Browse > Home / Archive: March 2010

Guardian publishes correction… before the readers write in

A curious correction in the Guardian on Saturday: for “inappropriate language” in its Guide magazine, published in the same newspaper. It would seem that someone spotted the potential fall-out, in time for a correction in the main section but not in time to amend the Guide.

So the Guardian has in fact apologised for something before the complaints came in and my Googling would suggest there’s has been little to no online comment (correct me if I’ve missed a forum thread etc.).

The correction (Saturday 20 March):

Apology: In today’s edition of the Guide there are two instances of inappropriate language. The headline for a film article on page 17, and the section in Charlie Brooker‘s column, page 52, which begins “Take Jews” were intended to be satirical but should not have appeared in the Guardian. Brooker says that he is “aghast at the prospect of my satiric intent not being clear, or my choice of words causing genuine upset”. These elements will not appear on the website versions of these articles and we apologise for any offence their inclusion in the Guide has caused.

As outlined above, the amendments were made for the online versions. In the headline case: “Hollywood might be run by Jews, sinners and Scientologists these days, but the Catholics once called the shots” became “Hollywood might be run by Scientologists these days, but the Catholics once called the shots” for the online edition.

In the other incident, Brooker’s Jewish analogy in his piece about MTV show Jersey Shore does not appear in the online version. Brooker criticised the programme for its ethnic stereotypes of Italian Americans and re-wrote its structure with examples of  Jewish sterotypes, to explain how in another context a Jersey Shore format could be “altogether more incendiary”.

Brooker says it was satire, but it was of a kind that was later considered inappropriate by the Guardian editors. Who was right? Should the Guardian have pulled the extract?

Writing on LiveJournal, AlexS, thinks the correction was wrong:

Properly placed in the piece, this thought experiment is clearly intended to demonstrate just what a grubby little exercise Jersey Shore is. Anyone reading it in that context and failing to understand that it is satire rather than anti-Semitism is too stupid for their opinion to be worthy of consideration. But the ‘Corrections and Clarifications’ column says that while the piece was “intended to be satirical”, it “should not have appeared in the Guardian, before dragging Brooker himself on for a little Maoist self-criticism session. The Guardian: officially the paper for people too retarded or permanently offended to recognise satire.

Tags: , ,

Similar posts:

MediaPost: Louisiana judge orders satirical news item to be restored

A court in Louisiana has allowed a ‘fake’ and satirical news item to be republished, overturning a previous restraining order.

Background, as reported by MediaPost:

The publisher, Nicholas Brilleaux, had posted the item “Giraffe Claims Third Victim at Global Wildlife” shortly after news broke about the tragedy at Sea World in Orlando – where an orca whale had killed a trainer in February. The Global Wildlife Foundation complained by email to Brilleaux, which spurred him to add a disclaimer stating that the piece was a satire. But that wasn’t enough for Global Wildlife, which went into state court in Louisiana and convinced a judge to order Brilleaux to remove the piece.

Full post at this link…

Tags: ,

Similar posts:

Charlie Beckett: Do we have an information overload?

Charlie Beckett, director of think tank Polis, reports on last week’s Media CSR Forum and Polis event, In Media We Trust?

The debate questioned information overload, and how to manage media literacy – raising issues on which audience and panellists were divided. Beckett concludes:

[I] am more concerned about whether we have the curators to help shape these information flows and whether those people or organisations that do the filtering and connecting are informed by some kind of ethical value system. Data is not neutral. Information is beautiful but it is also political. Networks are powerful and so they also need to be transparent and acountable. Step forward the networked journalist, your digital public sphere needs you.

Full post at this link…

Tags: , , ,

Similar posts:

Checking your facts – to every last detail

March 22nd, 2010 | No Comments | Posted by in Editors' pick, Newspapers

Via the Fleet Street Blues blog, comes a story of intimate fact checking at the Sunday Times.

Showing that editors take their ‘There’s a part of you for every part of the Sunday Times’ motto seriously, journalist Camilla Long rang UKIP’s press officer to find out which of MEP Nigel Farage’s testicles had been removed, for yesterday’s profile feature.

The story not only reveals some meticulous journalism practice, but a disputed version of events.

Compare the two different accounts:

UKIP’s press officer, Gawain Towler:

“Look Gawain”, she said, “I am really sorry to ask you this but the editors have told me to”, “What’s that?” I said, “They want me to ask which one of his balls was removed after his cancer”.

