. You have not just outed a critic, you have stolen from Philadelphia's restaurant-goers a crucial tool in determining how to spend the hundreds of millions of dollars the restaurant industry generates annually. In sum, then, your justifications for this action are at best fatuous, at worst outright dishonest. I won't ascribe motive to what you've done, but one thing is clear - you're a jackass.
Laban
Posted by H | Sep. 5, 2007 at 11:44 PM
COMMENT:
What a sad pathetic opportunist you are, Larry. yeah, this will surely ruin Laban's career now. Moron.
I hate Philadelphia Magazine
Posted by John | Aug. 18, 2009 at 2:56 PM
COMMENT:
I'm two years behind on this sleazy move by Philadelphia magazine. That's because I haven't picked up this rag in more than ten years. Even for Philly mag, this is a new low.

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