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Charles Apple: Newsweek photo-cropping row

Pulitzer prize-winning photojournalist David Hume Kennerly is not at all happy with the way Newsweek magazine cropped his photo of former vice-president Dick Cheney at home with his family, Charles Apple notes on his blog. The original photograph shows Cheney leaned over a chopping board, with his family in the background. The cropped version shows the vice-president only, to illustrate quotes that he made about C.I.A. interrogators.

“This incident is another example of why many people don’t believe what they see or read. And America clearly notices these shifts in journalism,” wrote Kennerly in a piece for the New York Times site. Newsweek has defended its use of the photo.

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Science journalism needs fewer science writers and more editors, says Goldacre

September 18th, 2009 | 1 Comment | Posted by in Events, Journalism

Science journalists were subject to intense criticism in a debate between science minister Lord Drayson and Bad Science blogger Ben Goldacre on Wednesday night.

Current standards of ‘dodgy coverage’ are having an impact on public health, argued Goldacre, who is a medical doctor and writes weekly for the Guardian exposing inaccurate science journalism.

He attributed the problem to a ‘systems failure’ within media organisations, with editors making ill-informed decisions about how science stories are covered.

“We should get scientists to talk about stuff in their own way. There should be fewer science writers and more editors shaping academic ideas,” he said.

Goldacre also encouraged academics to promote good public engagement from their own departments and to start their own blogs. His key criticisms against the mainstream press were a reliance on press releases and a failure to engage with the ‘nerds’, he said.

“There is nothing out there for the people who did biochemistry 10 years ago and now work in middle management at Marks & Spencer,” he said.

But Drayson insisted there was an ‘admirable and improving standard’ of science reporting in the mainstream press, saying that Dr Goldacre’s criticism ‘risks undermining’ the trust between the academic community and the media.

Sensationalism was not necessarily a bad quality in science stories, Drayson added.

“The very nature of the media means that to get that communication, it has to cut through the noise. But sensationalism must be accurate and based upon good science – I don’t see them as mutually exclusive,” he said.

Drayson also countered criticism levelled against journalists interpreting academic ideas and particularly praised specialist writers: “It’s very important for us to support our journalists within their media organisations and recognise when they are doing a good job. They are vital to the general public and we need to have this access.”

Drayson refused to be drawn when the audience raised the issue of libel laws as a barrier to investigative science journalism.

After concluding the debate, however, he did tweet his e-mail address to help those who feel misrepresented by the media.

Shona Ghosh is a freelance journalist. She blogs at http://shonaghosh.com/.

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Grey Cardigan: Notes from a regional newspaper focus group

September 18th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted by in Editors' pick, Newspapers

Press Gazette’s Grey Cardigan shares a sorry tale from his regional newspaper’s focus group – held in a Travelodge conference room. The off-the-wall complaints leave him pretty irate, but it’s the ‘normal’ who leaves him quietly crying into his cup of warm white wine. Full post at this link…

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Economics Unbound: The US journalism job market – plotted

September 18th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted by in Editors' pick, Job losses, Jobs, Journalism

On the Business Week Economics Unbound blog, Michael Mandel takes ‘a shot at assessing the state of the journalism job market’, using US government data and what he knows about ‘the dynamics of labour markets and industries’.

Part One gives us some pretty depressing graphs, charting the number of jobs from 1990-2009 in each sector:

“What we have is a wipeout in newspapers, plus what looks like a combination of secular and cyclical declines in other ‘journalistic’ industries.”

Graphs at this link…

Mandel has used statistics from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics; any ideas for how we could attempt something similar for the UK?

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Technology Review: How trustworthy is crowd wisdom?

A new study about crowd wisdom could prove useful for news sites thinking about crowd behaviour and interaction with their content.

Technology Review, published by MIT, reports on new research suggesting that crowd reviews can paint a ‘distorted picture’ of a product if a small number of users do most of the voting.

Researchers looked a voting patterns on Amazon, the Internet Movie Database (IMDb), and the book review site BookCrossings and presented findings last month at the 2009 IEEE International Conference on Social Computing.

