Tag Archives: Online Journalism

A handbook to online journalism

A quick heads-up on this resource: an online reference guide for journalists: the Bighow: handbook to online journalism.

It’s quite a rough product, but some really nice touches – like the ‘quotes for journalists’ and the guides to online writing style. The ‘seven types of stories you should be doing more often’ is a nice feature too.

It’s created by Pramit Singh who blogs at http://mediavidea.blogspot.com.

We haven’t fully explored the options yet, but it looks like you can contribute yourself, once you’ve created a profile. wooden hot tubs for sale, camping pods and outdoor saunas www.balticspa.co.uk


Online Journalism Scandinavia: Online media play crucial role in Iceland’s fleece revolution

On Monday, Iceland’s coalition government collapsed under the strain of an escalating economic crisis.

However, because of widespread cross-ownership, Icelandic media is not only feeling the impact of the crisis on its advertisement revenues; it’s in the eye of the storm, and angry Icelanders have turned to turn to the web to inform each other, organise anti-government rallies and vent their frustrations.

“It’s a grassroots revolution,” said Andri Sigurðsson, a blogger and web developer.

He explained that Iceland had seen a surge in political blogs in the wake of the financial turmoil, and that people had turned to using web tools such as Facebook and Twitter to organise demonstrations and protests.

With so many people losing their jobs, this year the island is facing the highest unemployment in decades. Some have turned to blogging full time – the blogger behind Newsfrettir, for example, has started translating Icelandic news to English after being made redundant in October.

Since the country’s biggest newspaper, Fréttablaðið, along with a large portion of the rest of Icelandic media, is controlled by Baugur (the ailing investment company that also owns a large stake in Iceland’s and the UK’s retail industry); and the second biggest newspaper, Morgunblaðið, has been controlled by Björgólfur Guðmundsson (owner and chairman of West Ham FC and chairman of Landsbanki, the bank embroiled in the Icesave scandal)… the whole situation gets rather complicated.

“We’re trying to cut all our connections to Baugur. You know, the sugar daddy behind DV and Fréttablaðið was Baugur, but the sugar daddy behind Morgunbladid was Björgólfur Guðmundsson? Every media here has its problem. We had Baugur’s Jon Asgeir Jóhannesson, they have Björgólfur,” said Reynir Traustasson, editor-in-chief of Icelandic tabloid DV, pictured right.

It is against this backdrop that political blogs such as the conservative AMX.is and the socialist-green Smugan.is have grown in popularity. However, Fréttablaðið’s editor-in-chief Jón Kaldal, does not see the surge in independent sites for news and opinion as a threat to mainstream media.

“None of these are doing investigative reporting; they are just repeating what has been written elsewhere. It is an outlet for gossip and rumours. But certain internet sites have worked well to get information out of the government. When gossip breaks out on these sites, the government is forced to come out of hiding,” he said.

Yet Kaldal was not optimistic about the times ahead:

“The whole society of Iceland is in a very strange place at the moment. It’s like we’re engulfed in a thick fog, and we don’t know quite how the world will look like when it lifts. Always in a recession or downturn there is a stronger demand for effect in advertisement. The strong grow stronger during a recession. But the situation here on Iceland is so critical that I don’t know if that’s enough.”

Read more about online journalism and the media in Scandinavia at this link.

Images in this post used with the author’s permission. For more of Kristine’s Iceland images visit Flickr.

Comment is free: Can links kill?

Dan Kennedy on how the dispute over online linking between New York Times and GateHouse Media could determine online journalism’s future. “What makes this battle especially dangerous is that the Times and GateHouse are struggling not just for advantage, but for their very survival.”

Sir Christopher Meyer’s speech in full: plea to publishers to aid PCC

As reported on the main page, Sir Christopher Meyer will tonight urge publications to support the Press Complaints Commission (PCC) in its role, which he emphasises is still relevant in light of online developments and recent privacy issues. Here is his speech in full, courtesy of the PCC’s website:

“It is always a pleasure to be in Manchester – a city with a vibrant media which I have visited more than any other in England during my time chairing the PCC. It was in this very room five years ago that I launched the first of our Open Days: public meetings in the towns and cities of the UK aimed at making the PCC as accessible as possible. Then, as now, we were given all possible support by the Manchester Evening News and Paul Horrocks. One of the most respected and innovative editors in Britain, Paul was also an outstanding member of the PCC for four years.

It has always been my ambition to hold a full meeting of the PCC outside London. It is vital to get over the message that we are not a body shut away inside a metropolitan bubble, dealing with the complaints of celebrities, royals (and near-royals), and politicians. The reality is far different. We exist for all the citizens of the United Kingdom; and of the thousands who come to us for help and advice, over 90 per cent lay no claim to celebrity whatsoever.

So, tomorrow’s meeting of the PCC is an historic moment in the 17-year life of our organisation. My colleagues from the board, all/most of whom are present tonight, are the people who take the decisions under the Code of Practice: about where the public interest meets the individual’s right to privacy; what constitutes a significant inaccuracy; when payments for information can be made – in short, on how the UK’s newspapers and magazines should gather and report news in print and online.

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Which are the best of the online journalism blogs out there?

We have a Best of the Blogs page, in which we feature the best of the online journalism blogs posts.

Although we hand-select items for the Editor’s Pick each day, this selection is automated from a list of chosen blogs, and specific feeds.

It can be viewed as an RSS feed, and it also goes into our newsletter which is sent to nearly 16,000 journalists every day.

We’ve been adding and updating it recently but are there other blogs out there you think should feature? Or would you like your blog to be in it?

It would be nice to get more of an international mix over a range of subjects, covering everything from the techie to the social side of online journalism.

If so, leave your suggestions below or email judith at journalism.co.uk.

Writing a feature for Wired magazine – live

Wired magazine is publishing a blog about the commissioning and writing of a feature about Charlie Kaufman.The latest installment on September 5 sees some ‘creative brainstorming’ because Kaufman doesn’t want to sit for a photo-shoot.

The project outline on Wired.com says it’s ‘an almost-real-time, behind-the-scenes look at the assigning, writing, editing, and designing of a Wired feature.’

Wired creative director Scott Dadich’s SPD blog, The Process, explains the design side of things. It posts internal e-mails, audio, video, drafts, memos, and layouts.

The thinking behind the one-off experiment is to ‘pull back the curtain’ on the process of making magazines. See the video The Birth of Storyboard for how it all began

The Australian: Australian journalism may need government support in wake of Fairfax cuts, says veteran

Former Sydney Morning Herald editor Eric Beecher has said the government may be forced to step in to safeguard ‘quality journalism’ in Australia, following last week’s announcement by Fairfax Media of 550 job cuts.

Alternative media outlets, such as websites, will not be sufficient to plug the gap left by traditional outlets unless backing is found, said Beecher.