Category Archives: Media

‘University professors turn to the blogosphere, for classes and recognition’

From Michigan Daily: University professors turn to the blogosphere, for classes and recognition:

In recent years, academics across the country have started using blogs to relay information and ideas. Many are now incorporating the medium into their classes, asking students to take to their keyboards and post thoughts or resources on course material.
——————–
The time commitment means professors need to prioritize when it comes to blogging. Those who write personal blogs do so outside of their teaching requirements, but as blogs become more popular, the question of their role in academic research and publishing becomes more complex.
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“It’s so new that (universities) haven’t quite incorporated it yet into the three areas that we’re responsible for — teaching, research and service,” Perry said. “But it really kind of overlaps in all those areas.”
Perry said he believes that blogging could be considered applied research.
But in an interview, University Provost Teresa Sullivan said that blogging lacks an important element, which generally elevates the credibility of a publication: peer review.
“Peer review is an important quality marker,” said Sullivan. “With electronic media now, anybody can publish anything.”
While the University doesn’t view blogs as a form of official research or publishing, Sullivan said she encourages professors to use them, even if they express controversial opinions or ideas.
“That’s what universities are about,” Sullivan said. “The university is the place where you’re free to put ideas out there, and we’re tolerant of other people’s ideas but it also means you’ve got to be ready for somebody to go after you and attack your ideas.”
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Blogs considerably raise the profile of University professors, which is good for the University. Through their archive of posts, professors advertise their expertise in a given field. Establishing that authority leads calls from the media — and the University’s name appearing in print.

A good, positive article, including quotes from some well-known academic bloggers. Except for the very first sentence:

The booming blogosphere is a world dominated by celebrity gossip, confessionals and radical opinions.

But we know that corporate journalists have to say something offensive whenever they mention blogs, as a loyalty test, lest they be expelled from their guild.

You can laugh now….

…but some people knew waaay back then that news will, one day, move from expensive paper to cheap internet:

From here

TechCrunch surfaced this look at a story that ran back in 1981 that covered
how internet news would someday be delivered. At least watch the last 30 seconds. The reporter remarks it would take more than 2 hours to deliver the digital text needed to read the “online newspaper.” She added the per minute (i think) charge was around $5 and comments about the difficulty the new approach would have when competing with the .20 cent daily.
What’s in store for us over the next 30 years?

Tear Down This Myth

Tear Down This Myth.jpgWill Bunch of Attytood recently published an interesting and important book – Tear Down This Myth: How the Reagan Legacy Has Distorted Our Politics and Haunts Our Future.
On his blog, Will provides an excerpt and commentary:

Twenty years gone – but Reagan still matters. About this time one year ago, unceasing Reagan idolatry hijacked the race for the White House. Sometimes it was voiced in the name of policies on immigration or toward Iran that were the exact opposite of what really happened a generation ago. The power of this political fantasy – expressed mainly, of course, on the GOP side but occasionally even spilling over to the Democrats – caused me to begin work on a book about the Ronald Reagan myth. The result – “Tear Down This Myth: How the Reagan Legacy Has Distorted Our Politics and Haunts Our Future” – is coming out now from Simon & Schuster’s Free Press.
———————————-
OK – but you may ask whether the Reagan myth matters as much now that George W. Bush is back at the ranch and President Obama in the White House. I would argue that it does. Increasingly, the GOP minority in Washington, including 41 senators with just enough votes to derail the administration’s proposals, is going to invoke the Reagan myth to continue to justify a tax system that harms the middle class and policies that ignore the scientific consensus on climate change. Look at the first major policy debate of the Obama presidency, over the proposed $825 billion economic stimulus. Democrats are under enormous political pressure to weight the plan toward tax cuts, and away from spending programs, which Republicans quickly branded as much pork – despite evidence that jobs programs stimulate the economy at twice the rate of tax reductions. “I remain concerned about wasteful spending that might be attached to the tax relief,” House GOP leader John Boehner said – and right-wing talk radio was a lot less restrained. Ironically, the spending sought by the Democrats seek to undo the crumbling of America’s infrastructure and the failure to create “green-collar” jobs that dates back to the Reagan era.
And here’s another reason the Reagan myth still matters, and that’s because there’s a pundit class inside the Beltway that cuts its teeth in the 1980s and remains firmly convinced that America is a “center-right” nation, despite massive evidence to the contrary. These pundits will urge Obama to enact an economic recovery package in the Gipper’s image, ignoring the long-term harmed caused by Reagan’s brand of “trickle-down economics.
Unless we don’t let them – and tear down this myth.

Graham Lawton Was Wrong

There.
How’s the taste of your own medicine?
Yup, there was an editorial meeting. Coturnix, coturnix, @coturnix, BoraZ, Bora Zivkovic and @borazivkovic were there. I was there, too, and I could have said something, but I decided to remain silent as the traffic of this blog, which – cha-chink – means more money, is more important than accuracy.
Very few readers will read your article. But everyone will see the cover.
Very few people will read this post to the end, especially the links on the bottom that really contain the meat of the argument. But everyone will see this post title in their feeds.
Graham, you know print is swiftly dying and that journalism is moving to the Web, don’t you? Do you understand that this means that in a year or two you will have to come here and play with the Big Boys? Do you understand that all the silly comments you plastered all over the blogs will be remembered? And if not remembered, easy to find – this blog has bigger Google juice than The New Scientist, you know?
Do you understand that in your future transition to online journalism you will have to abandon all the lies you were taught in J-school? That you will need to upgrade your journalistic ethics in order to match the higher ethics of the blogosphere?
Why are you trying to start your career on a wrong foot?
Graham, and someone needs to tell you now before it’s too late, that you don’t know shit about science. And that you’ll have a steep hill to climb in order to start trying to play on the level field with people who actually know their stuff?
You just curmudgeoned yourself.
Is that a new term for you?
Congratulations! Your name will now be forever associated with the likes of (yes, study all those links carefully!) Skube, Mulshine, Johnson, Cohen, Boxer, Keen, Siegel, Henry and several other laughingstock curmudgeons from the journalistic Jurassic Park?
Now, calm down, I was just joking, just like you were in all those comments everywhere. Heh, some light-hearted blogospheric banter. Ha-ha. Can’t be mad about that, can you?
Now sit back and learn by reading, very carefully, what people with actual expertise have written (including people with expertise in the comments) and learn from your mistake as not to make it again:
Darwin Was Wrong?
Why’s Graham so Glum: Lawton Critiqued
Was Darwin Wrong?
Darwin was wrong…ish
Explaining New Scientist cover
New Scientist take the hype road
Darwin: The Genius of evolution
The Trouble With Science Journalism
Speaking of media mangling…
New Scientist take the hype road
It’s such a fine line between stupid and clever
Of trees of life and straw men
Got it?

The Psychology of Cyberspace

The Psychology of Cyberspace is a course taught by John Suler in the Department of Psychology at the Science and Technology Center at Rider University. The website is a collection of a large number of thought-provoking essays on various aspects of human behavior online:

This hypertext book explores the psychological aspects of environments created by computers and online networks. It presents an evolving conceptual framework for understanding how people react to and behave within cyberspace: what I call “the psychology of cyberspace” – or simply “cyberpsychology.” Continually being revised and expanded, this hypertext book originally was created in January of 1996. See the article index which indicates the articles most recently added and revised.
In order to make these readings accessible to as many people as possible, I have written them in a style that is not overly abstract or technical. Important concepts in psychology and psychoanalytic theory appear throughout the book, but I try to present them in an “experience-near” rather than “experience-distant” way that I hope makes them useful in understanding everyday living in cyberspace. The emphasis is on practical concepts rather than purely academic ones. Other versions of these articles appear in various professional journals. These publications are indicated within the articles and in the article index.

The course/website also has a blog which, though not updated lately, contains some gems in the archives. Worth reading and bookmarking – all of it.

Hopebuilding and Storytelling

On the Hopebuilding’s Weblog, Rosemary wrote:

When I was a journalist, many years ago now, it never really occurred to me that we spent much more time on “bad news” than on “good news”. In fact, sometimes people caricatured the “good news” attempts as being Pollyanna-ish; they thought “good” news was not really news.
But these days, as I spend so much time on the web, I really appreciate the “good news” sites. It provides a healthy balance to the daily diet of so much “bad news” in the media – what my friend Jim Lord calls “deficit thinking”, and what he replaces with “appreciative thinking”.

And from that idea, Hopebuilding Wiki was born – a collection of stories from around the world describing how people overcome adversity, or got together and solved a problem:

Hopebuilding wiki was created to share stories of achievement by ordinary people who are doing extraordinary things to make their world a better place to live in, but whose stories are not as widely known as they should be.
You will meet people here who saw a problem as an opportunity to create something new or something better, whether it be a school principal finding a way to use spare land to grow crops for a school lunch program, and thus inspiring dozens of neighbouring schools to do the same thing; a community of slumdwellers setting out to provide water and sewer service to their area, using their own resources and skills; people in large cities creating jobs for, and bringing gifts to, the homeless; or a huge company like Wal-Mart realizing that putting canned fish on the shelves meant doing its best to ensure that the fishing industry was sustainable.
You will meet people who built peace for themselves, even while the rest of their country was in chaos, and people who sustained their communities even in the middle of conflict. You will find people who dreamed of eliminating or reducing the death toll from terrible illnesses, suffering people who reached out to each other to provide comfort and support when others would not, and people who wanted to give others the tools to manage their own health effectively even when no professionals were available. You will find inventive people whose creativity is offering us new solutions to live sustainably on our shared earth.
Hopebuilding includes stories from both the “developing” and “developed” worlds, as they are often called, because I believe that people living in fragile states and in inner cities and aboriginal communities in North America and Europe have a great deal in common, both in terms of challenges and in inspiring ideas and solutions based on their own capacities and resources. Many people living in fragile states think of North America and Europe as being incredibly wealthy, not as places with homeless people and public schools without learning resources. Similarly, many people in North America and Europe have a picture of fragile states as being places where nothing works, because that is what they see on the news, rather than places where people have used their own knowledge and capacity to develop creative solutions to the challenges they face – solutions that may well help people in “developed” states as well. Realizing that we share the same challenges means we can be inspired by each other’s solutions, capacities, and ideas – and for me, that is the essence of a peer-sharing approach to international development.
For me, these stories show why local knowledge, and local capacity, is such a vital foundation for development at every level. New technologies have shown us that our world is an inter-connected place, and our problems are shared. It is not a world in which some people have all the problems, and other people have all the solutions; in fact, some of the most creative ideas are coming from places or groups that were once seen as ‘under-developed’. Sharing our creative solutions widely means local peoples’ expertise and achievements in one country can inspire local people facing a similar problem in another country.
While I live these days in a small village in a relatively remote part of the world, it inspires me daily to be able to find and share such stories of other peoples’ achievement through the Internet. The people in these stories give me hope, and I salute their achievements. I hope you will, as well.

Check out the stories there….

Zbigniew Brzezinski to Scarborough: “Stunningly Superficial”


And what Joe says in response? He claims that he got his information from NYTimes and Washington Post, not realizing that those two publications are just as superficial as he is. Yes, Joe, throw those out and call Zbig if you want to get educated, not that he does not have his own agenda and his own perspective, but it’s a start, the first baby-steps from just not knowing anything yet saying it on TV with smug self-adoration….

Bloggers vs. Journalists Redux, part N

Some guy named Mulshine, who is apparently an ancient journalist (remember: generation is mindset, not age), penned one of those idiotic pieces for Wall Street Journal, willingly exposing his out-datedness and blindness to the world – read it yourself and chuckle: All I Wanted for Christmas Was a Newspaper:

This highlights the real flaw in the thinking of those who herald the era of citizen journalism. They assume newspapers are going out of business because we aren’t doing what we in fact do amazingly well, which is to quickly analyze and report on complex public issues. The real reason they’re under pressure is much more mundane. The Internet can carry ads more cheaply, particularly help-wanted and automotive ads.

Bwahahaha! Good old days, when we were the deciders of what you, the proles, deserved to know. And we did it right because we went to j-school!
Frank Wilson responds, by debunking, right out of the box, two of the claims that Mulshine made in his article (apparently out of his own ass):

I don’t think someone who uses the word prophesized in place of prophesied (perhaps he was thinking of proselytized) should be so quick to complain about pundint (which I, by the way, had never seen or heard of before now).
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Actually, the people in a given school district are likely to be very interested in and willing to sit through such meetings and read such reports very carefully, since they are interested parties, more interested, apparently, than a cub reporter trying to keep himself awake during the proceedings “by employing trance-inducing techniques.”

Also good stuff in the comments there:

My principal objection to Mr. Mulshine’s lamentation is that blogs have not killed newspapers. Newspapers have been committing slow suicide for years. The elimination of book coverage means that a large group of people – called readers – no longer find what they are looking for in newspapers.

…and…

There is indeed often nothing more boring than a public meeting, which is why bloggers can attend the public meeting, report interesting details, and fashion a long-form report that is far more compelling that the sad dessicated prose that often serves as newspaper journalism.
There was a recent Pew Reports statistic for this year: in 2008, for the first time, people turned to the Internet for news more than newspapers. Not only has it not occurred to some newspapers to hire bloggers to provide a fresher perspective for journalism, but they willfully make themselves obsolete by getting rid of articles after three weeks, not bothering to tag them with keywords or categories, not provide RSS feeds, and not permit comments. You will find all this on the blogosphere. In fact, I think it can be argued that blogs are doing a better job at tracking stories than newspapers at times because of these active technologies.