Full post at this link…

Hat-tip: Adrian Monck (@amonck)

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Deadline.com: Variety going behind pay wall; The Hollywood Reporter could go online-only

September 18th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted by in Editors' pick, Online Journalism

Nikki Finke (who sold her media and entertainment news blog, Deadline Hollywood Daily, to Mail Media Corporation – for a figure speculated to be as much as $15m in June) reports how her rival, entertainment title Variety has decided to go behind a pay wall:

“[T]he website will no longer be free. So online and print content will both be subscriber-based. Exactly which combination of content and services will be offered has yet to be determined. But this is being done in recognition of the sad fact that, ever since Variety pulled back that paywall in 2006 (back when all that mattered was traffic numbers at the expense of subscription dollars), the trade has lost a ton of money.”

And, she says, The Hollwood Reporter could kill its print edition:

” Meanwhile, sources tell me that The Hollywood Reporter is about to dump its daily print version. The date considered was October 16th, but now that’s been moved back. So this means THR will pursue a paid web-only strategy for its content. (Though I’ve heard certain special issues will be published from time to time, including awards coverage.) If THR scraps its print edition as planned, then Variety might see its print subscriptions pick up.”

Full post at this link…

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#FollowJourn: @christiandunn/digital news editor

September 18th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted by in Recommended journalists

#FollowJourn: Christian Dunn

Who? Digital news editor, NWN Media

What? Manages the online content for a regional newspaper group publishing in north-east Wales and Chester

Where? @christiandunn and http://christiandunn.blogspot.com/

Contact? christian.dunn@nwn.co.uk

Just as we like to supply you with fresh and innovative tips every day, we’re recommending journalists to follow online too. They might be from any sector of the industry: please send suggestions (you can nominate yourself) to judith or laura [at] journalism.co.uk; or to @journalismnews.

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Mark Thompson on the defence: BBC review will be ‘radical and open-minded’

September 18th, 2009 | 2 Comments | Posted by in Broadcasting, Editors' pick

BBC director-general Mark Thompson yesterday responded to the various criticisms of News Corp’s James Murdoch and culture secretary Ben Bradshaw at the Royal Television Society’s binnenial convention in Cambridge.

While Thompson said that he agreed with parts of Bradshaw’s RTS speech and said that a ‘radical and open-minded’ review of the BBC would not dismiss the suggestion that the coporation had reached its limits of expansion, the director-general said he found some of Bradshaw’s ideas ‘frankly puzzling’.

“He [Bradshaw] set out a long list of the current BBC public services. By the way, I don’t know many broadcasters who haven’t launched multiple services over the past decade. But with one or two exceptions, these new BBC services weren’t approved by the BBC Trust. They were approved by the Government of which Ben is a member. Indeed, the Government asked the BBC to launch a range of new services to help with their policy of encouraging the public to move to digital television and radio. Ben’s surprise at these services is itself surprising.”

The speech can be read in full at this link.

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#Tip of the day from Journalism.co.uk – a guide to multimedia proficiency

September 18th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted by in Top tips for journalists

Training: Mindy McAdams’ fantastic guide to multimedia proficiency can now be downloaded in one handy PDF document. The 42-page booklet covers audio, video and slideshows, and has even been translated into Spanish. Tipster: Laura Oliver.

To submit a tip to Journalism.co.uk, use this link – we will pay a fiver for the best ones published.

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#FollowJourn: @marshagoldcoast/multimedia manager

September 17th, 2009 | 1 Comment | Posted by in Recommended journalists

#FollowJourn: Marsha Graham

Who? Multimedia manager at Hot Tomato Broadcasting Company

What? Currently working as multimedia manager for 102.9FM Hot Tomato, Australia. Her job as part of the Multimedia team at Hot Tomato is to provide people with the entertainment and information they would normally get from the station, in digital formats like the website www.1029hottomato.com.au, and social on sites such as Twitter and Facebook.

Where? @marshagoldcoast and www.marsha.com.au

Contact? mgraham [at] hot-tomato.com.au or me [at] marsha.com.au

Just as we like to supply you with fresh and innovative tips every day, we’re recommending journalists to follow online too. They might be from any sector of the industry: please send suggestions (you can nominate yourself) to judith or laura [at] journalism.co.uk; or to @journalismnews.

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