Browse > Home / Archive: January 2009

MSP raises issue of reduction in newspaper advertising by Scottish government and local councils

January 9th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted by in Advertising, Newspapers

A debate in Scottish Parliament raised MSPs’ concerns with the manner in which Herald group journalists have been made redundant and forced to reapply for their jobs.

MSP Ted Brocklebank raised some additional concerns: he has asked written questions about the amount that is spent by the Scottish Government on local and national press advertising per annum, and requested similar figures from the councils.

Answers could reveal the threat to newspapers resulting from the rise in government and councils placing advertising online (via Jon Slattery’s blog).

Journalism.co.uk hopes to update on the story next week.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

Similar posts:

Web Publishist: Why group-wide templates are bad news for newspaper publishers

January 9th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted by in Editors' pick, Newspapers, Online Journalism

Ben LaMothe takes newspaper publishers that impose group-wide templates on web editors to task. “This failed mentality does not recognize one simple fact: No two publications are the same. Each have different needs, different readers and present different opportunities in terms of design and layout,” he writes. Full story…

Tags: , ,

Similar posts:

NUJ release: Union secures three-year pay deal for Telegraph journalists

January 9th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted by in Media releases, Newspapers

Deal for journalists at UK’s Telegraph group secures pay rise for three years. Full release at this link.

Tags: , , ,

Similar posts:

News channel’s cit-j footage of Oakland shooting goes viral

The video of the police shooting of Oscar Grant III in Oakland, California, has spread quickly over YouTube in the last week, greatly influencing the nature of the media reports. The most popular video is the clip that originally aired on news channel KTVU, a FOX affiliate in the San Francisco Bay Area.

WashingtonPost.com reports:

“Handheld video-enabled cameras and cell phones at the ready, alert witnesses at the scene caught the shooting and the moments that preceded it from different angles.

“In one of their videos, an onlooker yells at a woman recording the scene: ‘Put it on YouTube!’

“Local and national television stations have aired and re-aired excepts from the raw and grainy videos, which have taken on a new life online.”

Imagine if such footage existed in cases such as the UK police shooting of Jean Charles de Menezes: how would reportage or subsequent events have been different? Would the UK media have used the footage in the same way?

Also – does film like this show that we have reached a point where video quality can be disregarded when it’s a strong news story?

Watch the YouTube video ‘Bart Police shooting in Oakland KTVU report‘ here:

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Similar posts:

Experiences of using Publish2 to report the Washington flooding

As reported on the Journalism.co.uk main site, Washington newspaper rivals have joined forces to publish shared links relating to extreme flooding in the Western Washington region, in one of the first examples of ‘networked link journalism’ in action.

Journalism.co.uk contacted Paul Balcerak, assistant editor of dynamic media at Sound Publishing, publisher of the PNWLocalNews.com site.

Further to his comments in the main piece, Balcerak shares here his thoughts on using Publish2, the link journalism site and application:

What does it have over other link applications (e.g Ma.gnolia/Delicious)?
“The big selling point for me is the create-a-widget that lets you bundle links by tag and embed them (via Javascript) on your web page. Sure, if we wanted to build our own Delicious widget we could have done that, but this was already there for us and allowed us to work a lot faster.”

What benefit is it to you to work with your competitors?
“It made our jobs a lot easier, too. Pnwlocalnews is an aggregate site for all the sites under the Sound Publishing umbrella (about 35 of them, which all represent small, community newspapers).

“Our newsroom staffs aren’t huge – some consist of only a couple or few people – and to be frank, there’s just no way for us to have all the breaking news, all the time.”

At the moment a lot of US regional journalists seem to be using it (hasn’t really taken off in UK yet) – do you think it suits that environment particularly?
“I can’t really say, as I’m really not aware of how the environment outside the U.S. differs.

“I think part of it might be that it’s sort of this ‘Delicious for Journalists,’ which appeals to those who are hesitant to embrace ‘citizen journalism,’ or whatever we’re calling it. It’s more exclusive.

“For my part, it’s just another aggregate network that a ton of great journalists are on – why wouldn’t I be there?”

How could Publish2 improve its service for journalists?
“There are a few little things that could be improved (I can’t seem to find a search function to look up other people on the network) but I think the only real downside is that, well, it’s another aggregate network.

“It’s another username/password that you have to remember and log into everyday. If the Publish2 people ‘Who Make Things Happen’ could get it listed in Shareaholic or ShareThis, that might make it a little more convenient.”

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Similar posts:

News sites get social for Obama inauguration

January 9th, 2009 | 5 Comments | Posted by in Social media and blogging

To mark President Elect Barack Obama’s inauguration on January 20, news sites are plotting and planning their online coverage already:

CNN

CNN’s going for the social networking angle, teaming its live video streaming site, CNN.com Live, with Facebook. Users will be able to update their Facebook status from the CNN site and see a stream of updates from their friends.

The updates entered via CNNLive will be tagged with the hyperlink ‘via CNN.com Live’ so Facebook contacts can click through to view the inauguration site from the social network.

NPR

At the end of last year, NPR used its inside blog to put a call out for social media ways to cover the inauguration. Among the ideas mooted in the post were:

  • Citizen journalism iPhone app
  • ‘Mobcasting’ – audio recordings of voicemails left by listeners about their experiences of inauguration day
  • An inauguration #tag – for Twitter, Flickr, blog posts etc. The tag #inaug09 seems to be in use already.
  • Maps of user-generated content

More help is wanted from techies and journalists – contact Andy Carvin (@acarvin on Twitter) via the blog post.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Similar posts:

Manchester Evening News mojo captures Ronaldo crash

January 9th, 2009 | 2 Comments | Posted by in Mobile, Multimedia

The Manchester Evening News‘ decision to equip some journalists with Nokia N95 handsets has started to bear fruit, as mojo (mobile journalist) Nicola Dowling captured Manchester United footballer Cristiano Ronaldo’s recent fender bender.

Dowling’s mobile pics from the scene were supplemented with some video footage, which shows just how high quality the N95 cameras are:

According to a report on HoldtheFrontPage, Dowling’s footage and images were picked up by the Sun, BBC and Sky News.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Similar posts:

Readers begin making noises to keep Gazette in Colchester

January 9th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted by in Job losses, Newspapers

The story, ‘Lights in the sky From Gazette,’ has attracted some non-related UFO / Chinese lantern comments: ‘support’, of sorts, from readers for a call to keep the Gazette journalists in Colchester. But will it lead to a proper campaign…?

and this:

Tags: , , , ,

Similar posts:

CNN.com: Zimbabwe demands registration fees from foreign journalists

Foreign journalists working in Zimbabwe will have to pay $4,000 (USD) a year under new licensing rules announced by the country’s government.

Foreign media groups must pay around $32,000 for application, accreditation and administration as part of the new regulations.

The fees don’t apply to journalists working for Zimbabwean organisations. Full story…

Tags: , , , ,

Similar posts:

Telegraph.co.uk: B2B publisher UBM considering ‘virtual events’

January 9th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted by in Editors' pick, Events, Magazines

Group has tested running virtual events to cater for those who are less willing to travel to conferences during the economic downturn.

A trading update from UBM said its magazine advertising and events businesses had not performed as well as hoped. Full story…

Tags: , , , ,

Similar posts:

© Mousetrap Media Ltd. Theme: modified version of Statement