And Mark:

Sure, I’m biased as well, as is frankly anyone who picks up a pen to write (sadly a lost art) or taps out a missive on a keyboard; I spend a bit of time every day blogging about issues relevant to the world of residential real estate. While I don’t spend time on “junk blogs” (other than some pretty silly but nonetheless very entertaining fly fishing blogs) that perhaps Mr. Mulshine is referring to in his piece- on the contrary I’ve found that serious thinkers and authors writing blogs have had a lot more relevant information to share than Mr. Mulshine’s colleagues in the mainstream press, particularly in the mainstream newspaper press.

And Griff Wigley:

Paul Mulshine, opinion columnist for the Newark Star-Ledger, misses the point when he argues that citizens aren’t likely to voluntarily ‘cover,’ for example, city council meetings for their blogs in the same way that a reporter does for a newspaper.
Yes, it’s valuable to have Suzi Rook at the Northfield News, Dusty Budd at KYMN, and RepJ’s Bonnie Obremski sitting through public meetings and then reporting on them.
But it’s more valuable for their stories to be published in an eco-system of civic engagement where the media, public officials and citizens are all involved in the effort to inform so that better public outcomes can occur.

Official response from Herald de Paris:

The problem, however, is not that the Internet stole news from the broadsheets. First and foremost, dear Brutus (and here I am quoting another really good writer, of whom you have certainly heard), “The fault lies not in our stars, but in ourselves.” Sensationalized news, fictitious news, unconfirmed news .. Page Six – real newspapers did not go there. Ever. The death of the newspaper began the moment someone had the hair-brained idea to defy the public trust simply to increase circulation, because selling more papers meant higher advertising rates. Then, too, the newspaper has been dying a slow death for 30 or 40 years, and since this pre-dates the electronic format(s), this means CNN, and the proliferation of 24/7 cable news. The simple truth is, they could get the news to market faster and fresher than the broadsheets ever could. The problem, however, is that broadcast news doesn’t know what to do with itself on slow news days. This gave rise to ‘Breaking News’ stories about such vitally important items as what time Anna Nicole Smith’s baby had a bottle, and how much hair Brittney Spears shaved off. Blame OJ Simpson a little, too, for that riveting low-speed car chase on the LA freeway – complete with turn signals. The fatal blow, it would seem, might have been that newspaper executives took a cue from their school-aged grandchildren, and began to, “blog.” The B-word. *shudder*
The truth is, the electronic media is a wonderful tool for news, but only if you know what you are doing. At the Herald de Paris, we have what we call a virtual newsroom. Our writers and reporters provide us the latest news, sometimes written on a PDA or a mobile phone, and complete with photographs. We have a way to go in providing local media coverage, but we will get there. Since the print media printed yesterday’s news the night before yesterday, they can not touch the timeliness of the electronic media. But it does not stop at the Internet. The real brilliance of electronic media is in mobile technology – when the latest news, information, and features are all in your pocket – available for your reading at your will. To date, however the converse detriment to this new age is that there are economic barriers to electronic media that have yet to be overcome. As it stands, access to information is, and remains, a commodity. At the Herald de Paris, we think this is wrong, and so we are working on ways to overcome this. We don’t know if this is your so-called new model or not, but if you wish to call us geniuses, we’ll take it. You see, the newspaper industry at-large has been trying to mold the electronic information age in its image, when instead, they should have been learning how the technology could/can make what they do better. Geniuses or not, that’s what we are doing .. and so far, it is working brilliantly.

Internet Guru:

Acting as if NO Internet news is trustworthy or professional is just as illogical as assuming that all print media work is the most perfect model. The truth of the matter is a large part of the product that the Old Media is trying to sell us is junk. Most journalists fail at their job. There are a few, of course, that are great. But, this is an illustration of humanity itself, isn’t it? Some will be good, the rest will fail. It’s Jefferson’s “aristocracy among men” defined.
The Internet is already producing its stars just as print media has, and it will continue to evolve, getting better with each succeeding day. Additionally, there’s no reason to expect that professional journalists will forever go away. There is also no reason to blindly believe in some fantastic future of every citizen becoming his own journalist. Somehow a new business model will find its way to the net and professional journalism will continue unabated.

Susan Duclos:

Well here is the deal as I see it… Reynolds is right, if enough independent, lowly bloggers, with a good vocabulary, were strewn our across America and willing to attend local meetings and go through documents which now are usually all published online, then yes, old media can and will be replaced.
Sure, many times, we bloggers find the news, paste important paragraphs and give our opinions which if we were real “journalists” writers would calling “analysis” instead of opinion, and bring the news to people who come to our sites.
Other times bloggers have been known to get their hands on PDF documents, produce them, go through them and show the blog reading public the portions of the reports that the major media “journalists” deliberately do not mention in their all important “analysis”.
The reason I started blogging was simple and addresses this whole debate in my mind.
Bloggers do give their opinions or analysis of any given situation, agreed, but bloggers do something that the professional journalists do not….we provide links to the original sources to which we use to determine our opinions and analysis.
We give our readers a chance to read the original reports, data, PDF’s, court papers, whatever the case may be, then those readers can decide for themselves if they agree with our “analysis” or if they come to a different conclusion.
We don’t hide relevant facts to make the pieces match our preconceived ideas….we provide sources, we link.
Before I started blogging, I heard the news, read some online news articles, but found what I was getting was the writers opinion and when I looked for the original source to be able to form my own opinion, you know where I found the links to the original sources?
Bloggers. Blogs. Before I even knew exactly what a blog was.
So, to Mr. Mulshine, a quick note….. if journalists want to stay relevant, they need to stop thinking their opinion is the only opinion, they need to start providing links to the original sources and stop expecting people to take their word as the word of God.
Otherwise, those army of Davids, are definitely going to start reporting original pieces and they will be trusted more because they will provide something the old media, the mainstream media, refuse to….. the facts to go along with a “journalist’s” opinion.

Cranford Pundit:

A lot of newspapers are taking steps to make themselves even less relevant. Like the food section that canned it’s editor and now cuts and pastes recipes from cooking.com (my sister’s paper does that), or the editorial page that cuts and pastes items from the DailyKos (my brother’s area newspaper is guilty of that). If they are supplying even more content that we can get for free who will their customers be besides the elderly and computerphobic?

William Beutler:

All right, well this question about usage of “pundit” vs. “pundint” is easily testable. Let’s go to Google BlogSearch:
* For a search on the single word pundit we find 705,874 results. Sorted for relevance, here are the top three results as of Sunday afternooon:
1. Daily Kos: Your Abbreviated Pundit Round-up
2. Gateway Pundit: Israeli Gaza Strikes Called ‘Holocaust’ By Hamas …
3. Daily Pundit » Sweets for the Sour
Already we can see that Mulshine should have chosen a different word to illustrate the alleged ignorance of Internet political commentators. Thanks to those like Instapundit, the word has enjoyed a strong currency in recent years, perhaps more so than any word besides “meme”.
* For a search on pundint we find 1,320 results with the top three by relevance as follows:
1. Campaign Retrospective: Goofiest “Pun-dint” Remarks
2. Dec 18, Pundint or Pundit : Common Errors in English
3. MacBigot Cached Glances » Blog Archive » It’s PUNDIT, not PUNDINT …
Remember, these are not necessarily the savviest bloggers (let alone, strictly, bloggers), just those which (the increasingly unreliable) BlogSearch coughed up first.

Pwned!
evolution-nextstep:

People like Mr Mulshine — which I suspect are numerous among the 50-and-up age bracket of the profession — don’t really like5 that the stupid, misspelling people he’s forced to sell his product to have the right to spout their opinion as to its quality. Unless you’re a really tony club, you don’t get to choose your customers.
Your goal for the Internet is the same as it was in print — produce content that’s either superior to or different than anyone else. You can now do so at a much faster rate — and if you were to take control of your product as I’ve suggested above, you could indeed do it better than anyone else. Make sure that you are not in the opinion, the “framing”, or the “shaping of opinion” business, for you now have tons of competition on the Internet and you’ll get6 creamed. If you, as an individual journalist, want to be in those businesses, fine. Separate yourself from journalism. I suggest above that journalism should separate itself from you.7 It is much harder to make the current model work on the Internet than I think it would be for the model I have described. A few companies are trying it; but I think someday soon the novelty will wear off if it hasn’t already.
A journalistic outfit that can produce the kind of content that I’ve described in this post — the hard news — reliably, according to a documented standard, by tightly-knit, trained, and (perhaps) certified professionals, and deliver that content and reliability on the Internet can cream the Internet competition. In addition, I think it can turn a profit for itself and its employees. There is little doubt in my mind of that. I’m not a sentimental person, though; I won’t cry at all if the current journalism industry’s business model collapses as seems likely. They will learn someday.

JD Johannes:

The subject of the quote from Glenn’s book, Army of Davids , was about how someone who actually understood the law and legislative process would make a better State House reporter than a recent college graduate with a journalism degree. In other words, an expert in law and legislation should be covering the State House. I even explained to Glenn how the business model would work–old fashioned syndication.
———————
The hear-say quote, and this particular usage by Mr. Mulshine, is one of the reasons why blogs have succeeded–the core news consumer does not like hear-say quotes and does not want bland executive summaries for the “casual reader.” The core news consumer wants hard news without bias, and expert opinion. Mr. Mulshine’s use of a misleading hear-say quote explains well the demise of his beloved newspaper.

Fausta Wertz defends the article, but when creamed in the comments pretends that her praise is actually criticism, just in polite language. Yeah, right. Her article begins with:

My friend and fellow NJ Voices blogger Paul Mulshine has an excellent article at the Wall Street Journal…

Karen De Coster:

So many articles like this, so little time. Yes, here’s another one of these articles from the parade of old men who can’t understand why young people (and a lot of older folks) don’t want to read their irrelevant rags any longer. “Real journalist” Paul Mulshine bemoans the loss of the censured, state-fed, boorish organs called newspapers. Another horse breeder making a plea against the automobile. His rant in the Wall Street Journal is bitter, and he seems especially jealous of the success of Instapundit (Glenn Reynolds). The days of censured news organs are disappearing, so get over it, Mulshine.
Mulshine points to the fact that only the print newspapers can produce “real journalists.” This kind of vindictive arrogance only gets these dinosaurs the opposite of what they want. They hate their customers for evolving with the times and desiring a different product. So guess what? Their (former) customers are telling them to stick it. What he really means by “real” journalist is one who is employed by an approved voice in the mainstream media. Note his reference to “alternative” media – the quotation marks convey his contempt for people who haven’t had to spend 40 years moving their way up from floor sweeper and runner to “real” journalist because the glory of the digital age creates open access and possibilities for all, and at little or no monetary cost.
Mulshine doesn’t believe that people who get their news on the Internet can appropriately distinguish between good and bad journalism. Apparently, there exists a distinct definition of real journalism that is escaping me. He wants us to trust that which comes from the printed press, because surely, that must be “real.” A newspaper is a source you can trust.

Planet Moron:

The problem runs deeper than that, but it is not that all newspapers are terrible or that all bloggers are better. It’s that most newspapers are, by definition, average, as are most professional newspaper reporters and is why so many alleged news reports read like warmed-over press releases or why so much commentary is little more than half-informed political proselytizing. When we covered the TARP debate, we at least actually read the original 130-page document, the first 70 pages of which we were even sober. Judging by the professional news coverage that put us in a distinct minority (at least on the reading part).
The problem for newspapers is that people simply have more choices. There are excellent news reporters out there, but there are also excellent bloggers. Not here, but other places. And if you want to hold and attract readers, you’ll have to do more than talking about how you do “amazingly well,” and start actually doing amazingly well. It’s hard work, but if bloggers are willing to do it for a few Google AdSense pennies, professional newspaper reporters shouldn’t mind doing it for their day job.

BGrey:

I would suggest that rather than spending their time arguing the merits of their craft, “professional journalists” should embrace the digital migration that is well under way. And how might they do this? They should publish as much of their “high quality” journalism as they can through as many digital distribution outlets as they can so they get their fair share of those online car and job ads!

Now, the funniest part of all – Paul Mulshine responds! Oh my, oh my! Check out how nice and welcoming he is to his readers! How many comments he added a note to, calling the commenter a “moron”?

I’ve received so many comments from people who failed to read the Moron Perspective Warning that I am now starting this entry with it. Please read it and follow the simple instructions.

Ha? Giving instructions to commenters as to what to say? Who’s moronic now?
Robert Ivan has a great response:

To answer Mr. Mulshine’s question; What is the New Model for generating revenue? The answer for general interest newspapers and news sites is that there is none. NONE. That’s no mystery.
I heard Jay Rosen once say; “What would have been the correct business model for Tower Records when the Internet arrived? The correct answer would have been NONE”.

Correct. A hundred-and-change years ago you got paid to drive a pair of horses and a cart around. Now you pay if you want to do it – big money as this sport is expensive. Yes, there will be aficionados who will print their own personal newspapers just for fun, as a hobby. And there are still people who collect and know how to use slide-rules.
Newspapers will die. News-gathering and news-reporting will not. But it will not be done by people with J-school degrees. It will be done by people with expertise in the topic they report on, with fire in the belly to go out and do it, by people who perceive a need as they see a vacuum, a lack of coverage. That’s what motivates bloggers as well.
But Robert Ivan is onto something else, as well:

Will his insular remarks further hasten the decline of the newspaper industry? For the people that have not already been convinced, I feel they might. Journalism and Communications students are encouraged to create and explore blogs as viable forms of communication and reporting. They are encouraged to explore any new form of communication and business model. Mulshine craps on this exploration. Now what? we’re all wrong? None of us can spell pundit? What? Mulshine’s article does not insult an entire generation and a community 125 million strong, it reaffirms their notion that newspaper are clueless and irrelevant. What the heck was he thinking?

