Archive for January, 2007

Stressful week

January 31st, 2007

Sometimes things just al go wrong at the same time.

My day yesterday began with me sleeping in; ten minutes late for my first session. Then, the piece I was supposed to have emailed to myself was swiftly forgotten – I was supposed to do it in the morning before I left. Not to worry.

The newspaper I run was due to go to print today. It hasn’t. After submitting the final proof for copy approval at the SU, there were several problems with content – trivial matters – but it meant it had to be edited.

No problem, but between leaving uni and getting home, the quark file managed to corrupt itself, and is currenly unreadable. So I’m a bit stuck. Going to get the file down to PC before the weekend, but I’m not holding my breath.

Moving on: it’s dissertation time. Gulp.

Arrived at a seminar this morning – on time, yay – to be told a little more about our dissertations. Now, I’m a bit of a last minute man (the whole newspaper copy approval proves all that), but I’m determined to not make that mistake here. After all, it would cost me my degree.

But what to do? 10,000 words takes a bit of research, and without a strict subject, I worry I’ll drift.

They always say you should write about what you know. Now, aside from a dissertation ony myself, that leaves one subject that jumps out at me: Michael Jackson.

Crazy, you might think, but I reckon I could be on to something good here. The Michael Jackson trials created the most insane media circus ever seen. Opinions flying about glossed over in fact-ish presentation.

Any suggestions?!

Old Skills

January 25th, 2007

In this post a few days back I wrote about how online journalism is taught in universities and, more specifically, how it’s taught at the University of Lincoln.

Today was my first session of the semester. Our assignment is to produce a ‘news-based’ website by the end of term – which is about ten weeks. We will be using Dreamweaver 4 and Photoshop to design and code it, with maybe a little hand-coding too if we’re gonna try and be bit flash.

Refreshing that it’s ‘news-based’, I suppose, but judging my some of the suggestions and examples given it seems like that could be a fairly loose requirement.

I know my tutor may be reading this – he asked students to email him with their blogs – so I’m guessing this is a good time to air my concerns.

My main criticism still remains: I don’t think these are skills we really need. Of course, knowing HTML is useful, absolutely, but what’s really important is the skill of news gathering for an online audience.

We will be doing some of this once our sites are up and running, but it seems the emphasis is on the technology rather than the journalism. Which is all well and good, but I know that if I were to go and write for Comment is Free, or the BBC, or any online news source I’d not be coding the pages. Those websites would hire me on the basis of my news writing skills.

It seems at the moment we’re learning old skills on old software. I’m going to leave university and have to learn it all over again. Except this time it won’t cost me £600 a term.
Internet journalism is blogs, Web 2.0, citizen journalism. It’s exciting. Botching together a page in Dreamweaver is old fashioned, and just doesn’t make sense.

Like I’ve mentioned in my post, my tutor may be reading. So I’ll add that this isn’t a lazy student rant. I want to be an online journalist. The way I see it, I don’t have much choice. When was the last time you read a newspaper front page to get up to date? Hardly ever – simply because you probably know already.

I’ve linked to this blog post before, but it’s even more relevant now. The author opens with this:

How many j-schools are permitting students to graduate with a journalism degree and inadequate skills to pursue a career in journalism?

Lincoln? I may be being a little harsh, but take a look at our unit handbook (Word, 60KB). You can read a break down of the weekly sessions there.

The reading list says a great deal:

Html 4.0 Sourcebook, Ian S. Graham 

Html 4 Bible, Bryan Pfaffenberger, Alexis D. Gutzman 

Creating Killer Web Sites, David Siegel 

Building Better Web Pages, Rebecca Frances Rohan 

Designing Web Usability, Jakob Nielsen 

A Brief History of the Future: The Origins of the Internet, John Naughton 

Weaving the Web: origins and future of the World Wide Web, Tim Berners-Lee 

Spinning the semantic web: bringing the World Wide Web to its full potential, Tim Berners-Lee 

Where are the journalism books? We’re not here to become web designers.

We’re journalists. Well, we want to be. Units like this do little to help us with that cause.

Semester B

January 22nd, 2007

Tomorrow brings the start of Semester B. The home straight, as it were. I’m over half way through my university course.

Soon I’ll have to start thinking about getting a real job. God knows.

Tomorrow we’ll find out what our assignments for the next few weeks are. My new years resolution is to actually do them before the last week. Lets see how that goes.

