The future of journalism is here. Right here. Wait, I am sure it's around here somewhere. Has anyone seen the future of journalism? I left it right here. Hey this isn't funny. Am I being punk'd?
Friday, November 6, 2009
Going it on their own - or - Will internet kill the television star?
Monday, November 2, 2009
Would you have published the Derrion Albert video?
Should FOX Chicago have aired the disturbing video of 16 year-old Derrion Albert being beaten, resulting in his death, during a violent outburst outside of a Chicago school? Obviously the question is much larger than this single incident. Just weeks before the Derrion Albert video aired, a similar debate arose around the AP’s decision to share a graphic photograph of a wounded
Before you decide - Check out these two news reports from Fox Chicago. The broadcast on the day of the killing is before the channel received the video - http://bit.ly/3ulR0z. The following day’s report includes the footage (don’t just watch the raw video that unfortunately wants to play first, click to watch the report so you can compare) - http://bit.ly/49pSqT.
Does the video help the viewer better understand the level of violence those kids live with?
Also consider this – According to kids at the school, that kind of violence had been common for months receiving little attention. After the video aired, President Obama dispatched the secretary of education and attorney general to meet with school officials and community leaders. Obama = attention (at least for a news cycle).
Think about this – The video was released along with a plea for viewers to help identify the assailants.
Next, do some online research and read some of the articles about Albert’s death. Are the stories about the tragic death of an honor student, do they stimulate conversation about the larger issue of youth violence or has the video become the story?
Finally, (like you haven’t already made up your mind) take the time to listen to FOX Chicago news director Carol Fowler explain her reasons for airing the video (talking with On The Media’s Bob Garfield). - http://bit.ly/3ZdYhJ
OK, now you can decide if it was the right decision or not.
Friday, October 30, 2009
More than advertising loses value in transition to web
A clip of Sam Zell discussing the Tribune bankruptcy on Bloomberg TV is popping up all over the place today [ disclosure – I do freelance work for Patuxent Publishing, owned by Tribune]. You can see the full clip from Bloomberg here: http://bit.ly/4a8Tlx. Yeah - he says the Tribune deal is the most money he’s ever lost (on 1 deal) and that no newspaper can survive. But people running the shorter YouTube version of the clip leave out that Zell expects Tribune to emerge from bankruptcy in the first quarter next year. However, I wouldn’t say he’s exactly enthusiastic when he says it, and he originally said it would come out of bankruptcy at the end of this year.
Looking at the cause, to the Tribune’s effect, aggregation has gotten most of the press as the slayer of the industry. Jason Fell discusses another big wrench in the works in an article called “The Value of Online Content: Practically Nothing” - http://bit.ly/4k1YO0. It is not just advertising that loses value in the transition to online. While it may be easy to dismiss this as “you get what you pay for,” look at the numbers. According to the article, Demand Media is bigger (based on visits) than cnn.com, and gotten there paying $15.00 a story. If you produce content, that has to make you sit up and say “Yikes!”
“…other media companies, which have been trying to increase the value of their content to at least match the cost of producing it, have the equation backwards. As he’s done with Demand, Rosenblatt said the trick is in cutting costs until they match market value for your content.”
– “Yikes!”
Monday, June 1, 2009
Saturday, May 16, 2009
Sunday, May 3, 2009
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
NFL Draft
You have to love newspaper journalism - from tractor pull (will post later) to NFL draft in a matter of hours. Aaron Maybin was drafted 11th by the Buffalo Bills. While the tractor pull is more my speed, it was interesting to be there at that single moment that he went from college junior to multi-million dollar NFL player. Life altering for him and his family.
Wednesday, April 8, 2009
Saturday, January 24, 2009
January 20, 2009
Inauguration day - millions crowd the mall in Washington DC to witness Barack Obama take the oath of office and be sworn in as the 44th President of the United States.
January 20, 2009 from Anthony Castellano on Vimeo.