Yes, every time one of the journalistic dinosaurs (sorry, I love dinosaurs, but that word has become a synonym for large, lumbering lizards who are too dumb and too slow to adapt to avoid extinction) writes one of these articles about “dirty, ignorant bloggers”, that article is itself a stark example of exactly what is wrong with journalism and why people are dropping their newspaper subscriptions in droves. It is an unsupported, blithering lie which most of the audience knows is a lie. Way to go to lose the last crumbles of authority….
Yes, it is important to make a distinction between beat reporters (I always think they got that name because the editor beat them into going out into the rain to report), op-ed writers (aka pundits aka bloviators) and expert journalists (people who work on a single story for a long, long time, doing in-depth research and usually having their own expertise in the topic).
The thing is – bloggers can and do all three. Many bloggers are better thinkers and better writers than David Brooks, so David Brooks will need to get smarter and better if he’s to survive. Many bloggers are also bad, but most professional journalists are just as bad PLUS they have bad editors to answer to.
Many bloggers have expertise in the topic they write about. Look at my SciBlings – when one of them blogs about a science topic, that is written by a scientist who actually knows what he/she is writing about, unlike some poor journo who was told by the editor to do it and do it fast. Sure, some people mouth off idiocies about topics they know nothing about, but those bloggers will never be respected as voices of authority on that topic anyway. Getting a salary from a media organization does not guarantee that the journalist is any less idiotic and any more respected by the readers.
And yes, bloggers are doing beat reporting. I’ve been watching the hyperlocal blogging here in Orange County, Carrboro, Chapel Hill, Durham, etc. for several years now and there are lots of bloggers who go to town hall meetings and report, in great detail and with great expertise, about those meetings or other local events. Mulshine just never bothered to familiarize himself with the topic he was supposed to write about…
And then, there are accidental reporters. All of the people who write and read blogs, are on twitter, facebook or friendfeed, mostly posting techie or pop-culture stuff, or about food or knitting, nonetheless are getting a training in new journalism, however subconsciously – taking in, by osmosis, the ethics, the forms and the etiquette of online journalism. And when the opportunity arises, they know how to rise to the challenge. Examples?
All the folks who just happened to be in Mumbai at the moment of the attack? They are not journalists and do not think of themselves as journalists. Most probably do not want to be journalists. Yet, at that moment, they were witnessing something important, they got on Twitter and did the journalistic job marvelously. It is through them that we learned, faster and better than from MSM, what happened there. They were journalists for a week. They are probably back to “what I had for breakfast” tweets, and that’s fine. A lot of citizen journalism will not and need not be full-time.
Remember the Denver airport accident last week? Well, a guy twittered from that airplane. The world learned from him that it happened, some 18 minutes before any news organization did. Then, after just having survived his second airplane crash, his couple of tweets were mostly about his need for a strong drink and who could blame him. But then, once he recharged his batteries, had a stiff drink, and perhaps a short nap, he went back on twitter and gave a series of reports that no professional journalist could match, because he was actually there, and he has no editor to dictate what is and what isn’t appropriate.
Remember when the bridge fell down in Minnesota about a year or so ago? Where did we get the first news? From a blogger who lives in the first house next to the bridge. Is he a journalist? No, but for a couple of weeks he was – he went down and helped with recovery, interviewed people, took pictures, and posted all of that on his blog. And none of the professional journalists – print, photo, radio, TV – that showed up on the scene later could match him. Not just because he was the first. But also because he knew the geography better than they did. He got people to tell him stories they would never trust a journalist with, because he was a neighbor. His blog was a place to go for a week or two, because no journalist on the scene could come close to the quality of his reporting. Did he earn any money on this? Probably not (though some readers probably hit his PayPal button at the time). And then he went back to his normal life and his normal blogging topics.
Being online all the time, consuming and producing content, is sufficient training for quality journalism. We all constantly train each other, by providing examples, and by criticizing each other all the time. Add to this the expertise in the topic that a generalist journalist will not have, and read why Jay Rosen wrote that If Bloggers Had No Ethics Blogging Would Have Failed, But it Didn’t. So Let’s Get a Clue, and you will realize that graduation from J-school is not needed for quality journalism, and may even be a hindrance as the students there learn the ropes of doing the False Equivalence, Fair&Balanced, He-Said-She-Said journalism (which they brazenly defend in public – no shame!) which sucks and that’s why the readers are leaving the professional media and instead are trusting bloggers who have proven themselves with their honesty and expertise.
Who will provide the news? Some journalists will become bloggers. Some bloggers will become journalists – some full-time, others when the opportunity arises. All will be equal and will be judged by the quality of their work, not by degrees they got or companies they work for. Some old-style journalists will swim, some will sink when finally and suddenly encountering such stiff competition, and forced to abandon their schooling in order to do journalism right, for the first time in their lives. With or without them, the news will get reported anyway.
Update: Blogging Advice for the Frustrated Journalist :

I took a Mass Communications class at Moorhead State University in 1982. The professor, Marv Bossart, was a television anchor. One day he was discussing the future of journalism, and talked about how one day people would be reading the newspapers through their computers. This was back when graphics were rudimentary and computer terminals produced green screen with green text characters only. I couldn’t imagine how this would be appealing, but I was excited at the prospect. Long before Compuserve, AOL and Prodigy, Marv Bossart had seen a future in which instant publishing would be ubiquitous. Now, it seems as though print newspapers are going the way of blacksmiths.

Correct – do not conflate news with newspapers. Newspapers are news on paper. That model is dying. There are better ways to get news now that do not cost as much as paper, ink, presses, trucks and delivery men.
Update – a couple of interesting responses:
Tom Levenson:

All of this is prelude to the argument I want to take some time to craft, which is to push back- not all the way, but partly — on the notion that the blogosphere in and of itself is sufficient to take on the role traditional journalism has (at least in myth) played in the past. The reason why efforts like those undertaken in Minnesota and across the way from my office matter is that in a finite day the ubiquitous and self-correcting nature of what might be called the informal journalism of the internet exists synoptically — but people don’t. They — I, we — have finite time to perform the editorial work of chasing down contending versions of reality until some resolution sets in. We have only so much time to put together the range of stories we might find interesting or important in each day.
Someone will take care of all that, whether it be some part of the civic journalism movement, or mutating mass media. If we don’t create and use the tools that make the totality of our efforts accessible, then it seems to me likely that people like Rupert Murdoch et al. — who aren’t dumb, not matter what other qualities may attach themselves to them — will create the filters, packaging, production values and aggregation work that will capture much more of a share of audience than they should.

Dan Conover:

Most newspapers AVOID serious “watchdogging” on a regular basis and limit themselves to re-writing, publicizing, and (in the best cases) critically examining the substantive work of volunteer or non-profit watchdog groups.
Why do these groups give their work to newspapers and TV stations? Until recently, it was because those were the communications channels available to them. Why do they do it now? 1. Because those channels are still the biggest, and 2. Habit.
What percentage of your local news media bandwidth is actually devoted to ORIGINAL watchdogging by local journalists? I don’t have figures, but after 20 years in the business I’m here to report that the percentage is tiny. Watchdogging is expensive, it angers people with power and influence, it pisses off huge swaths of the audience you’re trying to serve, and effective watchdogging requires sustained study and careful analysis.
So even when a newspaper takes a couple of reporters and applies them to an “investigative” piece for months, their finished product typically relies on data sets that were developed over years by non-journalists watchdogging one particular institution, agency or industry. In most cases these studies were paid for not by “business models,” but by donors.
Which brings us to a fairly obvious conclusion:
Now that the real watchdogs have access to worldwide networked media and can go directly to the audience, why should they even bother going through the traditional news media filters?

Why can’t journalists call it as it is?

Researchers Hope Obama Team Will Reinvigorate Role of Science Adviser:

In recent years, though, some critics have charged that the science adviser’s influence has reached another low under President George W. Bush….

“Some critics”? Like, the entire scientific community? The entire science blogosphere? All the science journalists? Because of the obvious fact that the Bush Presidency is the pinnacle of the Republican disdain for reality, empiricism and science. Governing from the gut instead of from the brain. Governing by listening to direct messages from the Lord.
Because the conservative worldview is this:

The aide said that guys like me were “in what we call the reality-based community,” which he defined as people who “believe that solutions emerge from your judicious study of discernible reality.” … “That’s not the way the world really works anymore,” he continued. “We’re an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And while you’re studying that reality–judiciously, as you will–we’ll act again, creating other new realities, which you can study too, and that’s how things will sort out. We’re history’s actors…and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do.”

There, fixed it for you…

The Shock Value of Science Blogs

There was a good reason why the form and format, as well as the rhetoric of the scientific paper were instituted the way they were back in the early days of scientific journals. Science was trying to come on its own and to differentiate itself from philosophy, theology and lay literature about nature. It was essential to develop a style of writing that is impersonal, precise, sharply separating data from speculations, and that lends itself to replication of experiments.
The form and format of a scientific paper has evolved towards a very precise and very universal state that makes scientist-to-scientist communication flawless. And that is how it should be, and at least some elements of style and form (if not format) will remain once the scientific paper breaks down spatially and temporally and becomes a dynamic ongoing communication – clarity and precision will always be important.
But that is strictly technical communication between scientists in the same research field. How about communication between scientists in far-away fields, between scientists and lay audience, or among the educated lay-people? How about communication between scientific colleagues outside of peer-reviewed papers? This is where we are seeing the biggest changes right now and not everyone’s happy. And the debate is reminiscent of the debate in mainstream journalism.
Until pretty recently, the informal communication between scientists was limited to Letters To The Editor of scientific journals, conferences and invited seminars. In all three of those venues, the formal rhetoric of science remained. Fine, but….
Part of training in the academia is training in rhetoric. As you go up the ladder of academic science, you are evaluated not just by the quality of your research (or teaching, in some places), but also in how well you mastered the formalized kabuki dance of the use of Scientese language. The mastery of Scientese makes one part of the Inside club. It makes one identifiable as the Member of this club. The Barbarians at the Gate are recognizable by their lack of such mastery – or by refusal to use it. And it is essential for the Inside Club to make sure that the Barbarians remain at the Gate and are never allowed inside.
Academic science is a very hierarchical structure in which one climbs up the ladder by following some very exact steps. Yes, you can come into it from the outside, class-wise, but you have to start from the bottom and follow those steps “to the T” if you are to succeed. But those formal steps were designed by Victorian gentlemen scientists, thus following those steps turns one into a present-time Victorian gentleman scientist. But not everyone can or wants to do this, yet some people who refuse are just as good as scientists as the folks inside the club. If you refuse to dance the kabuki, you will be forever kept outside the Gate.
The importance of mastery of kabuki in one’s rise through the hierarchy also means that some people get to the top due to their skills at glad-handling the superiors and putting down the competitors with formalized language, not the quality of their research or creativity of their thought. Those who rose to the top due to being good at playing the game know, deep inside, they do not deserve that high position on merit alone. And they will be the loudest defenders of the system as it has historically been – they know if the changes happen, and people get re-evaluated for merit again, they will be the first to fall. This is the case in every area (mainstream journalism, business, politics, etc.), not just academic science.
Insistence on using the formalized kabuki dance in science communication is the way to keep the power relations intact. Saying “don’t be angry” is the code for “use the rhetoric at which I excel so I can destroy you more easily and protect my own spot in the hierarchy”. It is an invitation to the formal turf, where those on the inside have power over those who cannot or will not use the kabuki dance. This has always been the way to keep women, minorities and people from developing countries outside the club, waiting outside the Gate. If, for reasons of your gender, race, nationality or class you are uncomfortable doing the kabuki dance, every time you enter the kabuki contest you will lose and the insider will win. The same applies outside science, e.g., to mainstream journalism and politics.
This is why some people in the academic community rant loudly against science bloggers. If they cannot control the rhetoric, they fear, often rightly, that they will lose. Outside their own turf, they feel vulnerable. And that is a Good Thing.
The debates about “proper” language exist on science blogs themselves. See this and this for recent examples (the very best discussion was on this post which is now mysteriously missing). In response I wrote:

We here at Sb are often accused of being cliquish and insular. But if you look at our 70+ blogs and dig through the archives, you will see that we rarely comment on each other’s blogs – most (99%?) of the comments come from outside readers. Also, most of our links point to outside of Sb. On the other hand, NN [Nature Network] is specifically designed to be a community (not a platform for independent players) and almost all of the comments there are from each other. Thus, it is easy for them to maintain a high level of politeness there (this is not a bad thing – this is how they designed it on purpose). It is much harder to harness the hordes of pharyngulites that spill over to all of our blogs – and I do not mind them at all, I think they make the debate spirited and in a way more honest by bypassing superficial niceness and going straight to the point. This may also have something to do with NN bloggers mainly being in the academia, while a large proportion of SciBlings are ex-academia, journalists, artists, etc. with a different rhetoric. The rhetoric of academia is a very formalized kabuki dance, while the rhetoric of the blogosphere has shed all formalities and is much more reminiscent to the regular everyday oral conversation.