Please be nice to Jade Goody

January 19th, 2007
There’s something fascinating about watching Big Brother when you know that every clip is contributing to a worldwide debate. It’s incredible, and the climax of the reality TV genre.The painful fact is that we never really expected reality TV to actually be real. The cheesy phrase “The truth? You can’t handle the truth” springs to mind.

But here we are. A mirror on our society. It’s all well and good saying that Jade Goody doesn’t represent British society – which is true – but we have to come to terms with the fact that she represents some of it.

The scenes of her crying on tonight’s show really tugged at your emotions – in opposite directions. Part of you wants to feel sorry for her. I genuinely feel that Jade didn’t see the racial connotations in what she said. But the other part of you says no, don’t go easy, her comments were horrible and out of order.

This is brilliant television. I don’t mean that in a sickening way – it’s horrible seeing people get ruined like this. Tragic, car crash television. However, if ever a program gave a lesson to society, this is it.

When the first comments to Ofcom started filtering through, they were calling for the program to be stopped and taken off the air. I hope they’re eating their words now – what Big Brother has done is raised the debate. Got it all out. Everyone is talking about it.

Racism in the UK is an underlying problem. It’s not ‘out there’, we don’t tell black people to sit in a different part of the bus. No, it’s a lot deeper than that, and a lot more hard to rid ourselves of. This is because it’s racism behind closed doors. Said between friends and relatives. It is impossible to detect, too, as only when you live among people would you ever notice it. Which is why only a show like Big Brother could bring such atrocities to light – and long may it continue. If Big Brother brings all our social ills to the fray then I’m all for that.

The Big Brother saga has made me look at myself and wonder about my own views on ethnic minorities. Millions of young people across the country are no doubt doing the same thing – even if they don’t know it. Seeing Jade, Jo and Danielle learning the lesson of their lives in front of our eyes sends out a clear message: racism is not acceptable.

The beauty of Big Brother is that the public is in control – mostly. Jade said comments that were wrong – and now she has been voted off. Democracy at its best.

Rumour has it that Jade’s first interview is with the News of the World this Sunday.

I’m worried for Jade. I’m also worried about British society.

We’re all so scared that Jade has made us look like a culture of bullying that we’re going to hound her, abuse her and condemn her forever.

Isn’t that bullying too?

Panda Porn

January 19th, 2007

The Trial of Tony Blair. Big Brother. The BBC Licence fee. All issues clearly warranting attention in a blog that claims to deal with the important topics in journalism.

But I just can’t help bringing your attention to a most wonderful article I read today:

(From The Guardian/Reuters)

Podgy panda slims down for long-awaited love

A male panda at Chiang Mai zoo has been put on a diet to avoid squashing his partner during sex. Chuang Chuang weighs 150kg (23.5 stone) and is too big for 115kg Lin Hui. The zoo’s project chief, Prasertsek Buntrakoonpoontawee, said that male pandas should weigh 30kg less than their partners. The pair have been at the zoo since 2003 but show little inclination to mate. The diet includes few bamboo stems, and more bamboo leaves which are harder to chew. When Chuang Chuang hits the required weight, he will be shown videos of pandas mating to get him in the mood.

Wow. If today was April 1st, I’d be applauding a great little April Fools joke – but then maybe criticising it for being so obviously made up.

It raises three questions.

1) When did pandas stop wanting to have sex?

2) Who’s out there selling panda porn to zoos?

3) How do you get a surname like Buntrakoonpoontawee?

(For the record: The Trial of Tony Blair was brilliant, the Big Brother debate very much out of proportion, and the licence fee would remain great value for money even if it were £200 a year. But, I can see the logic in capping the increase.)

More Michael…

January 17th, 2007

The Sun are at it again.

“Will Beckhams buy Neverland?”

Haha, of course not. Posh denies it. Michael denies it (or rather..has said NOTHING, ever)…and the article even admits that Neverland Ranch is over 150 miles from L.A.

Completely made up. What’s the bloody point?

No heroes in journalism anymore

January 17th, 2007

Interesting reactions to my blog post last night.

Martin Stabe agrees:

Lincoln journalism student Dave Lee gets it: “Words are words. They take just as long to write, and are just as valuable, whether they are destined for paper or web.

And in an e-mail, he pointed me in the direction of a blog by Kevin Anderson, who I’ve learnt was the first ever BBC online journalist working outside of the UK. So if anyone knows about grasping new technologies, it’s him. An extract from his post:

There was some talk about exactly what skills students and journalists need in to compete. Do they need to learn how to code? Do they need to focus on A/V skills? Do they need to learn Flash? I’ve always been very wary about suggesting too much investment in any specific piece of software. The industry moves too fast. Instead, I’d echo what Rob Curley says:

Skillset is important. But mindset is most important.