You want odious? I would suggest even asking that question is pretty bloody impertinent and cheap, and I told her so, but she persisted. So I agreed to ask, but told her not to expect a particularly forthcoming answer. When I asked Farage, he was, unusually for him somewhat put out, but after saying that he though it a cheap shot he then he recovered his normal poise, “Tell her if she is so bloody interested that she can come over and check herself”. So I called her back and told her, both that he felt is tawdry, but if she must then that is his coment [sic].

and Long’s version:

[I] call his press officer to confirm which testicle he had removed. Farage has just given his party conference speech and is in high spirits. “Tell her to come and find out, ha-ha-ha!” he shouts over the din.

Tags: , , , ,

Similar posts:

paidContent:UK: Browser extension for beating the paywall

March 22nd, 2010 | No Comments | Posted by in Editors' pick, Online Journalism

PaidContent:UK reports on a new browser extension, BreakThePayWall.

Available for Internet Explorer and, soon, Firefox, BreakThePayWall works mainly – and merely – by deleting cookies sites use to limit the number of stories users can read before having to subscribe. Deleting the cookies means the publisher’s site forgets how close the reader is to the “pay up” threshold.

Full post at this link…

Tags: ,

Similar posts:

#Tip of the day from Journalism.co.uk – adjusting YouTube video code

March 22nd, 2010 | No Comments | Posted by in Top tips for journalists

Embedding video: If you want a video you’ve embedded from YouTube to start from a specific point – this blog post explains how to simply adjust the code. Tipster: Laura Oliver.

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

Tags: , ,

Similar posts:

Journalist makes the news for councillor assault

A story you’ll find in Newsquest’s Streatham Guardian, but not in its rival, the Tindle-owned South London Press – an extract:

A journalist from our rival newspaper the South London Press has admitted assaulting a senior Lambeth councillor at a glittering charity fundraiser.

Chief reporter Greg Truscott pushed Councillor Mark Bennett at the Mayor of Lambeth’s annual fundraising dinner, held on a cruise boat on the Thames on Wednesday, March 3.

He was cautioned by police after admitting an offence of common assault on the cabinet member for community safety, when interviewed at Brixton police station last Wednesday.

Lambeth Council has now banned him from all its buildings and events – including the town hall and the borough’s leisure centres.

Full post at this link…

Of course, it was on the blogs first…

Tags: , , ,

Similar posts:

Ken Kobre: Visual journalism trends

March 19th, 2010 | 1 Comment | Posted by in Editors' pick, Photography

Photojournalism professor Ken Kobre takes a look at Harvard’s Nieman Report and its visual journalism feature.

We had to ignore our email inbox and take the phone off the hook find the requisite time to delve into it.

Digest at this link…

Tags: , ,

Similar posts:

Telegraph cocks-up Hadron headline

March 19th, 2010 | 4 Comments | Posted by in Journalism

I’m sure we ordinarily consider ourselves above such things, but, as it is Friday afternoon on the Journalism.co.uk blog, here is a pretty regrettable subbing error from the Telegraph to brighten up your (rainy, if in the south of England) day.

The typo was amended quite quickly, as you can imagine, but not quickly enough…

Screenshot by Skepchick on Flickr

Tags: ,

Similar posts:

Future of unpaid cit-J models: Dan Gillmor and Rory Cellan-Jones (audio)

March 19th, 2010 | No Comments | Posted by in Citizen journalism, Events

I managed to grab a few minutes with both the Knight Center’s Dan Gillmor and BBC technology correspondent Rory Cellan-Jones at yesterday’s Guardian Changing Media Summit 2010 to talk about the future of community generated journalism.

Rory Cellan-Jones thinks that “the place where citizen journalism is actually triumphing is Wikipedia”.

“It is becoming an instant news agency as well as a kind of journal of record and deep explanation of events, in a way the newspapers might find difficult to compete with.” But speaking as a journalist, he finds unpaid contribution based models, such as the Huffington Post’s, a “difficult” concept.

This and more (on Spotify and predictions for 2011) in this AudioBoo:

Dan Gillmor, director of the Knight Center for Digital Media Entrepreneurship, and advisor to crowd-sourced site Spot.us, says there are questions to raise about unpaid models and sustainability. “People who run these sites should of course be fully aware there will be an ebb and flow of active users, that some people will start and then give up, and then some will be highly committed.” Citing fellow panellist iVillage network general manager Rebecca Miskin’s experience, he described how some unpaid community moderators eventually become paid employees.

Audio: Dan Gillmor on crowdsourced journalism:

Tags: , , , ,

Similar posts:

© Mousetrap Media Ltd. Theme: modified version of Statement