Remember the Roosevelts on Toilets saga? The biggest point of contention was the suggestion by the authors of the paper to the bloggers to move the discussion away from blogs to a more formal arena of letters to the editor. We, the bloggers, fiercely resisted this, for the reasons I spelled above – in the letters to the editor, the Insiders have power over the Outsiders because it is their turf. No, if we want to have a non-kabuki, honest discussion, we will have it out here on the blogs, using our rhetoric, because the honest language of the modern Web places everyone on the even ground – it does not matter who you are, what degrees you have, or how well you’ve learned to dance the kabuki: it is what you say, the substance, that counts. This is why being pseudonymous online works, while academia requires full names and degrees. The Web evaluates you directly, by what you write. The academia uses “tags” – your name and degree – to evaluate you. The academia is in the business of issuing credentials, the stand-ins for quality. The credentials are rough approximations of quality – more often then not they work fine, but they are not 100% foolproof. And if one is insecure about one’s own quality, one would insist on using credentials instead of quality. The use of “proper” rhetoric is, as I said above, a good quick-and-dirty way to recognize credentials.
During the Roosevelt saga, I wrote this post very, very carefully, with a specific purpose in mind. First, I went to great effort to explain the science at length and as simply, clearly and conclusively as possible. This performed several functions for me: first, to establish my own credentials, second, to make my readers understand the science and thus be on “my side” in the comments, and third, to make sure I was as complete about science as possible so as to not have to talk about science at all in the comments. Apart from science, I also included several snarky comments about the authors which served as bait – I wanted them to come and post comments. And they bit. Go read the comment thread there to see what was happening. The author insisted on discussing science. I insisted on refusing to talk about science (to him, I did respond a little bit to some other commenters) and to talk about rhetoric instead.
But first, in a comment I posted even before the authors showed up, in order to set the stage for what I wanted, I wrote this:

In an earlier post, burried deep inside, is this thought of mine:

The division of scientists into two camps as to understanding of the Web is obvious in the commentary on PLoS ONE articles (which is my job to monitor closely). Some scientists, usually themselves bloggers, treat the commentary space as a virtual conference – a place where real-time oral communication is written down for the sake of historical record. Their comments are short, blunt and to the point. Others write long treatises with lists of references. Even if their conclusions are negative, they are very polite about it (and very sensitive when on the receiving end of criticism). The former regard the latter as dishonest and thin-skinned. The latter see the former as rude and untrustworthy (just like in journalism). In the future, the two styles will fuse – the conversation will speed up and the comments will get shorter, but will still retain the sense of mutual respect (i.e., unlike on political blogs, nobody will be called an ‘idiot’ routinely). It is important to educate the users that the commentary space on TOPAZ-based journals is not a place for op-eds, neither it is a blog, but a record of conversations that are likely to be happening in the hallways at conferences, at lab meetings and journal clubs, preserved for posterity for the edification of students, scientists and historians of the future.

What happened on Dr.Isis’ blog is very similar – a clash of two cultures. I think that the picture of the Teddy Bear on the potty was a clever and funny shorthand for your point. If you did it about something I published, I’d laugh my ass off. But I can see how the uptight strain of the scientists would balk at it. It is them, though, who need to get up to speed on the changed rhetoric of science. The straight-laced, uber-formal way of writing in science is on its way out.
The rhetoric, even after it completely modernizes, will still have four concentric circles: the paper itself will always be more formal, especially the Materials/Methods and Results sections due to the need for precision; the letters to the editor will remain pretty formal, but not as formal as they are now; the comments on the paper itself will be still less formal but still polite; the commentary on the trackbacked blogs will be freewheeling, funny and to-the-point, just like yours was, not mealy-mouthing with politeness on the surface and destructive hatred underneath, but honest and straightforward. So, if it is crap, what better way to say it than with a picture of a Teddy Bear on a potty – much more lighthearted and polite than saying it politely, and less devastating for the paper’s authors as it takes their mistake lightly instead of trying to destroy their reputation forever.
The point that both Dr.Isis and I made is that the paper is neat, experimental method sound, data are good, but the interpretation is crap. Now, having a couple of crappy paragraphs in an otherwise good paper is not the end of the world. A paper is not some kind of granite monument with The Truth writ in stone. It is becoming a living document (with comments on the paper and tracbacked blogs), and it has always been a part of a greater living document – the complete literature of a field. That is how science works.
It is hard to know which paper will persist and which one will perish in the future, what sentence will turn out to be a gem of prophetic wisdom, and which one is crap. People publish a lot of stuff, some better than other.
Making a mistake in one paper is not the end of one’s career. But many people perceive criticism as if they are just about to be sent out to join a leper colony. This is, in part, due to the formal rhetoric of science: outwardly polite, but underneath it is an attempt to destroy the person. In comparison, a light-hearted joke with a Teddy Bear acknowledges the failability of humans, allows for everyone to make a mistake and move on (we all shit, don’t we?). It is actually much more normal, and much less dangerous for one’s career to receive such a funny form of criticism than a formal-looking destruction of all our work and our personna.

In the next comment I did the one and only hat-tip to science, then moved onto the territory I wanted – rhetoric (many comments, so go and read them all now). As a result, Dr. Janszky grokked it – and we’ll probably see more of him in the blogosphere in the future. The reason he grokked it is because he is confident in his own qualities – he can change the rhetoric and tone and still not lose the debate because he knows what he’s talking about. Those who know they do not have the quality, would just have ranted harder and harder, complaining about the tone. Dr. Janszky adopted the bloggy tone in the comments right then and there. Which was a victory for everybody.
The informal rhetoric of blogs is a form of subversion – breaking the Gate and letting the Barbarians in (while not allowing quacks and Creationist to hitch a ride inside as well – which is why so many science bloggers focus on those potential free-riders and parasites). What we are doing is leveling the playing field, pointing out the inherent dishonesty of the formalized rhetoric, and calling a space a spade. This is a way to make sure that smart, thoughtful people get heard even if they did not have a traditional career trajectory, or refuse to play the Inside club games. If some of the insiders fall down in the process, that’s a good thing – they probably did not deserve to be up in the first place.
Different bloggers do this in different ways. We can use a brilliant, but snarky use of English (PZ Myers), or texting/LOLCat snark (Abbie), or awe and reverence for the great scientists of old (Mo), or sexual innuendo (SciCurious), or shoes (Dr.Isis), or a light-hearted sense of humor (Ed or Darren), or excessive use of profanity (PhysioProf). What we all do is write in unusual, informal ways. We want to shock. We feel there are many people out there who need a jolt, an injection of reality. We do it by using informal language. And this can be very powerful – just see how the dinosaurs squirm when they read some of our posts! But that’s the point. We are testing them: if, like Dr. Janszky, you “get it”, this means that you have the balls, which means you are confident about your own qualities independent from your credentials. If you keep ranting about “dirty, angry bloggers”….what are you so insecure about? Why are you so afraid of being shown a fraud if you are not? Or, are you?
Another point about blogs, which I alluded above already, is the time-frame. This is a very important point that is often forgotten in the scientists vs. bloggers “let’s be polite” debates. In the formal arenas (Letters, conferences, etc.), where formal language is used, the game some people play is to use an outwardly seemingly polite language to write or say something that is designed to destroy a career. Often in multiple places over a stretch of time. On blogs, when we snarkily attack you, our purpose is to teach a lesson (more to our readers than the scientists in question who may not even know the blog post was written). In other words, it is a one-time thing that is designed to correct a single error, not an attempt at destroying a career.
For good recent examples of the way scientists use the formal venues as well as formal language to destroy each other, see this and this (I have seen more on PLoS ONE, but don’t want to draw your attention to those right now, for professional reasons – keeping my job).
I post 8.2 posts per day on this blog, on a large variety of topics. Do you really think I have the time, energy and interest to study in great detail the life-time achievements of everyone who did something wrong on the Internet? Of course not. I see an article that says something stupid and I shoot a post that shows how stupid it is, so the readers, especially if the deconstruction of stupidity requires some expertise I may have and most people don’t, can see why that particular argument is wrong. Then I move on to the next post on some completely different topic. I have forgotten about your existence in about a nanosecond after publishing that post. I have no interest in destroying your career, but I understand that you are touchy – the life in academia, with its poisonous kabuki game, has trained you to defend yourself against every single little criticism because, underneath the veneer of civility is the career-damaging attack by someone powerful who is hell-bent on destroying you. We don’t do that on blogs. We don’t care enough to do that (unless you are a dangerous peddler of pseudoscience or medical quackery). We want to educate the lay audience and have fun doing it. I have no idea if everything else you have written before and after is brilliant and I don’t care – I think that this one stupid paragraph you wrote is good blogging material, amusing, edifying and useful to use to educate the lay audience. You are NOT the target personally. Your stupid argument is. And I don’t care if that was your one-off singular mistake in life, or an unusually bad moment for you. So, don’t take it personally. This is not academia. We are, actually, honest here on the intertubes, and you need to learn to trust us.
The attempts at character assassinations within academia, by using the formalized kabuki language by the powerful and forcing the powerless to adopt the same and thus be brought to slaughter, do not happen only in print. They also happen in person. Read this and this for a recent example of a senior researcher trying to publicly destroy a younger, female colleague at a meeting. And he was wrong. But he was powerful and intimidating. I wish the young woman responded by going outside of formal kabuki dance, shocking the audience in one way or another, giving all the present colleagues a jolt, making them listen and perhaps notice what is happening. Or, if she was shy, I wish some senior male colleague did the same for her and put the old geezer in his place. I wrote a comment:

“Tone it down” and “Why are you so angry?” are typical sleazy tactics used by a person in power over a person not in power. It was used against people of other races, against women, against gays, against atheists – this is the way to make their greivances silent and perpetuate the status quo, the power structure in which they are on the top of the pecking order. The entire formal, convoluted, Victorian-proper discourse one is supposed to use in science is geared towards protecting the current power structure and the system that perpetuates it. Keeping the dissenters down and out. Bur sometimes, anger, or snark, or direct insult, are the jolt that the system needs and it will have to come from the people outside the power structure, and it would have to occur often and intensely until they start paying attention.

And then, there is the area in between scientists and lay audience. The job of translating Scientese into English (or whatever is the local language) has traditionally been done by professional science journalists. Unfortunately, most science journalists (hats off to the rare and excellent exceptions) are absolutely awful about it. They have learned the journalistic tools, but have no background in science. They think they are educated, but they only really know how to use the language to appear they are educated. Fortunately for everyone, the Web is allowing scientists to speak directly to the public, bypassing, marginalizing and pushing into extinction the entire class of science “journalists” because, after all, most scientists are excellent communicators. And those who are, more and more are starting to use blogs as a platform for such communication.
The problem is, the professional science journalists also love to put down the blogs and use the paternalistic “tone it down” argument. But, unlike the political journalists who are incapable of seeing the obvious (stuck too far inside Cheney’s rectum to see what we all could see?), the science journalists have the added problem of not having the expertise for their job in the first place. In politics, everyone with the brain, not just journalists, could see that excuses for going to Iraq were lame. But in science journalism, there exist out there people with real expertise – the scientists themselves – who now have the tools and means to bypass you and make you obsolete because you cannot add any value any more.
To the list that includes MSM “journalists” aka curmudgeouns like Richard Cohen, Sarah Boxer, Andrew Keen, Lee Siegel, Michael Skube, Neil Henry and many others, we can now add curmudgeounly science journalists George Johnson and John Horgan as well – just listen to this!!!!! Yes go an listen before you come back. If you can stand it. But if I suffered through it, you can, too. I am a pretty calm kind of guy, but listening to that “dialogue” filled me with rage – I felt insulted, my intelligence insulted, and my friends insulted. Frankly, I’ve heard smarter science-related conversations from the drunks in rural Serbian bars.
I’ve been in this business (both science and science communication) for a long time, but I have never heard of George Johnson until today. From what I saw in that clip, I have not missed anything. Where does his smugness come from then? As for John Horgan, I’ve heard of him – he earned his infamy when he published – and was instantly skewered and laughed at by anyone with brains – his book “The End of Science”, arguably one of the worst and most misguided books about science (outside of Creationist screeds) ever. Where is his humbleness after such a disaster? Why is he not hiding in the closet, but instead shows up in public and appears – smug. Some people just have no self-awareness how stupid they appear when they behave as if they have authority yet they don’t and it’s obvious. What is it about professional journalists that makes them have illusions they are educated? “No, I am not a scholar but I play one on TV” turns into “Since I can transcribe and read smart stuff I must be really smart myself”.
Luckily, bloggers have no qualms about defending themselves – please read this gorgeous smack-down by Abbie, this older post by Ed in which he explains exactly what he meant, and perhaps this old post of mine which also, in a circuitous way, predicts the extinction of science journalistic dinosaurs.
But perhaps I shouldn’t be that nasty to Johnson and Horgan? After all, my blogging schtick is niceness. This makes it very easy for me to destroy someone – on those rare occasions when someone like me, renowned for endless patience, flies off the handle, people sit up and pay attention. If I use profanity to describe someone, that one probably richly deserves it. I know I have to use this power with prudence. If I attack someone full-blast, people will tend to believe me, as I rarely do that kind of stuff. And if you subsequently Google that name, my blogpost about him/her is likely to be the #1 hit on the search, or in the top ten.
Perhaps Johnson and Horgan are actually nice and smart guys. They may be nice to their wives and kids. Perhaps they wrote, 30 years ago, something really smart. But I have no interest in digging around for that. I want to finish this post and move on. And after watching this movie, I really have no motivation to search for anything else by these two guys as it appears to be a waste of my time. It does not appear to me like a bad-day, one-off mistake that everyone sometimes makes. It is 30 minutes of amazing ignorance and arrogance at display – probably sufficient material to make me doubt I’d ever find anything smart penned by them in the past, so why should I bother with them at all? I can probably evaluate their qualifications quite accurately from these 30 minutes and safely conclude they equal zero. Their “angry bloggers” shtick was the first give-away they know deep inside they are irrelevant and on their way out. Their subsequent chat about science was amateurish at best, no matter how smug their facial expressions at the time.
Perhaps if we remove those middle-men and have scientists and the public start talking to each other directly, then we will have the two groups start talking to each other openly, honestly and in an informal language that is non-threatening (and understood as such) by all. The two sides can engage and learn from each other. The people who write ignorant, over-hyping articles, the kinds we bloggers love to debunk (by being able to compare to the actual papers because we have the background) are just making the entire business of science communication muddled and wrong. Please step aside.
Update: Brian, Greg, Ed, Dr.Isis, Mike Brotherton, Hank and Larry chime in on this discussion as well. More: Alex, Chris Mooney, Mike, Chad, Eric Wolff, Stephanie and Tom Levenson, Sabine and Tom again.

