Tag Archives: 2009

Mediaite: Traffic has dictated online news coverage in 2009

Glynnis MacNicol for Mediaite says it should come as no shock that the media “in a year of hard news [2009] (…) has gone soft” and devoted time and coverage to “shiny distractions” of stories.

[U]ntil someone creates a new, workable business model the coin of the internet realm is traffic. And traffic is most cheaply generated by frequency and shock value, two things which are very much at odds with in-depth reporting (…) Traffic talks in the new media internet world, what it does not do yet is report and/or research whilst penning the required 15 posts per day.

Full post at this link…

Journalism.co.uk’s top 10 blog posts of 2009

Unless there’s a Christmas surge in traffic, the top 10 posts on the Journalism.co.uk Editors’ blog in 2009 are as follows:

  1. 1. Ten things every journalist should know in 2009: this list of tools and trends for journalists is essential reading for 2010 too;
  2. 2. Twitterers claim victory over loaded Daily Mail gypsy poll: how Twitterers and emailing academics nearly brought the Daily Mail’s servers to a halt;
  3. 3. Personal comments detract from original MMR/LBC debate: an update in Guardian writer Ben Goldacre’s copyright case with LBC;
  4. 4. BNP members list leak gathers pace online – to link or not to link?: a post from 2008 that came back to light after speculation of a secondary BNP members’ list leak;
  5. 5. How to: Track a conversation in Twitter: more handy hints on using Twitter from @johncthompson;
  6. 6. The $10m lawsuit against the New Yorker – Papua New Guineans challenge Jared Diamond article: the story of a a $10 million defamation lawsuit in the US;
  7. 7. Labour conference wearies political hack (and it’s only day one) #lab09: a napping Michael White caught on camera;
  8. 8. Too old to become a journalist – The NCTJ fast-track course: say so long to your social life: part of our series from then Lambeth College journalism student Amy Oliver;
  9. 9. paidContent:UK: Sun’s page 3 girls too ‘obscene’ for Apple : paidContent:UK’s story in our daily editor’s picks on why Apple rejected the iPhone app;
  10. 10. Heather Brooke thanks the Speaker for ‘making my career’/Alan Keen update: FOI campaigner and investigative journalist on her investigation into the MPs’ expenses scandal.