Journalism
Tuesday November 6, 2007
Posted by Hash | Tags: Corporations and Journalism
Just published, graphic novel Shooting War by Anthony Lappe and Dan Goldman: it’s 2011 and anti-corporate blogger Jimmy Burns is working as an embed for Global News - ‘Your home for 24-hour terror coverage’ - in President McCain’s Iraq… And boom. The beta online version is available here.
.
Tuesday July 17, 2007
Posted by Hash | Tags: Corporations, Journalism and Making Money
… conned by the numbers from their web departments and aided and abetted by laughably inconsistent web metrics… newspaper owners will strip newspapers of the resources they need to reinvent themselves in order to nurture an internet beast that they believe is a rottweiler puppy but is, in fact, a fully grown poodle. They are barking mad.
- John Duncan, former managing editor of the Observer, 1999 to 2005, Press Gazette
Thursday April 26, 2007
Posted by Hash | Tags: Journalism, Software and Tips
My review of Rationale, an argument mapping application for Windows and a useful addition to any journalist/blogger/critical thinker’s software arsenal:

Wednesday April 18, 2007
Posted by Hash | Tag: Journalism
The public spaces on the internet served as the most important arena for exchange of information on the events yesterday. Almost every news story cited a Facebook or Myspace page or a livejournal entry as a source. The Wikipedia entry and discussion on the event hashed out validity of sources and the semantics of tragedy. And then the jarring cell phone footage on Liveleak was among the realest indicators that this gruesome event had actually happened. The events as documented on the social web became the authority.
… These past two days have made it ever so much more apparent that our social lives on the web are intractable, crucial, and part of the news and the historical record.
- booktruck
Tuesday April 3, 2007
Posted by Hash | Tags: Design, Journalism and Marketing
Spot the change in the new logo at the American Society of Newspaper Editors (ASNE ):
Before

And After

Yep, “newspaper” is so 20th Century.
ASNE president Dave Zeeck thinks ASME may eventually drop “newspaper” altogether for something more up to date.
- Strupp’s Notebook
Friday March 2, 2007
Posted by Hash | Tag: Journalism
Flip away from the enthusiasms of the Web 2.0/participatory media crowd; the future suddenly loses its shine.
In a paper published last year by Harvard’s Shorenstein Center, Robert G Picard gives a detailed account of what’s gone wrong with American news journalism:
Many of the challenges of news organization today exist because the professionalism of journalism and journalism education have determined the values and value of the news, commoditized the product, and turned most journalists into relatively interchangeable information factory workers. Average journalists share the same skills sets and the same approaches to stories, seek out the same sources, ask similar questions, and produce relatively similar stories. Few journalists encounter skills-related problems changing from one news organization to another and the average journalist is easily replaced by another. This interchangeability is one reason why salaries for average journalists are relatively low and why columnists, cartoonists, and journalists with special skills (such as enhanced ability to cover finance, science, and health) are able to command higher wages. Across the news industry, processes and procedures for news gathering are guided by standardized news values, producing standardized stories in standardized formats that are presented in standardized styles. The result is extraordinary sameness and minimal differentiation.
- Robert G Picard, Journalism, Value Creation and the Future of News Organizations
(Google’s cached version; click here for pdf)
Continue reading Cookie-Cutter Journalism
(200 words read, 360 words in all, around 1:26 mins to read)