More on Pulitzers for online reporting

Remember this?
Now Simon Ovens interviewed several key players in this game – Pulitzers Open to Online-Only Entrants — But Who Qualifies? It’s longish, but worth your attention:

He did, however, confirm that a blog could hypothetically qualify. “If one or two people call their website a text-based newspaper, would it be eligible?” he said. “Blogs tend to fall into three categories. There are news reporting blogs, there are commentary blogs, and there’s a hybrid version of the two. If they’re text-based and meet our criteria, then they probably could compete. But it would be up to them to satisfy the criteria.”

Big News from Lawrence Lessig

“In the summer, I will begin an appointment at the Harvard Law School, while directing the Safra Center.”

More details here.

Hotspots, a new PBS movie

Starting this month, a new PBS documentary-three years in the making-will change the way Americans see life on Earth. Scientists the world over now agree that Earth is experiencing runaway mass extinction of life across virtually all ecosystems.
The bottom line? Life on Earth is dying off, fast. The good news? People everywhere are waking up and doing something about it.
Far from being just another nature film with awe-inspiring aerials (although it sports some), HOTSPOTS takes American television audiences to the front lines of some of the most far-flung places on Earth. Viewers are given a first-hand look at a global movement of local initiatives to stop Earth’s 6th mass extinction dead in its tracks and bring our biosphere back from the brink an ecological bankruptcy that would know no bailout.
Dr. Tobias, the film’s producer and director, nails it when he says that “mass extinction is the mother of all issues” and that “there is a direct connection between our dual economic and ecological crises.” Far from pessimistic, HOTSPOTS profiles pioneers of a new kind, unsung heroes around the world who are working to save Earth’s last life banks from complete collapse.
Dr. Russell Mittermeier, president of Conservation International and the film’s host, is available by phone, often from the frontlines of a biodiversity hotspot. Dr. Michael Tobias, president of Dancing Star Foundation, a global ecologist with over 100 films and 35 books to his credit, is available in Los Angeles. Both are ready to share the latest news on biodiversity loss and protection, and each has an epic eye-witness perspective to share on mass extinction-why we need to act now and the unprecedented opportunity that this challenge gives us to get it right for generations to come.
HOTSPOTS will air on PBS affiliates throughout December and run well into 2009. A companion DVD is also available from the PBS online store and DancingStarFoundation.org. Thank you for considering coverage or passing this along to someone who might. I’ve included our new release below for your reference.
In the mean time, I invite you to watch the trailer.

Scienceblogs.com on NYTimes

If you go to the Science page of New York Times, starting today, you will see on the right side, just below the “Most popular” box a brand new widget – “Selected Posts From Sb Scienceblogs” that looks like this:
NYT%20Sb%20widget.JPG
Soon, we’ll reciprocate the link by linking to NYTimes science content as well. A nice way for old media and new media to integrate with each other, send readers to each other and educate the general audience about the difference in format, form, style, voice and quality between the old and new media. Everybody wins.

“Newsworthy-ness”

It appears that the clash of generations in regards to journalism is also happening in journalism schools: Screw AP style! Why I don’t want to be a journalist anymore.

5 of my friends began their college careers as eager journalists. 5 of my friends are now either in a different field or no longer eager about being a journalist but eager to graduate. My choice is to go back and get another degree in Graphic Design – something that results in product that highlights as opposed to false light.

And this comes from one of the most promising students in that class!

My question: is it the industry or the classroom that has soured these students on the profession? And are we going to lose an entire generation of reporters in a massive media-fatigue driven brain drain?

The wide-eyed youngsters eager to become journalists are leaving in disgust. Why? Yes, money and jobs are a concern. But also:

As I sat through most of my classes this semester, I realized the overrated-ness (if you will) of journalism. Journalist can be very ruthless, not caring about where their next story comes from – as long as it comes. I spent four years of my life studying to become a journalist, which means I sat in classes learning about the history of journalism, the technology boom, and how the news is shifting from newspapers to the Internet. I also spent a lot of time learning about the importance of “newsworthy-ness” only to realize that the only time I ever sit down and watch the news is when I’m bored, then EVERYTHING becomes newsworthy.

Ha! That is a gem right there! When you need to find stuff, you look for it online. But when you sit in front of the TV, you become, like most people, a passive consumer. Everything on the screen becomes interesting. If a pollster calls you and asks you what topics you are interested in, you will probably note the exact same topic you were just watching a show about. If it was a show about celebrity, you will say that you find celebrity news interesting. The pollster tells the TV that you are interested in Britney Spears, so the TV puts up more shows about Britney Spears, so you are more likely to see it and find it interesting and say to the next pollster that this is what you are interested in…. you see: a vicious cycle. People watch Britney because they find it interesting and they find it interesting because it is on TV.
But if there was something else on TV, like a nature show with David Attenborough, they would find that interesting instead. And they did – for years. Nature and science shows used to be very popular. Why are they not any more? Because people don’t see them any more, so they don’t know (and don’t tell the pollsters) they would be interested. People who already know they are interested in science and nature, seek that information on their own, perhaps by reading science blogs. But many others WOULD be interested if they had an exposure to such material on a regular basis.
Cameron just had an amazing and eye-opening encounter on his train commute:

What do I take from this? That there is a a demand for this kind of information and data from an educated and knowledgable public. One of the questions he asked was whether as a scientist I ever see much in the way of demand from the public. My response was that, aside from pushing the taxpayer access to taxpayer funded research myself, I hadn’t seen much evidence of real demand. His argument was that there is a huge nascent demand there from people who haven’t thought about their need to get into the detail of news stories that effect them. People want the detail, they just have no idea of how to go about getting it.

In the related FF thread, Jill notes: “No one believes that anyone outside of academe has a serious interest in the content.”
I think there is such an interest, both for science/nature content in general media for the general viewer, and for access to data and more thorough science reporting by the educated, sophisticated audience. And there is a hunger for a more modern, more serious, and more engaged journalism. The student cited above, conludes in a new post:

I have been thinking alot about being apart of such a Journalism Renaissance that would completly revolutionize journalism as we know it today. I have been getting encouragement and several discouragements from people about the feild in general but I WANT to be a part of it. I WANT to be a part of change. To re-create the art of storytelling and essentially change journalism from mere reportage to a tool used to make a change. To use my “creative energy to plan awesome marketing campaigns/web sites” as well as to keep people in the know. Awareness vs. just information. It may sound corny but, I want to spark a nerve to make people want to come from behind the television, come from behind the newspapers and the computer screens and begin to “change the world.”
Can I do it? YES. Will I have opposition and adversity? Of course…the best can’t live without haters.

Related:
Are we Press? Part Deux
Science vs. Britney Spears
Scientists are Excellent Communicators (‘Sizzle’ follow-up)

Ah, finally some useful stuff done with math modeling…. ;-)

YouTube Usage Decoded:

Why are certain videos on YouTube watched millions of times while 90 percent of the contributions find only the odd viewer? A new study reveals that increased attention in social systems like the YouTube community follows particular, recurrent patterns that can be represented using mathematical models.
The Internet platform YouTube is a stomping ground for scientists looking to investigate the fine mechanism of the attention spiral in social systems. How is it possible, for example, that one YouTube video of a previously unknown comedian from Ohio can be viewed over ten million times in the space of two weeks and 103 million times during its total two-year running time? The video was aired on the most popular television networks in America and the comedian Judson Laipply has meanwhile become a YouTube star. Social scientists, economists, mathematicians and even physicists are fascinated by this “herding”, as the herdlike behavior in social networks is often termed, on YouTube.

Read the rest, it’s very interesting (and applicable to other media, not just YouTube).

Bloggers vs. Journalists morphs into Twitterers vs. Journalists

Journalists are fantastically capable of forgetting the he-said-she-said False Equivalence mode of dishonesty if they are themselves one of the sides. In that case, they quote only the “skeptics” side, not the side that may have actually something intelligent to say about the matter.
Watch this incredible video clip.
It shows a horse dealer, a horse trainer, a farrier and a saddle-maker sitting around the table, with serious faces, discussing this new invention – the car! It is just a fad. Those engineers know nothing about transportation. This will remain just a toy for the idle and the rich. No way a car can do what a horse can (like rear, buck, kick and bite). And how do we know – because we are the transportation experts!
Translation: People who used Twitter (and FriendFeed and blogs, etc.) to report from the scenes in Mumbai during the attacks and standoff cannot possibly be journalists. Let’s give them another name – how about “newsgatherers”? Why are they not “journalists”? Because they are not us. They don’t do what we do – bloviate about things we know nothing about but can pretend so well.
This NYT article also introduces the same word for a journalist who is not “one of us”:

A decade ago, Blogger was one of the first services that allowed anyone on the Internet to immediately publish his or her own content. It forever changed the face of media (witness the blog you are currently reading) and the way people communicate. Twitter is an extension of that transformation, Mr. Williams said.
“I was surprised by blogging. It took me a while to realize the profundity of blogging,” he said.
He is not surprised, though, that Twitter is being used in newsgathering, as it was during the terror attacks in India last week. “I’ve actually been waiting for it to happen,” he said. The day Barack Obama was elected president was Twitter’s most-trafficked day ever.
Twitter will complement other forms of media, he said, the way that blogs and newspapers co-exist. “New media never kill old media,” he said. “It’s all part of an ecosystem.”

Then Twitterers surprise them from the inside, reporting blow-by-blow from a behind-the-doors meeting:

CNN, a division of Time Warner, invited several dozen newspaper editors to Atlanta last week for a summit about its forthcoming news wire. Gatherings of journalists aren’t usually off-the-record affairs, but CNN probably didn’t expect each segment of the summit to be shared with the Web. Then again, the increasingly popular Twitter, which allows users to share short messages with others, sometimes acts as a wire service as well. (CNN declined to comment.)

Dan Conover puts it the best:

…Thing is, if you don’t think Twitter is useful or valuable, don’t use it. Please don’t care about it. It’s really no skin off my ass. Those of us who use these tools aren’t offended by your opinion. In truth, we just don’t find your opinions all that interesting.
The strengths and weaknesses of Twitter and other social media tools are far more apparent to the people who use them than the people who don’t, so you’re not breaking any news to me when you tell me about their “flaws.” Half the conversations on social media are various forms of bitching about social media tools.
And when we observe with wonder the mysterious things that occur because of these proliferating new tools, and probe their meanings and implications obsessively, by all means try to frame that as a discussion about editorial control and quality. The party didn’t start when you noticed it. It didn’t stop when you left. It doesn’t care that you don’t think it’s a good party and that you and your friends want to go somewhere else. Knock yourselves out…[read the rest for the excellent and biting analysis]

But with a lot of gentle hand-holding, the dinosaur journalists can start “getting it”….
Update: Another new term – iReporters, sounds better as it suggests the people are journalists. And some are better than the professional journalist who wrote this article using a single case he liked and hand-picked because it proves his point.

Kinesthetic learning online?

Tina writes – Kinesthetic Learners: Why Old Media Should Never Die:

…..Many classrooms, however, don’t offer this type of kinesthetic learning. The hands-on learner is left to fend for themselves and more often than not the only physical interaction they get is with the learning material itself.
You’ve seen them before. Sometimes, it’s a student whose fingers trace the words as they read them. Or the highlighter: the student who makes a colored mosaic of their text as they try to physically interact with the material. Even note-taking is a kinesthetic activity. In a variety of subtle ways, the kinesthetic learner can physically interact with their learning material.
Now, imagine these same students trying to physically interact with ‘new’ media. The method of consuming learning material is physically no different than consuming entertainment material. Your fingers and eyes make the same motions, there is no easy way to physically differentiate material, much less to physically interact with it.
Obviously, there are ways that new media can be superior. Video offers the best chance to reach all learning types. For example, a step-by-step video of a science experiment caters to visual and auditory senses while leaving the hands free to actually perform the experiment.
But for straight information consumption, new media leaves the kinesthetic learner out in the cold.

Videos. Like JoVE and SciVee.tv?
What about joysticks and Wii?

