Virtualjournalist

Staking a claim to the Fourth Estate

Posts Tagged ‘blogging’

Lens, New York Times’s photojournalism blog

Posted by Mediascaper on May 18, 2009

The New York Times unveiled its great-looking new blog, Lens. The light-gray text of the captions is rather small and doesn’t contrast well against the background. But the photos are the focus here, and they are excellent, particularly this lovely set of black-and-whites by Fred R. Conrad.

Posted in Multimedia, Online journalism, news industry | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »

Save these online journalism classes

Posted by Mediascaper on April 27, 2009

Fire up your bookmark folders, I’ve got a good ‘un today: Online Journalism Blog has a number of useful online classes, PowerPoint-style. Topics covered include writing for the Web, podcasts, blogging practices (including points both for and against frequent posts), Twitter for beginners and managing feeds.

Posted in blogging, news industry, social media | Tagged: , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

This is why journalists and readers need to communicate

Posted by Mediascaper on April 23, 2009

The St. Petersburg Times‘ Lennie Bennett is a passionate art critic and defender of the arts, and so I would love to have heard her response to some of these reader comments to her article about FSU’s consideration of closing the Ringling Art Museum:

  • Bob from St. Pete
    Apr 23rd, 2009 10:31 am
    Close it! The voters have spoken. This is not the sort of thing that government should be funding. Or is it that the voters just want a free lunch and want someone else to pay for their quality of life?
  • Jonathan from Jacksonville, Fl
    Apr 23rd, 2009 10:26 am
    The Ringling should be sold. There is no reason for the state of Florida to be subsidizing an art museum (according to the story, operations only fund half of the Ringling’s budget) in this climate.
  • Andrew from Palm Harbor
    Apr 23rd, 2009 8:58 am
    If its so wildly popular and successful, WHY DO YOU NEED A STATE SUBSIDY? It should be autosufficient. There are enough blue blood art-lovers with guilty consciences who will endow millions for a plaque on the wall.

At my previous employer, Creative Loafing, staff writers readily engaged readers who commented on their blog posts, explaining why or why not they were wrong — which led to some spirited discussions.

But the comments on Bennett’s article, absent a response, have all the effect of yelling into a void.

One other nitpick — the Times really needs to provide permalinks to its reader comments.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: , , , , , , | 2 Comments »

The myth of the multimedia journalist

Posted by Mediascaper on April 21, 2009

Andrew Nusca offers a media reality check to the conventional wisdom that today’s journalist must be a camera-toting, video-editing, pen-and-paper wielding jack-of-all-trades:

As new media has increased in popularity and usage, this myth has populated of the multi-talented reporter — you know, the one carrying all the gear a few paragraphs back. And while it’s certainly an ideal, it’s not a necessity. In fact, it’s barely a reality.
Thus brings my first point of this New Media Reality Check: most news organizations simply don’t operate that way.
Nusca uses Henry Ford’s Model-T assembly line to draw an analogy to modern news production:
The same thing applies to publications, moreso as it gets bigger. Whether the publication in question is a newspaper or a magazine or a radio/TV station or a website, the assembly line theory of the Industrial Age still holds true: a writer reports and creates the story, an editor edits it, a photographer shoots art for it, a production editor lays out a template for the story to appear and another editor (or two) looks at the entire package, all while being fact-checked and copy-edited by another person dedicated to that task.
Nusca provides some common sense advice for new and seasoned journalists unsure of whether they have the skills to endure. Pursue the skills you need for your particular niche, he advises. And if you want to be an online journalist:

Posted in New Media, Online journalism, blogging, media criticism, news industry | Tagged: , , , , , | 2 Comments »

G20 summit is a social media event

Posted by Mediascaper on April 2, 2009

Posted in Multimedia, Online journalism, blogging, crowdsourcing, social media | Tagged: , , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »

Break these blog rules, journalists

Posted by Mediascaper on March 20, 2009

Once again, Save the Media’s Gina Chen is lighting the way for reporters who want to thrive in the digital age.

This time, she covers “10 journalism rules you can break on your blog.” My favorite is number 2:

Tell part of the story: Journalists are trained to wait until they have the full story before telling any of it. I’m not asserting that blogs shouldn’t be accurate; they should. But they should be immediate even if that means telling only the story as you know it at that moment in time. The beauty of a blog is you can update immediately as more details become apparent or earlier reports are disputed. This isn’t publishing lies; this is giving readers evolving information in real time.

Posted in New Media, Online journalism, blogging, ethics, hyperlinks, journalism ethics | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »

Journalism will cease to be a profession

Posted by Mediascaper on March 18, 2009

Gotcha! I’m not saying that — no way! Nope, I’m just paraphrasing the words of Dave Winer, Web pioneer and provocateur par excellence. He reads Doc Searls. And Jay Rosen (me too, actually). And while at a panel discussion about the San Francisco Chronicle hosted by the UC-Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism, Winer poured an ice-cold glass of “THE FUTURE” over those stuffy gatekeepers in attendance:

I said the sources would take over the news. Not enough reporters covering the courtroom? The judge will report, as will the jurors, the attorneys, the plaintiff, the defendent (sic). It will be messier, I would have said had I had the time to complete the thought, but more truth will come out.

I just going to assume that the messy truth Winer left out will clear up a statement I can’t begin to comprehend.

Posted in Mainstream media, Newspaper industry, blogging, citizen journalism, civic journalism, freedom of the press, media criticism, news industry, newspapers | Tagged: , , , , | 1 Comment »

Blogging’s not enough

Posted by Mediascaper on March 17, 2009

You also have to be a good marketer of yourself and your ideas, as Patrick Thornton points out in his latest post at Beatblogging.org, Blog your way into a job:

Blogging your way into a job — Yes, personal blogs make people money, and ads aren’t needed either. I wouldn’t have this job without my personal blog. I’m not the only one with this story either. Tony Pierce wouldn’t be heading up the LA Times’s blogging efforts if he didn’t blog on his own time.

Blogging may never get you a job. But with persistence, it can introduce you to some great minds, strengthen your writing, and enrich your life.

Posted in blogging | Tagged: , , , , | 1 Comment »

Online journalism — the handbook

Posted by Mediascaper on March 3, 2009

If you yearn to learn the 10 things the online journalist must know

If you ache to discover the seven kinds of stories you should be doing often

If you would move heaven and earth to know the basics of online reporting

Then today is your lucky day. Ladies and gentlemen, I dutifully point you to the Bighow Online Journalism Handbook. Enjoy.

Posted in New Media, Online journalism, blogging, news industry | Tagged: , , | Leave a Comment »

Organizing the online newsroom

Posted by Mediascaper on February 11, 2009

Gina Chen at Save the Media offers the second part of “What’s an online-first newsroom.” A few highlights of Chen’s recommendations:

  • The best of the Web should come back to print
  • Fellow reporters should follow each other on Twitter to cross-post tweets
  • Traditional walls between editorial departments need to come down so that reporters can work together for the benefit of readers
  • More writers than a traditional newsroom
  • Organize the website along topics
  • A thoroughly revamped print product

Posted in Multimedia, New Media, Online journalism, blogging, hyperlinks, news industry | Tagged: , , , , , , , , | Leave a Comment »