Thursday, June 28, 2012


Let’s blow up the news story and build new forms of journalism





























A complicated story told on all platforms

One In A Billion: A boy's life, a medical mystery

The 2011 Pulitzer Prize for explanatory reporting was awarded to Mark Johnson, Kathleen Gallagher, Gary Porter, Lou Saldivar and Alison Sherwood of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinal for their "lucid examination of an epic effort to use genetic technology to save a 4-year-old boy imperiled by a mysterious disease, told with words, graphics, videos and other images."


See how they packaged their story across all platforms here:

Twitter helps TTN bag the Pulitzer


How The Tuscaloosa News’ post-tornado tweeting helped bring home a Pulitzer Prize















The Pulitzer prize for Breaking News went to a small newspaper that combined old-fashioned field reporting with a new tool, Twitter, after a tornado devastated swaths of Tuscaloosa, Ala., on April 27, 2011.

Read the story here:


Check out Forbes new homepage



Inside Forbes: The 5 Reasons Behind Our Bold New Home Page


Stop the Digital Presses: 
FORBES is disrupting 
the media model for news.


I have this thing about home pages of news and information sites. They pretty much all look, feel and function the same — equal parts overwhelming, lifeless, a chore to navigate. A colleague of mine calls it “user punishment.” On CNN.com, I recently counted 315 links (373 if you include the 58 links in two drop-down menus). AOL.com, a quasi news site, asks you to click through a 40-slide module to find what might interest you. Others blind you with a mishmash of bright colors, squares, rectangles and circles. More telling, every one is a throwback to another era. Editors present their agenda as if it’s the only one that matters.


Read Lewis DVorkin's post here

5 Ways Journalists Can Use Pinterest



Does Pinterest, the digital pinboard site, have value as a tool for journalists?
Of course it does writes Elana Zak if you want to:
1. Share The News

2. Give Your Audience a Preview of What’s Next
3. Showcase Photo Galleries, Profiles, and Features
4. Show Off Your Reporting Staff 

5. Invite Readers To Participate
Read Elana Zak's post here:

What does 'digital first' really mean?

Rob O'Regan's Blog





“Digital first” is a great rallying cry for the struggling publishing industry 
– but what does it actually mean?

Read Rob O' Regan's blog here:


US students on the future of media


Speaking at The Nation/Campus Progress annual Student Journalism Conference, a range of student journalists reflect on the future of media. Where is journalism headed? What trends and technologies are changing the game? And with print in peril, is a career in journalism still worth it? Students from all over the country give their view of the changing media landscape, and the efficacy of current "J-School" curricula.

 


Wednesday, June 27, 2012








For the full report, click here

By Amy Mitchell  and Tom Rosenstiel of PEJ
In 2011, the digital revolution entered a new era.
The age of mobile, in which people are connected to the web wherever they are, arrived in earnest. More than four in ten American adults now own a smartphone. One in five owns a tablet. New cars are manufactured with internet built in. With more mobility comes deeper immersion into social networking.
For news, the new era brings mixed blessings.
New research released in this report finds that mobile devices are adding to people’s news consumption, strengthening the lure of traditional news brands and providing a boost to long-form journalism. Eight in ten who get news on smartphones or tablets, for instance, get news on conventional computers as well. People are taking advantage, in other words, of having easier access to news throughout the day – in their pocket, on their desks and in their laps.
At the same time, a more fundamental challenge that we identified in this report last year has intensified — the extent to which technology intermediaries now control the future of news.

NYT backs away from The Local

 

Five things The New York Times learned from its three-year hyperlocal experiment


 The Local was billed as an open-ended project with some specific ideas in mind. Blogs would be helmed by a couple of professional New York Times reporters, but story ideas and contributions would come from the community. If all went well, it might create a platform the Times could license to other communities.
But now The New York Times is backing away from The Local, says it doesn’t make sense to pay its staff to be in the hyperlocal business. 

Read the story here:

Best Designed Newspapers in the World



Best Designed Newspapers in the World
 6/20/2012

Politiken, Copenhagen, Denmark)
Five newspapers representing four countries were recently named the World’s Best Designed Newspapers as part of the Society of News Design’s 33rd annual World’s Best-Designed News competition.

The winners are Excelsior (Mexico City, Mexico), National Post (Toronto, Canada), Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung (Frankfurt, Germany), The Grid (Toronto, Canada), and Politiken (Copenhagen, Denmark). The publications were chosen from 230 entries from 39 countries.

Papers were judged on writing, visual storytelling, use of resources, execution, photography, illustrations, graphics, headlines, and the paper’s “voice.” Each entrant submitted five complete issues from five different months of the year.

Excelsior won for the first time with “sophisticated typography, bold color palette, and overall visual energy.”

The Post celebrated its third win. Judges said, “(The Post) lures its readers in with a sultry beauty and then captivates them with an authoritative attitude that makes this Canadian daily a must-read.”

FAS was commended for its “excellent photojournalism, vibrant illustrations, and clear, direct information graphics,” while The Grid surprised judges with “sparse but great inside photography on full spreads.”

A previous winner in this category, Politiken once again wowed judges with its “thoughtfulness to the cropping and editing of photographs with designers using full width of pages for impact.”

Eric Alterman - Does Print Journalism Have a Future?



Watch this short interview with Eric Alterman from CUNY on the future of print journalism

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

John Paton's wise words

John Paton
CEO of the Journal Register Company

 
"As career journalists we have entered a new era where what we know
and what we traditionally do has finally found its value in the marketplace
and that value is about zero.
Our traditional journalism models and our journalistic efforts are inefficient
and up against the Crowd – armed with mobile devices and internet connections- incomplete.
Our response to date as an industry has been as equally inefficient and in many cases emotional.
'You’re gonna miss us when we’re gone' is not much of a business model."

Read the whole blog here:

CAN THE GUARDIAN SURVIVE?


CAN THE GUARDIAN SURVIVE?




Newspapers are in crisisyet they have greater reach than ever before.
And nowhere is this truer than at the Guardian, the paper that revealed the phone-hacking scandal. Tim de Lisle follows its triumphs and tribulations and talks to its editor...
From INTELLIGENT LIFE Magazine, July/August 2012

Is Journalism's Digital Future Going to be About Quality, or Junk?

In Print or Online, Newspapers Tarnish Their Brand by Offering Readers Less

By , About.com Guide



"I don't really care how my news is delivered. I just want solid reporting, sparkling writing
and a sense that the nooks and crannies of my community,
from the city council to the courthouse,
are being watched by a reporter
somewhere. "

Fit to print - laid off journalists speak




Laid off journalists speak out about the death of newspapers in the upcoming documentary "Fit To Print." 


State of the Media 2012

 Good graphic on the State of the Media
from the Pew Research Centre's Project for Excellence in Journalism

http://stateofthemedia.org/2012/mobile-devices-and-news-consumption-some-good-signs-for-journalism/infographic/

What is it that journalists do? It can’t be reduced to just one thing


What is it that journalists do? It can’t be reduced to just one thing