Pulitzers for online reporting

Pulitzer Prizes Broadened to Include Online-Only Publications Primarily Devoted to Original News Reporting:

New York, Dec. 8, 2008 – The Pulitzer Prizes in journalism, which honor the work of American newspapers appearing in print, have been expanded to include many text-based newspapers and news organizations that publish only on the Internet, the Pulitzer Prize Board announced today. [Who defines “newspaper” and “news organization”? Can I claim “A Blog Around The Clock” as one of those if I call it that way? If not, why not? Who decides?]
The Board also has decided to allow entries made up entirely of online content to be submitted in all 14 Pulitzer journalism categories. [Including for Commentary?]
While broadening the competition, the Board stressed that all entered material — whether online or in print — should come from United States newspapers or news organizations that publish at least weekly,[Is 8.2 times a day enough?] that are “primarily dedicated to original news reporting [That’s tough, but many bloggers have done it, and some do it on a regular basis.] and coverage of ongoing stories,” [Every blogger in the world.] and that “adhere to the highest journalistic principles.[Oooops! So NYTimes and WaPo are not eligible?]”
Consistent with its historic focus on daily and weekly newspapers, the Board will continue to exclude entries from printed magazines and broadcast media and their respective Web sites.[What is the difference between a weekly newspaper and a magazine? Are the Atlantic bloggers, like Sullivan, excluded because Atlantic gets printed on paper?]
“This is an important step forward, reflecting our continued commitment to American newspapers as well as our willingness to adapt to the remarkable growth of online journalism,” said Sig Gissler, administrator of the Prizes. “The new rules enlarge the Pulitzer tent and recognize more fully the role of the Web, while underscoring the enduring value of words and of serious reporting.”
The Board will continue to monitor the impact of the Internet, Gissler said.[Better later than never, I guess….]
Beginning in 2006, online content from newspaper Web sites was permitted in all Pulitzer journalism categories, but online-only newspapers were not allowed to submit entries, and entirely-online entries were permitted in only two categories, breaking news coverage and breaking-news photography.
In addition to text stories, the competition will continue to allow a full range of online content, such as interactive graphics and video, in nearly all categories. [No photoblogs?] Two photography categories will continue to restrict entries to still images.
The Board adopted the changes at its November meeting at Columbia University after a lengthy study by a committee.[This sounds like something written by a committee….]
The Board also refined the definition for its prize on Local Reporting of Breaking News. To emphasize immediacy, the new definition states that “special emphasis” will be given to “the speed and accuracy of the initial coverage.”[Someone on Twitter will win every time!]
The Board, Gissler said, hopes that this will encourage the submission of more online material in the category. [OK, guys, we’ll nominate and we’ll be watching you!]

A little more detail here: At Last: Pulitzer Prizes Expand to Include Web-Only News Outlets
Update:They asked Dan Gillmor for advice, but did not listen to a word of what he told them. Read his entire response.

Elites? That’s somehow bad?

This kind of he-said-she-said False Equivalence journalism is infuriating and is the prime reason why nobody trusts the corporate media any more which is why the newspapers are dying:
Academic Elites Fill Obama’s Roster:

…..All told, of Obama’s top 35 appointments so far, 22 have degrees from an Ivy League school, MIT, Stanford, the University of Chicago or one of the top British universities. For the other slots, the president-elect made do with graduates of Georgetown and the Universities of Michigan, Virginia and North Carolina.
While Obama’s picks have been lauded for their ethnic and ideological mix, they lack diversity in one regard: They are almost exclusively products of the nation’s elite institutions and generally share a more intellectual outlook than is often the norm in government. Their erudition has already begun to set a new tone in the capital, cheering Obama’s supporters and serving as a clarion call to other academics. Yale law professor Dan Kahan said several of his colleagues are for the first time considering leaving their perches for Washington.
“You know how Obama always said, ‘This is our moment; this is our time?’ ” Kahan said. “Well, academics and smart people think, ‘Hey, when he says this is our time, he’s talking about us.’ ”
But skeptics say Obama’s predilection for big thinkers with dazzling resumes carries risks, noting, for one, that several of President John F. Kennedy’s “best and brightest” led the country into the Vietnam War. Obama is to be credited, skeptics say, for bringing with him so few political acquaintances from Illinois. But, they say, his team reflects its own brand of insularity, drawing on the world that Obama entered as an undergraduate at Columbia and in which he later rose to eminence as president of the Harvard Law Review and as a law professor at the University of Chicago…..

What a load of bull!
A society builds Universities for a reason – as places where the best and the brightest, surrounded by the other best and brightest, gain knowledge, skills and wisdom, as well as humility that comes from having one’s ideas challenged by colleagues every day. These are the places explicitly built to train the new generations of leaders – people who have a good grasp of the way the world works and a good understanding of the best ways to deal with the curveballs that the world throws at people and societies. These are exactly the kind of people a country needs to lead it.
Where else can one gain such knowledge and skills? You can learn fist-fighting skills out on the street. You can learn how to fudge books in the business world. You can learn how to sing hymns in church. You can learn how to ignore reality, spin fairy tales and destroy the English language in right-wing “think” tanks. But the honest useful skills are learned only in the academia.
Why is Washington Post, in this piece (and most others, this is just the latest example), inserting irrelevant opinions of “conservatives” and so-called “skeptics” (really ‘pseudo-skeptics’)?
Over the past 28 years, and especially starkly over the past 8 years, every single “conservative” idea has been shown in practice to be wrong and dangerous. The conservatives, what’s left of them (although many of them erroneously, for historico-local reasons, think of themselves as conservatives although they are not, or label some liberal ideas as ‘conservative’ although they are not) are out wondering in the wilderness.
So, why should any media outlet ever ask any conservative for any opinion on any topic? They have been proven wrong on everything, their ideology is dead, and their opinions are irrelevant (except for the humor segments). Inviting a conservative (or a Republican, because these two terms are today, more than at any time in history, equal and interchangeable) on a show is just like inviting a Creationist on a show when the topic is a new finding in evolutionary biology. Quoting conservatives in a newspaper article is just like quoting a Global Warming Denialist in an article about climate change – irrelevant, laughable, wrong and, yes, dangerous because it gives the audience the wrong idea that conservatism still deserves respect. It does not.
With conservatism debunked and dead, the next opposition party to the Democrats will come from the Left, not Right.
No, it is not the loss of advertising that dooms newspapers. It is not the unruly, wild bloggers. It is their own dishonesty. Let them die. Now.

Douglas Baird, who hired Obama at the University of Chicago, noted that whizzes can also have too much faith in their answers. But he said Obama is confident enough in his own intellect to challenge others’ conclusions. He recalled watching Obama hold his own with erudite faculty members.
“He goes into a faculty club filled with Nobel laureates, and he talks to them on equal terms — there hasn’t been anyone in the White House like that for a long time,” Baird said. “So it’s not as if, when he’s given advice by powerful, smart people, that he’ll get swayed from his core principles. And if you’re confident you’re going to stick to your own principles, then you might as well surround yourself with smart people rather than dumb ones.”

Science Reporting – the dead-tree press perspective

Deborah Howell, the WaPo Ombudsman (for a few more days), wrote her thoughts on science reporting in the Washington Post (and in general) – Making Sense of Science Reporting:

The job of science reporters is to take complicated subjects and translate them for readers who are not scientifically sophisticated. Critics say that the news media oversimplify and aren’t skeptical enough of financing by special interests.
That led me to review papers that are to be published soon as part of a project sponsored by the American Academy of Arts and Sciences on how the media cover science and technology, and to interview a half-dozen experts, from scientists to teachers of science writing. Here’s my take:

Read the rest. Do you agree with her, or are you happy that her days as WaPo ombudsman are numbered? Why?
Related
Related

Is this true? Perhaps it’s time for me to find where that TV controller is….

An Injection of Hard Science Boosts TV Shows’ Prognosis:

It’s no fiction: Scientific fact has usurped science fiction as TV’s favorite inspiration for prime-time story lines. And to keep everything on the up and up, show writers and producers are hiring scores of researchers and technical consultants to get the science straight.

National Day of Listening

StoryCorps is declaring November 28, 2008 the first annual National Day of Listening:

This holiday season, ask the people around you about their lives — it could be your grandmother, a teacher, or someone from the neighborhood. By listening to their stories, you will be telling them that they matter and they won’t ever be forgotten. It may be the most meaningful time you spend this year.

Future of Journalism?

Jeff Jarvis systematically lays down the possible future of journalism (read carefully the entire thing):

It’s fair to expect me to put forward scenarios for the future of news. In a sense, that’s all I ever do here, but there’s no one permalink summarizing my apparently endless prognostication. So here is a snapshot of – a strawman for – where I think particularly local news might go. What follows is just a long – I’m sorry – summary of what I’ve written here over time and an extension of the one model I think we need to expand coming out of the conference, where one lesson I took away is that news – on both the content and business side – will no longer be controlled by a single company but will be collaborative.

And if you are a recently laid-off journalist, call Anil Dash and he’ll help you become a New Journalist:

The TypePad Journalist Bailout Program offers recently terminated bloggers and journalists a free pro account (worth $150 annually) on the company’s popular blogging platform. In addition to the free yearly membership, the 20 to 30 journalists who are accepted will receive professional tech support, placement on the company’s blog aggregation site, Blogs.com, and automatic enrollment in the company’s advertising revenue-sharing program.

Public Intellectuals R Us – Discuss….

Daniel Drezner: Public Intellectual 2.0:

“…..The pessimism about public intellectuals is reflected in attitudes about how the rise of the Internet in general, and blogs in particular, affects intellectual output. Alan Wolfe claims that “the way we argue now has been shaped by cable news and Weblogs; it’s all ‘gotcha’ commentary and attributions of bad faith. No emotion can be too angry and no exaggeration too incredible.” David Frum complains that “the blogosphere takes on the scale and reality of an alternative world whose controversies and feuds are … absorbing.” David Brooks laments, “People in the 1950s used to earnestly debate the role of the intellectual in modern politics. But the Lionel Trilling authority figure has been displaced by the mass class of blog-writing culture producers.”
But these critics fail to recognize how the growth of blogs and other forms of online writing has partially reversed a trend that many cultural critics have decried — what Russell Jacoby called the “professionalization and academization” of public intellectuals. In fact, the growth of the blogosphere breaks down — or at least erodes — the barriers erected by a professionalized academy.
Most of the obituaries for the public intellectual suffer from the cognitive bias and conceptual fuzziness that come from comparing the annals of history to the present day……
————————–
….The proliferation of blogs reverses those trends in several ways. Blogs have facilitated the rise of a new class of nonacademic intellectuals. Writing a successful blog has provided a launching pad for aspiring writers to obtain jobs from general-interest magazines. The premier general-interest magazines and journals in the country either sponsor individual bloggers or have developed their own in-house blogs.
For academics aspiring to be public intellectuals, blogs allow networks to develop that cross the disciplinary and hierarchical strictures of academe. Provided one can write jargon-free prose, a blog can attract readers from all walks of life — including, most importantly, people beyond the ivory tower. (The distribution of traffic and links in the blogosphere is highly skewed, and academics and magazine writers make up a fair number of the most popular bloggers.) Indeed, because of the informal and accessible nature of the blog format, citizens will tend to view academic bloggers that they encounter online as more accessible than would be the case in a face-to-face interaction, increasing the likelihood of a fruitful exchange of views about culture, criticism, and politics with individuals whom academics might not otherwise meet. Furthermore, as a longtime blogger, I can attest that such interactions permit one to play with ideas in a way that is ill suited for more-academic publishing venues. A blog functions like an intellectual fishing net, catching and preserving the embryonic ideas that merit further time and effort.
Perhaps the most-useful function of bloggers, however, is when they engage in the quality control of other public intellectuals. Posner believes that public intellectuals are in decline because there is no market discipline for poor quality. Even if public intellectuals royally screw up, he argues, the mass public is sufficiently uninterested and disengaged for it not to matter. Bloggers are changing that dynamic, however. If Michael Ignatieff, Paul Krugman, or William Kristol pen substandard essays, blogs have and will provide a wide spectrum of critical feedback…..”

Robert Cottrell: Isaiah, chapter 100:

…….The term “public intellectual” gained currency 20 years ago, describing a writer or academic who commanded public notice, especially when accepted as an authority in many fields. There was nothing new about such “brand-extension” in the humanities. Like Plato, Goethe or Berlin, writers and philosophers had long drifted in and out of public view, holding forth on life in general. But when nuclear weapons, environmentalism and genetics began to perturb Western public opinion in the 1960s, so more scientists followed Albert Einstein out of the academy and into the public arena. Richard Feynman, James Watson and Jacob Bronowski produced bestselling books without diluting their reputations. Freeman Dyson and Steven Weinberg wrote regularly for the New York Review of Books. Noam Chomsky’s left-wing politics eclipsed his scholarly work in linguistics……….
———————————-
……But the rise of blogs has greatly enlarged and confused the market. A disparager would say that anybody can be a blogger, and anything can be a blog: is this not proof of low standards? And yet, top bloggers include academics and commentators whose work would qualify them as public intellectuals by any traditional measure–for example, Tyler Cowen, Daniel Drezner, James Fallows, Steven Levitt, Lawrence Lessig and Andrew Sullivan. Indeed, it seems fair to say that if you have the quick wit and the pithy turn of phrase traditionally needed to succeed as a public intellectual, then you are one of nature’s bloggers. If you cannot quite imagine Berlin posting to Twitter, then think how well he would put, say, Hannah Arendt in her place, on bloggingheads.tv……
——————————-
….Whatever their provenance, the public intellectuals of 2009 will want to be fluent in the obvious issues of the moment: environment and energy, market turmoil, China, Russia, Islam. On that basis it looks like another good year for established stars such as Thomas Friedman, Martin Wolf, Bjorn Lomborg and Minxin Pei. But a rising generation of bloggers is terrifyingly young and bright: expect to hear more from Ezra Klein, Megan McArdle, Will Wilkinson and Matthew Yglesias.

