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Al Jazeera gives the public a chance to ask the questions for Cameron interview

February 21st, 2011 | No Comments | Posted by in Broadcasting, Editors' pick, Politics

A series of monthly interviews with leaders across the world that gives the public the chance to ask the questions will feature David Cameron on 25 February.

World View, an Al Jazeera series, asks for questions to be sent in either by video or text.

More information on Al Jazeera’s YouTube channel at this link.

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Media Week: H Bauer and Bauer Media in joint bid for BBC magazines

February 21st, 2011 | No Comments | Posted by in Business, Editors' pick, Magazines

Bauer Media and H Bauer have reportedly joined forces in a bid for BBC Magazines – the first major link-up of the two Bauer businesses in more than three years.

H Bauer, whose titles include Take A Break, bought Emap’s consumer magazine and radio division – including Grazia, Heat and Q – in a £1.14bn deal in December 2007 and renamed the division Bauer Media. But until now, the two parts of the business have remained very separate.

Now, according to Media Week, the two Bauers are in joint talks about buying BBC Worldwide’s 50 magazine titles, which are up for sale.

BBC titles such as Radio Times would sit comfortably in the H Bauer stable alongside TV Choice, while titles such as Top Gear are firmly in Bauer Media territory.

A BBC Magazines spokeswoman said the company hoped to draw up a shortlist of a bidders in the coming weeks and finalise any deal in the summer.

Any sale would need the approval of the BBC Trust, which is due to announce the appointment of its new chairman shortly.

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#Tip of the day from Journalism.co.uk – social media metrics

February 21st, 2011 | No Comments | Posted by in Top tips for journalists

Twitter: This article on Poynter offers some useful examples on social media strategy and the ways journalists from different outlets use metrics to measure the success of their Tweets. Tipster: Rachel McAthy.

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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#jpod: The week’s top news stories from Journalism.co.uk, 18 February 2011

February 18th, 2011 | No Comments | Posted by in Journalism, Podcast

Listen below for this week’s news round-up from Journalism.co.uk senior reporter Rachel McAthy and sign up to our iTunes podcast feed for future audio.

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OJB: Bella Hurrell on data journalism and the BBC News Specials Team

February 18th, 2011 | No Comments | Posted by in Data, Design and graphics, Editors' pick

Online Journalism Blog’s Paul Bradshaw asked Bella Hurrell, specials editor with BBC News Online, how data journalism was affecting their work for a forthcoming article.

Read her full response on the OJB site at this link.

As data visualisation has come into the zeitgeist, and we have started using it more regularly in our story-telling, journalists and designers on the specials team have become much more proficient at using basic spreadsheet applications like Excel or Google Docs. We’ve boosted these and other skills through in house training or external summer schools and conferences.

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Blood and Dust: Vaughan Smith on the rescue teams saving lives in Afghanistan

February 18th, 2011 | 1 Comment | Posted by in Broadcasting, Editors' pick

Frontline Club founder and freelance filmmaker Vaughan Smith has produced a new film following two weeks embedded with the US Army’s 214th Aviation Regiment in Afghanistan.

The film, produced for Al Jazeera’s People & Power series, follows the trials of a US military air ambulance crew as they attempt to save the lives of soldiers, local nationals and Taliban fighters alike.

“I have done a fair number of military embeds in Afghanistan over the last few years,” says Smith, “but was concerned that I hadn’t filmed the suffering of war, just its machinery.”

“I have worked with Al Jazeera on this because I couldn’t find another news broadcaster in Britain that would show the film without cutting out the stronger images. I have huge respect for the way Al Jazeera as a broadcaster engages the world while so many others appear to retreat from it,” he adds.

Media Briefing editor Patrick Smith says: “What I enjoy about Vaughan’s work is its absence of politics. A BBC, Sky or CNN journalist may frame a report around whether the troops should be at war or not. This is just a document of professionals at work, doing their job, stitching people up in the most unimaginable heat and horror.”

More information on the Frontline Club site at this link.

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#Tip of the day from Journalism.co.uk – teaching journalism ethics

February 18th, 2011 | No Comments | Posted by in Top tips for journalists, Training

Teaching journalism: PBS MediaShift offers some thoughts from Stephen Ward on the principles he believes the teaching on journalism ethics courses should be based on, in terms of content and format, such as helping students with reflective engagement and offering historical perspective. Tipster: Rachel McAthy.

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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Innovative Portuguese daily i wins best designed newspaper award

February 17th, 2011 | 2 Comments | Posted by in Design and graphics, Newspapers

Portuguese daily newspaper i (short for informação, not to be confused with the new bite-sized Independent), has been named the world’s best designed newspaper by the Society for News Design.

Judges in the 32nd annual Best of Newspaper Design Creative Competition said that the paper “stood out for its ability to take the best of the visual language of newspapers, magazines and other publications and create something new that is more than the sum of its parts”.

It’s compact. It’s fresh. It’s consistent, yet full of surprises. Its magazine-like size allows the reader to hold the newspaper close; the format invites the reader to engage more deeply. The publication is packed with information, yet extremely well organized, using elements of layering and editing to draw readers into every page.

i, which is closer to a magazine in format and is stapled, launched in May 2009, aiming to experiment as much as possible with design and layout. “”We just don’t care,” said Martim Figueiredo, publisher and editor of i, at the 2009 World Association of Newspapers (WAN) conference.

“There are no obligations. The only obligation of our news team is to target what people want each morning (…) we organise the news so that people don’t get lost.”

The paper also launched with the idea of targeting an untapped audience. According to a report from the Editors Weblog in 2009, 23 per cent of i’s readers had not regularly read newspapers before.

The title won European Newspaper of the Year in the 2009 European Newspaper Awards.

See a slideshow of images of i at this link.

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Hilary Clinton’s net freedom speech: analysis from Index on Censorship

Press freedom organisation Index on Censorship has consulted a number of experts over US secretary of state Hilary Clinton’s recent speech on internet freedom.

They include Chinese internet activist Wen Yunchao and former Guardian head of digital and Tow Center professor Emily Bell, who says:

There are many contradictions in how the US government has tackled the issue of the internet; from a rather ambivalent approach to net neutrality, through the involvement in industry of providing cyber security to overseas repressive regimes, to its extremely hostile reaction to the Wikileaks disclosure of diplomatic cables …

The irony of the timing of the speech was not lost on the Twitterverse. As Clinton spoke, lawyers from the department of justice were defending their pursuit of information on Wikileaks operatives, which involved ordering platforms such as Twitter to hand over user data on individuals it linked to the organisation.

Full post on Index on Censorship at this link.

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#Tip of the day from Journalism.co.uk – interactive video

February 17th, 2011 | No Comments | Posted by in Top tips for journalists

Looking for inspiration on innovative ways to use video in storytelling? The 10,000 Words blog offers some examples of how interactive video that allows the viewer to experience a scene from ‘an infinite number of angles’ is being used online, resulting in greater engagement. Tipster: Rachel McAthy.

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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