admin | July 27th, 2010 | No Comments »
The news that the largest leak in American military history came via the website Wikileaks will not surprise long-term watchers of the controversial, multi-award-winning site.
Afghanistan war logs expose truth of occupation.
Less gatekeeping, thanks to the Internet and Fox News, may be scary to liberals, but it’s progress over the Cronkite era.
A recent study from The USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism found there is little doubt how consumers feel about paying to use Twitter.
admin | July 26th, 2010 | No Comments »
I had not planned on writing again until some time in August but the more and more this story plays out the more and more it becomes clear that truthful honest journalism is a thing of the past in the United States. For that reason I felt a need to write about this sad, pathetic case of “journalism” in our country’s history.
Iraq’s proposed new journalism court is a further blow to the country’s already oppressed media.
Poynter marking 35 years.
The website WikiLeaks has published more than 90,000 leaked U.S. military records about the war in Afghanistan. Marc Ambinder has a lot more about the content of the classified archive, but there’s another fascinating aspect to the story: WikiLeaks gave the New York Times, Guardian, and Der Spiegel access to the archive several weeks ago.
admin | July 22nd, 2010 | No Comments »
If there is one thing we should have learned from the Shirley Sherrod fiasco, it’s to beware of snippets posing as journalism — particularly from sources of ill-repute. It is a lesson we should have abided then, and one we should remember now as the “Journolist” faux-scandal continues to flex its wings. Alas, many, including TMV’s own Logan Penza, have managed to forget that lesson literally within minutes of such a stark reminder.
Andrew Breitbart and the “Big” websites are currently receiving a hefty dose of well-deserved criticism due to their shameful smear against Shirley Sherrod, and they have been scrambling to defend themselves.
admin | July 21st, 2010 | No Comments »
Google just published a response to some ideas recently floated by the FTC in US on how to rescue journalism.
Andrew Breitbart and Tucker Carlson distort facts to smear liberals, and it works. What liberals should learn.
admin | July 20th, 2010 | No Comments »
A key general and his aides shoot their mouths off to a reporter with whom they had become familiar and apparently foolishly trusted and a blogger/reporter shoots his off to 400 fellow journalists over an Internet that is vulnerable to intrusion by those interested in nailing anyone stupid enough to trust it.
Have you ever thought of journalism as an inconsolable sinner? Have you ever then thought of mobile as journalism’s second chance? Neither had I — until an article I read this weekend suggested it.
With two Pulitzer Prizes to her name, Dana Priest is one of the Washington Post’s most celebrated reporters. Until Monday, when the Post published the first installment of a bombshell series on post-9/11 intelligence industrial complex, national security blogger William Arkin was hardly known to the paper’s readers.
admin | July 19th, 2010 | No Comments »
“The Internet only one factor of Journalism’s slide into the superficial.” Profound words to pause and ponder. Those are the words of Pulitzer Prize- winning, former New York Times reporter, Sydney Schanberg during a discussion on the “decline of mainstream American Journalism,” with Politics Daily’s staff. (Sweet irony though, he was having this serious discussion with an online, news magazine.) But is he speaking the harsh truth? Have we sacrificed quality and substance for quantitative fluff? Inane gossip? Superficial stories?
In most newsrooms, the joke would have been obvious. It was April Fools’ Day last year, and Politico’s top two editors sent an e-mail message to their staff advising of a new 5 a.m. start time for all reporters. “These pre-sunrise hours are often the best time to reach top officials or their aides,” the editors wrote, adding that reporters should try to carve out personal time “if you need it,” in the midafternoon when Internet traffic slows down. But rather than laugh, more than a few reporters stared at the e-mail message in a panicked state of disbelief.
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I majored in Journalism in college. Well, technically, it was Broadcast Journalism, but I elected to have my diploma simply state “Journalism” after a horrendous internship at the Orange County Newschannel (OCN) in my hometown of Santa Ana, California.
admin | July 16th, 2010 | No Comments »
A leading American academic has made out an argument in favour of public funding (aka state subsidy) for the beleaguered US media.
Journalism relies on public trust, and trust between individual journalists and their sources. Without trust, the Media Alliance’s Code of Ethics reminds us, journalists do not fulfill their public responsibilities.
Can building a network of local bloggers help turn online journalism into a money-making proposition? Two new media ventures are hoping that it can, and have partnered with a startup called GrowthSpur to try and make that hope become a reality. One of the ventures is another startup, a Washington-based outlet called TBD that is being run by Jim Brady, the former online editor at the Washington Post. The other is a traditional media entity that is trying to remake itself online: the Journal Register Co.
Washington Post writer Ezra Klein and Julian Assange, editor of the whistle-blowing website Wikileaks, have separately come out poignant critiques of the state of journalism. Klein has published a strong argument in favor of newspapers publishing full interview transcripts online. Mr. Assange’s more damning denunciation, including a similar call for public access to source material, was presented during a speech last week to the Centre for Investigative Journalism Summer School at City University London.