Daniel Drezner: Trapped in a recursive loop on public intellectuals:

Of course, the really funny thing about this is that Klein, McArdle, Wilkinson and Yglesias all dwarf my traffic flows.

The Ayers interview

Last week, Terry Gross interviewed William Ayers on Fresh Air on NPR – you can listen to the podcast here.
James Fallows and Dave Winer have completely opposite reactions to the interview. What do you think?

Toward a Reality-Based GOP

…and the journalism that can help. Jay Rosen and Conor Friedersdorf on Blogginheads.tv:

Perhaps they should ask Ted Stevens about a series of tubes…

The geriatric leaders of the government of Italy are making fools of themselves by trying to regulate bloggers, i.e., get them to register with the government, pay taxes, be liable for what they write, etc.:

The law’s impact would turn all bloggers in Italy into potential outlaws. This could be great for their traffic, I realise, but hell on the business aspirations of an Italian web start-up, not to mention any tech company that wants to sell its blog-publishing software in Italy, or open a social network here. In addition to driving out potential tech jobs, the stifling of free speech also can have a dramatic chilling effect on all forms of free expression, the arts and scholarship.

Or, to keep it simple:

Only someone who is utterly clueless on how the internet works, or even what it is, could come up with such an idea.

Will there be new communication channels in the Obama administration?

There is quite a lot of chatter around the intertubes about changes in the communication environment that happened between the last and this election and how those changes may be affecting the way the new White House communicates to people as well as how the new White House will receive communications from the people.
A lot of people are impatient – they want to see everything in place right this moment. Easy, guys! The inauguration is on January 20th. Until that time, Bush is the President and the Obama communications folks have time to think through, design and implement communication channels that we will definitely NOT see until the inauguration or a little bit later. So, you can pore over Change.org all you want in search for hints of the future, but it is unlikely you will see anything truly informative until January 20th at the earliest.
But in the meantime, speculation abounds.
This NYTimes article lays down the arguments pro and con (and check out the FriendFeed discussion as well – quite telling to see how some techie folks do not understand this is not a technological problem at all).
The problem is this: if a President says or writes something that is recordable – and technology is irrelevant, it could be handwriting, a magnetophone or an 8-track – it can be subpoenad by Congress. The article explores the tensions between the need for a President to have confidentiality about important matters of the state, and the need to open up new mode of communications fit for the 21st century mindset of the Facebook generation (Note: “facebook generation” has nothing to do with the actual Facebook site, or with a particular age – it is a frequently-used shorthand term for a mindset of continuity and openness in communication).
This is why Bush stopped using e-mail the day he became the President. Everything that the President says or writes becomes official record. New technology allows one to communicate too much and too informally. Chatting with friends over e-mail becomes a potential liability for the officials of such high ranking.
What is new is that Obama is the first President with that “facebook generation” mindset of constant, open communication, as opposed to a bubble-boy, smoke-filled back-rooms, secretive types that the previous 43 Presidents were. The laws, customs and trappings of his new job are going to be conflicting with his modern instincts towards openness. And people are starting to talk about a potential need to alter these out-dated laws in order to allow Obama to lead a more transparent government.
We shall see what actually happens, but we can expect, at least until/unless there are legal changes, that all the e-mailing will be done by staffers and not Obama himself. He is also going to be the first President in history to keep a laptop on the Oval Office desk (doesn’t this sound quaint?)! He will likely use the computer not to broadcast or communicate anything himself, but only to get informed (perhaps via an RSS Feed).
Another confusion in online chatter about potentially new communication is that people do not make a distinction between centrifugal (broadcasting, outwards) communication and centripetal (listening, inwards) communication.
The best example is probably this Slate article. I think Disckerson is confused. The new Prez will experiment with a number of new ways to communicate. Some of it is inside out, some is outside in. Posting the radio address on YouTube is the part of inside out. It is not the only tool and should not be looked at in isolation. Yes, it is part of his PR, but it is targeted to a set of people who past Presidents did not and could not reach: exactly the same people who are the most likely to use OTHER channels of communication to talk back to him. What Dickerson did in this text was sorta like focusing on a Food Chain and not seeing the Food Web (or forest for the trees, choose your own metaphor) – a lack of ecological thinking by a member of an old media class that thinks too linearly.
Brian Solis has collected probably some of the best ideas on the entire issue, and you should also read the various links and ideas in Josh Bernoff’s post and Lidija Davis’ post.
Obama’s first radio address was also filmed. The movie was posted on Change.org, and also on YouTube:

People like Dan Farber and Allen Stern are worried about favouritism – why YouTube and not other video services? Answer: if the only place they place a video is Change.org, then someone else will put it on YouTube, perhaps edited, with open comments, who knows what else. By posting it on YouTube themselves, the Obama comms folks are putting a degree of control over the message. In the next few months, they may decide to do the same on several other video-hosting services. This was just the first address, and YouTube, being such an 6000lbs gorilla (or is it an elephant in the room?), is the obvious place to go and test the waters first before embarking on a more ambitious program.
Also, a more ambitious program requires building the communications team. Which requires hiring people, including a Chief Conversation Officer, perhaps this guy (or me – I can do it, that’s my job right now anyway). That process has just started. People like Secretary of State are much more important positions to fill first. So, have some patience….

Smoke Signals, Blogs, and the Future of Politics

Smoke Signals, Blogs, and the Future of PoliticsThis I first posted on June 24, 2004 on http://www.jregrassroots.org, then republished on August 23, 2004 on Science And Politics. I love re-posting this one every now and then, just to check how much the world has changed. What do you think? Was I too rosy-eyed? Prophetic?

Continue reading

Reporter assaulted at a Palin rally

Joe Killian is a reporter for Greensboro News&Record. Friday, he went to a Sarah Palin rally at Elon University and filed a report from there for his newspaper.
But he also got assaulted – the first reporter so far – and then blogged about the incident.
Pam has more details.
Joe lived through the ordeal and joined us all at ConvergeSouth for a while.
More local discussions here, here, here and here.

Quick ConvergeSouth08 recap

I am back from the 4th ConvergeSouth, the do-not-miss Greensboro conference about the Web, blogging, journalism and community (and the model/inspiration for our own science blogging conferences, including the third one) . Big kudos to Sue Polinsky, Ed Cone and the cast of thousands for putting together the meeting again, making it better and better every year. And of course, thanks to Dave Hoggard for hosting the legendary BBQ with (even more legendary) banana pudding.
I rode to Greensboro with Kirk Ross and came back home with Anton Zuiker, having interesting conversations with each.
Dave Slusher and I found a common interest beside blogging – animal domestication!
Pam Spaulding was on two panels, and did a great job liveblogging the conference. Melody Watson also has interesting thoughts on it all.
At the BBQ, Anton and I talked with Anil Dash (also here) whose SixApart runs MoveableType which is the platform on which scienceblogs.com is hosted. Of course, scienceblogs.com is a complex site, with much more than just a bunch of blogs, and Anil gave kudos to Tim, the tech guru of Seed, for his amazing ability to build, fix and run our platform. We also talked about the ability of the blogosphere to effect change (e.g., in Washington). Something Anil said in a panel discussion lit a lightbulb in my head. He said that until about two years ago or so, it was very unusual for a Congressman or a Senator to receive many phone calls from the constituents. But with blogs (either big blogs like DailyKos or lots of smaller blogs acting in unison), this changed. Suddenly, the blogs can turn the ‘on switch’ and send thousands of people to ring the phone in the offices on The Hill – something for which the offices are not prepared. Instead of a few letters, or some e-mails, suddenly, for a day or two, the phone is ringing off the hook and prevents all other business from getting done over the phone. This is an element of surprise to them and thus they tend to sit up and listen! This may explain why the blogosphere-wide action to defeat PRISM was so successful (and it was so thoroughly defeated that the ridicule even outside of science blogs was widespread). I heard that SPARC got a number of call from various senatorial offices, pretty much saying “call off the dogs, we got it, we understand the issue now and will vote Yes, and please, we need to use the phones again!” As a result, despite being voted on twice (Bush vetoed the bill the first time around), the NIH mandate language remained unaltered and the bill became the law.
After the initial talk by Chris Rabb and the morning panel, I first went to a session on Social Networking for Bloggers led by Kelby Carr. That was quite an interesting discussion about do’s and dont’s of social networking behavior, etiquette, dividing personal from professional, etc. It fed nicely to what someone at the closing panel said (and I’ve been saying for a long time) – that in the age of the Web, the criteria for ‘proper behavior’ for getting a job or running for office will change, as the Facebook generation takes over, knowing that everyone has drunk pictures on Facebook and that it is OK, so let’s look at what really matters about the person, not such superficalities that insult old puritanical norms stemming from the times when such behavior, while ubiquitous, could be safely hidden from the public. Soon enough, we can stop pretending to be mortally insulted that someone, gasp, had a beer at a college party or did/said something silly or stupid at some time in the past.
My own session was small – but that was good. Those who came were interested in the science side of things, so I could quickly dispose of the more general stuff about people being active on Facebook, twitter, FriendFeed or blogs, and focus more on commenting behavior (and specifically psychological barriers to commenting) on science-related content online, be it science posts on blogs or peer-reviewed papers. I got a lot of useful feedback on this which may help me both here on the blog and at work on PLoS.
Next, I went to hear Kirk Ross on “Slow News”. As you already know, I am a big fan of Carrboro Citizen and the concept that guides its publishing model. While the panic – “OMG! The newspapers are dying!” – may well apply to large metro, state and national papers, the small, hyperlocal newspapers are doing just fine and will probably continue to do so. I am constantly online, constantly scouting for news – about science, science publishing, U.S. electoral politics, Serbia, etc. – which is a ‘pull’ model. I am interested in particular topics and actively search for them at places I trust. Thus, I may be missing something interesting which is outside of the realm of topics I actively look for. This includes news about the happenings in my own town and neighborhood (if I spent less time online and more walking the streets, I may get such news the old, from-the-horses-mouth way). For this, I need to occasionally succumb to the ‘push’ model, which I do every Thursday when I go to La Vita Dolce, get a mocha (‘Bora’s style, please’), sit back and enjoy the new edition of Carrboro Citizen. I learn which cool plant is in bloom right now, what is the controversial issue at the Town Hall this week, what is going on at my kids’ school, and what the candidates for local elections are saying. And it is all written with no rush (digest the news first, don’t rush to print) and no heed for the he-said-she-said false-equivalence mode of journalism that has been poisoning the A.S. media for decades. See, for instance, this editorial from this week’s edition (this is just the ending paragraph – read the entire thing – well worth your time):
For The Record:

This has not been lost on many. In fact, in a recent local candidate forum, a member of the GOP — yes, there are a few here in Orange County — acknowledged that it appears there are programs or missions where government actually does a better job than the private sector. Such acknowledgements are rare, but increasing. It will take years, though, for the poison injected into our political discourse to be metabolized. People will still rail about big government and taxes. But there’s a difference between pushing back in order to insist on efficiency, transparency and fairness and simply attracting the system for ideological or political gain.
In a recent New York Times column, Thomas Friedman recalled Oliver Wendell Holmes remark that “I like paying taxes. With them I am buying civilization.”
We’re a far cry from that sentiment but perhaps a little closer to understanding the role of government and how dangerous it is to entrust the whole of civilization solely to those out to profit from it.

Now, if you are a partisan Democrat you will love this piece, if you are a partisan Republican, you will hate it. But if you are unbiased in any way, you will recognize that the piece has no ideological axe to grind – it is a mix of stuff you should have learned in high school Civics and what you have learned in college freshman Economics 101, plus recent statements from the two presidential campaigns. It provides you a baseline expert consensus on what the Reality is, so you can compare the party platforms, proposals and rhetoric to the Reality and decide for yourself which party tends to better consult with Reality when designing their campaign promises, i.e., this is how journalism should be committed.
The final panel compared the roles of the Web and technology between the 2004 and 2008 elections. The two-way communication between campaign and volunteers in real time, texting, ads on games, real-time updates of the voter databases – none of those were possible in 2004, but are ably used by the Obama campaign this year (McCain campaign is relying mainly on old-style techniques: nasty robocalls, racist flyers, and negative TV and radio ads). But the main difference between the two years is video – as soon as someone does or says something on TV or a campaign event, it immediately shows up on YouTube for everyone to see. The video of the ‘macaca’ moment that millions saw in 2006 did not so much show Sen. Allen as a racist as much as a jerk – someone you do not want to vote for. The videos this year are really making the opinions change – when you see the behavior of supporters at McCain/Palin rallies, when you watch the racist, dishonest and nasty ads they are putting out, when you watch the conventions and debates (and important moments from them), when you watch Obama’s rallies, ads and speeches in contrast, when you watch GOP operatives openly lying on TV, and you watch all of that over and over again – it is easy to make up your mind.
Finally, it was so much fun meeting and chatting with Ginny Skalski and Wayne Sutton (of 30Threads), Matt Gross, Lenore Ramm, Heather Solos (you can find her here, here and here), Dan Conover and Janet Edens, Jim Buie, Robert Scoble, Ruby Sinreich, Nancy Shepherd, Lauren Polinsky, Dennis Meredith, Donna Fryer, Ilina Ewen, Vera Hannaford, Jay Ovittore, Andrea Novicki and many others.
You can see more pictures from ConvergeSouth here and more discussions here. See you all next year – same time, same place.

