the fragmentation of media outlets and the audience likely means we won't soon have another Jon Landau "I have seen rock and roll future and its name is Bruce Springsteen" moment, or see a Pauline Kael able to single-handedly reverse the critical response to 'Bonnie and Clyde'.
It wouldn't matter in golf, anyway, because of the rampant dishonesty. For years, it has bothered me to find that what golf writers and p.r. people and podcasters say about courses "off the record" is radically different than what they will say on the record. Architects, too, for that matter . . . they can be very catty in private!
Tom--
As a member of the writing class, I understand this perspective but I'm not sure it's quite this black-and-white.
You may be relying on an assumption that what a writer says off the record both 1) is a truer take and 2) would ultimately be a more useful take to the public than what he or she ends up writing on the record. I'm not certain that is always the case (I grant it probably is sometimes). A short, searing off-the-record take might well be the product of a knee-jerk reaction that the taker ultimately finds a little overheated in hindsight when the time comes to actually say something cogent and public about the course.
In your own conversations with people about golf courses, have you ever felt as though some of them might be trying to play your game a little bit, turning the rhetorical heat up a notch or two on their true opinion of a course as a product of their interpretation of your style in the Confidential Guide? I don't know if that's true in practice, but if there's a kernel of truth to it, it might make certain off-the-record takes less than completely authentic. It's human nature to be eager to impress people we respect and whom we see as experts on something we're passionate about. Perhaps some of that is at play sometimes?
I think there's another general reason why the off-the-record takes can sound different from the on-the-record dispatch. The off-the-record hot take is ephemeral and disposable in the way a tweet is. That doesn't necessarily make it unreliable, but the brevity of it also usually doesn't make it complete, either. It's also more likely to be grounded in personal opinion/biases in a way that the longer-form piece probably shouldn't be, at least not as much. I have written about golf courses I don't personally love several times, but for reasons I've given previously in this thread, I have a bit of a philosophical problem with letting them infect my writing too much, because I know that many people authentically do enjoy them, and that dissuades me from wholesale dismissals. Person-to-person conversation and public writing are fundamentally different forms of communication. It doesn't surprise me that there isn't complete overlap.
All that said, I think you have a point re: difference in private expressions of opinion vs. public writing about golf courses. Hoping I'll be able to do a bit more of it this year, it's something I will bear in mind.