‘Tire swinging’ – the way to look at campaign reporting

TPM explains the origin of the term, what it evolved to mean, and who in the U.S. punditocracy is on the tire, who is off for good and who’s off but yearns to get back on:

Meghan McCain: “It was a really fun experience…. Everybody really relaxed. It was fun to kind of see big journalistic figures, like Holly Baily swinging on the tire swing and Jon Martin helping my dad grill ribs.”

Andrew Sullivan on blogging

Andrew Sullivan, who blogs on the vastly popular Daily Dish (one of the few sane conservatives out there and very informative and entertaining to read) just published a long essay in The Atlantic – Why I Blog? Worth your time and effort to read – just a short excerpt:

From the first few days of using the form, I was hooked. The simple experience of being able to directly broadcast my own words to readers was an exhilarating literary liberation. Unlike the current generation of writers, who have only ever blogged, I knew firsthand what the alternative meant. I’d edited a weekly print magazine, The New Republic, for five years, and written countless columns and essays for a variety of traditional outlets. And in all this, I’d often chafed, as most writers do, at the endless delays, revisions, office politics, editorial fights, and last-minute cuts for space that dead-tree publishing entails. Blogging–even to an audience of a few hundred in the early days–was intoxicatingly free in comparison. Like taking a narcotic.
It was obvious from the start that it was revolutionary. Every writer since the printing press has longed for a means to publish himself and reach–instantly–any reader on Earth. Every professional writer has paid some dues waiting for an editor’s nod, or enduring a publisher’s incompetence, or being ground to literary dust by a legion of fact-checkers and copy editors. If you added up the time a writer once had to spend finding an outlet, impressing editors, sucking up to proprietors, and proofreading edits, you’d find another lifetime buried in the interstices. But with one click of the Publish Now button, all these troubles evaporated.
Alas, as I soon discovered, this sudden freedom from above was immediately replaced by insurrection from below. Within minutes of my posting something, even in the earliest days, readers responded. E-mail seemed to unleash their inner beast. They were more brutal than any editor, more persnickety than any copy editor, and more emotionally unstable than any colleague.
Again, it’s hard to overrate how different this is. Writers can be sensitive, vain souls, requiring gentle nurturing from editors, and oddly susceptible to the blows delivered by reviewers. They survive, for the most part, but the thinness of their skins is legendary. Moreover, before the blogosphere, reporters and columnists were largely shielded from this kind of direct hazing. Yes, letters to the editor would arrive in due course and subscriptions would be canceled. But reporters and columnists tended to operate in a relative sanctuary, answerable mainly to their editors, not readers. For a long time, columns were essentially monologues published to applause, muffled murmurs, silence, or a distant heckle. I’d gotten blowback from pieces before–but in an amorphous, time-delayed, distant way. Now the feedback was instant, personal, and brutal.

Read the whole thing….
Just a note that, after a few months of blogging in relative obscurity, it was a simultaneous link by Cory Doctorow and Andrew Sullivan that exposed my science blogging to a broader audience, which soon led to invitation to Scienceblogs.com, which led to a job with PLoS…so I owe the guy at least a link every now and then…. 😉

A banner year for me, in a sense….

Every year, when I go to ConvergeSouth (and I still need your help with my session this year), I look forward to seeing again some of my good blogospheric friends. And somewhere very, very high on the list of people I am most excited about seeing again, are Dan and Janet, journalists and bloggers from South Carolina who are regular, annual participants there.
Their blog Xark has been one of my regular reads for a few years now. So, I was astonishingly flattered when I went there the other day and saw my own face on top of the page! Yikes! What have I done?
Oh, Xarkers just thought they would put a bunch of people they consider influential on their banner. What an honor (I guess – there is good influence and there is bad influence – see the list!).
You can see the banner in high resolution here and the small version is this:
xarkbanner2x.jpg

Carrboro Citizen – a model for the newspaper of the future

The future of newspapers is bleak, but there are three saving strategies: 1) hyperlocal papers will beat the big city, state, national and international papers, 2) telling the truth instead of false equivalence will foster reader loyalty, and 3) the print-to-web mode of thinking will be replaced by web-to-print, community-driven model.
Carrboro Citizen is an examplar of all three strategies. If you know that Carrboro is tiny, you already see how hyperlocal it is. If you have read it for a while, you know that they do not do the dreaded he-said-she-said tired, old schtick – they tell is at it is, and if you find that the truth hurts, you need to re-examine your own beliefs or loyalties.
But you may not be aware of their web-to-print strategy. The Citizen is really small – a couple of employees, a couple of interns and that’s it. But they are also next to UNC and its amazing Journalism program. Jock Lauterer teaches a class there and each year his students go out to Carrboro and surrounding areas and find interesting things to write about. Their articles then get published online first, on Carrboro Commons, where Kirk Ross and the staff of The Citizen read them and, if they like something, edit the article and publish it in The Citizen. The students learn their trade, the community gets to chime-in in the comments (on both sites), and Carrboro Citizen get to publish good articles written by fresh voices. Everyone wins.
You may remember last week when I told you about an article (which I like for obvious reasons – I am in it) about Carrboro Creative Coworking, and about telecommuting and coworking in general – Creative Coworking offers a new dynamic.
Just a few days later, and from what I can see minimal editing, the article is now on news-stands (as well as online – commenting allowed again) in Carrboro Citizen.
I am willing to bet that in ten years, when New York Times is either dead or changed beyond all recognition, Carrboro Citizen will still be going strong.
And here is more about Carrboro Creative Coworking:

Inside Duke Medicine

If you came to either the first or the second Science Blogging Conference (or both) you may remember that, among other goodies in your swag bag, you also got a copy or two of Inside Duke Medicine, the employee publication for the Duke University Health System.
And, you may remember it looked kind of….soooo last century 😉
Furthermore, it had its publishing model backwards – it was Print-to-Web, i.e., the well-crafted articles were first printed in hardcopy and then posted online almost as an after-thought.
Well, that model does not work, so Duke got smart and hired a visionary – Anton Zuiker
Over the past 18 months, Anton turned the publication around. Now, it is the way it should be – Web-to-Print. The news, stories, video clips and blog posts are constantly being added to the brand new website which, I may be biased but I think so, totally kicks ass!
Then, the best pieces get prepared for hardcopy print and get printed in the completely redesigned newsletter, for those who prefer to read on paper (or still have not discovered the ‘On’ button on their computers).
Anton describes the process in his own words. So, if you grab that RSS feed or make a bookmark, you will always be up-to-date on what’s happening at Duke Medicine.

Do we need a bloggers ethics panel?

Remember this?
Well, apparently that blog post (not mine, but the source) raised quite a lot of hackles, so much that the PBS Obmudsman had to step in and try to explain:

But, I have serious problems with the episode that unfolded recently in which a journalism student at New York University, Alana Taylor, authored a Sept. 5 posting as an “embedded” blogger on MediaShift, writing critically about her class content and professor at NYU without informing either the teacher or her classmates about what she was doing. The headline read: “Old Thinking Permeates Major Journalism School.” This column attracted a lot of online attention and controversy, not to mention attention by the professor, Mary Quigley, who was not happy. Glaser then wrote a follow-up column on Sept. 17 about the controversy, headlined “NYU Professor Stifles Blogging, Twittering by Journalism Student.”
The controversy was brought to my attention by Adam Penenberg, an assistant professor at NYU and chairman of the journalism department’s ethics committee, who raised numerous journalistic challenges to Taylor’s “embedded” role and reporting techniques and also questioned whether this was not a violation of PBS’ own editorial standards. That’s where I came in.
This is a complicated issue involving all sorts of free speech and privacy issues, respect for other students’ rights, private versus public institutions, and also whether the classroom should be a place where every word can be recorded, personal opinions introduced, and put on the Web without anyone but a blogger knowing about it beforehand.
I think that teachers and professors need to be accountable for what they say in class, and certainly student blogging (after class would be my preference) can be a useful tool in helping to improve struggling courses, reinforcing those that are really good, or simply expanding ideas and discussion.
But the issue here for me is that Taylor was not just an undergrad posting her observations on her own blog about her journalism class, called “Reporting Gen Y.” Rather she was hired — although not for money, according to Glaser — by Glaser as an “embed” to write for MediaShift. So Taylor’s post did not simply join millions of other postings in the blogosphere by individuals that may or may not have many readers. This one was sponsored by PBS’s MediaShift and had immediate access to the huge PBS.org audience.
Furthermore, this was a journalism student in a journalism department who did this without either telling the teacher what she was doing or who she was doing it for, without asking permission of the teacher or other classmates (one classmate is quoted anonymously, also not a great journalistic habit to get in to), without checking content or asking for the teacher’s views of the author’s critical assessments, and without, of course, identifying her national connection to PBS. Glaser, wrote Penenberg, assigned this NYU junior “to go undercover in one of her classes to blog about her impressions for PBS.” That is more straightforward language in this case than “embedded,” but it sounds right to me.

What do you think?

‘If Blogging Had No Ethics, Blogging Would Have Failed’

Jay Rosen. Makes you think. Watch the video here (no idea why there is no embed code#$%%^&*) and read the accompanying blog post here.

The number one reason why journalists should blog is that it tutors you in how the Web works. You learn about open systems, and getting picked up; you become more interactive and have to master the horizontal part– or your blog fails. Fails to stick.

As I like to say often – “blog is software”. But there is more – watch the video.

ConvergeSouth program change

Since BlogHer cancelled several parts of their Fall Tour, including the one in Greensboro, this does not mean that you go home on Friday night after ConvergeSouth as there WILL be a Saturday program, says Sue.

Look! Shiny!

Tom Tomorrow gets it right:
tomtomorrow.jpg

How To Digest News

How to deal with the ‘information overload’:

Your weekend reading on Media and Politics

Too long, thus under the fold – enjoy, think, bookmark for later, use:

Continue reading

This is how media should have talked about McCain all along

Via:

Journalism schools behind the times

Alana Taylor is in J-school at NYU and is not happy with the way she gets unprepared and mis-prepared by the old-timey professors for the journalism of the future:

What is so fascinating about the move from print to digital is the freedom to be your own publisher, editor, marketer, and brand. But, surprisingly, NYU does not offer the kinds of classes I want. It continues to focus its core requirements around learning how to work your way up the traditional journalism ladder. Here is the thinking I find here:
1. Get an internship at a magazine or newspaper. “This is good for your resume.”
2. Bring the New York Times to class. The hard copy. “It’s the only way to get the news.”
3. Learn how to write for a magazine or newspaper. “Writing for blogs or websites is not journalism.”
4. Become an editor at a magazine or newspaper. “This is the only respectable position.”
Obviously, I am being a bit facetious here, but the truth of the matter is that by the time my generation, Gen Y, gets into the real world there will be a much higher demand for web-savvy writers and thinkers than traditional Woodwards and Bernsteins.
I was hoping that NYU would offer more classes where I could understand the importance of digital media, what it means, how to adapt to the new way of reporting, and learn from a professor who understands not only where the Internet is, but where it’s going.
—————————
Again, I don’t expect her to be an expert on the world of social media, but for some reason I am unsettled at the thought of having a teacher who is teaching me about the culture of my generation. For example, she said one of the character traits of our generation was an unwillingness to interact with people face to face because we “spend so much time online.”
In my experience, the Baby Boomers often think the Quarterlifers are anti-social because they socialize on Facebook and MySpace. I would argue that we actually spend more time interacting with others than the previous generation who didn’t have many forms of communication and typically spent more time sitting in front of the television or with a couple of the same old friends. For our generation it’s easier to get in touch, organize a meetup, throw together a party, ask someone out on a date.

Is it better at other J-schools? How about UNC?
[Hat-tip: Jay on FriendFeed]

They are answer-less and fumbling


Believe it or not….

…but I have not seen even one minute of the DNC convention this year. I cannot escape some commentary on blogs and FriendFeed, though, and feel I have enough information.
Btw, I may be on TV tonight. News at 11 (literally). Stay tuned.

10 Alternative Ways To Follow Democratic Convention News

Links by Myrna the Minx, something for you to bookmark and use. I’ll probably use FriendFeed and visit some of my favourite blogs (including Pam and the Blenders who will be there – see the NYTimes article about the bloggers at the Convention).

When AP makes a funny typo.

Try this search but click on “Sorted by date with duplicates included”:
Lieberman2.JPG
(Click here to see enlarged)
Hat-tip to Anonymoses (also see Kevin Z)

Fairness Doctrine Panic

Fairness Doctrine Panic hits FCC, spreads through blogosphere:

The Fairness Doctrine will come up again and again over the next few years–mostly invoked by Republicans. Barack Obama says he opposes the Fairness Doctrine. But expect everything that he asks of broadcasters and the Internet to get called the Fairness Doctrine anyway. You can also expect conservatives to see the Doctrine in any telecom proposal that sounds too regulatory: requiring a minimum of local radio fare, restrictions on product placement, caps on how much junk food advertisers can hawk to children on digital TV, etc. All these sinister ideas, plus net neutrality, will be boiled in the same rhetorical broth.
In the final analysis, this debate isn’t about an extinct FCC policy. Right now it’s about scoring political points. And, most importantly, it’s about prolonging the fantasy that our nation’s broadcasting/telecommunications infrastructure can effectively serve us without government playing a constructive role.