Damn, I wish I would have said that. I’ve picked up the skillset because of my mindset. I can only think of one instance when I said: “That’s not my job.” New tasks are always an opportunity to learn new skills.

I feel if all journalism courses followed this mantra then we (students) would end up being much better off.

Ed Walker, a fellow student journalist studying at UCLan (Preston), backs up my thoughts on the website aspect of a student paper. He is involved with the excellent ‘Pluto‘, and has recently launched the online arm of the paper. It seems to be going well.

Bryan Murley (who writes this blog) encourages me to keep looking out for new heroes. In this post, he suggests some. I only really recognised Salam Pax, the Baghdad Blogger, as I have read his rather rubbish book. The content is brilliant, but really, the best thing about blogs is their immediacy. Putting them in print just defeats the point.

Anyway, I’m deviating. I think it’s a good thing that apart from Salam, none of these names jumped out at me. It’s all about the news, not the journalist. We are merely messengers. Also, the lack of fame these people are getting is a sign that there perhaps is no place for heroes in journalism anymore.

No journalist came close to giving the true account of the brutality of Saddam’s execution. But a citizen journalist certainly did – his moment of journalistic heroism had more effect on the world than any piece of journalism in the last year, but of course, I’m not going to aspire to be that person.

I need a hero!

January 16th, 2007

After reading a story about an Anglia News presenter who cocked it up a bit (it wasn’t really her fault) on the Press Gazette site, I decided to have a read of their blog which, it turns out, is now on martinstabe.com.

His latest post is criticising folk like me, young journalists that come out of university or other journalism colleges, with an apparently blinkered view on what the industry is all about.

Usually I leap to the defence of journalism students, for obvious reasons, but he (and all the people he links too in his posts) has got it spot on.

The point, in a nutshell, is that we’re leaving university with an outdated, unrealistic and somewhat romantic notion about the careers we’re heading into.

With this post he discusses, with the help of some student blogs from Cardiff, that perhaps the most conservative of all journalists are also the youngest. A confusing role-reversal – aren’t students meant to be forward thinking and enthusiastic about new things? Seems not, and the stereotype of the old ’stuck in his ways’ journalist seems to lie with the students – not the old fellas in the newsrooms tapping away at their typewriters.

In this blogs short life, I have written about my fascination with citizen journalism. I love it, and it angers me to see it dismissed by many people in the media. But when confronted with all the problems that are underlined in this fantastic post by US journalist Mindy McAdams, I realise that yes, I am coming out of university already stuck in my ways and more wiling to adopt the old-fashioned ways of working than I really should be.

Attitudes to old journalism are to be found even in the most technologically ‘hip’ places. Take The Guardian, for example. It’s my daily read. I love the fact that its website has taken up blogging with greater enthusiasm than any other British paper. But, a fee for blogs is roughly half that of a piece in the paper. Words are words. They take just as long to write, and are just as valuable, whether they are destined for paper or web. A lesser fee suggests lesser importance.

Even my own newspaper, which I founded at university, has a website that is in every way secondary to the main paper. Presently, it sits untouched, unloved and unvisited. For various reasons. Any work that was deemed not good enough for the newspaper was sent to the website as if it were some sort of consolation prize. Again, just as it was with the money side of things, words are words. If they are not good enough for the newspaper, they are not good enough full stop.

So now for my two pence.

At my University, I was asked to make unit choices at the start of my second year. My options were two of the following: Print, TV, Radio, Online/Photography. I chose Print and Online/Photography, based on a love of newspapers and an overriding fear of not being very good at speaking on camera or radio. In a questionnaire about my choices, I had to give a reason for not picking units, and I sheepishly admitted that I’d already made my mind up about my choices before even starting university – let alone year two.

What my course fails to do is emphasise that these units aren’t mutually exclusive disciplines. Print is considered to just be writing and designing – fine, but we’re using examples from papers that haven’t changed in the past ten years.

Indeed, when I asked if I could submit my tabloid design page in the style of thelondonpaper, I was advised not to. Perhaps to make their marking easier – I’d be using different fonts than the other students – but I felt it creatively restricting.
The very fact that Online and Photography are grouped as one unit (a term – 12 weeks – each) shows just how little my university thinks of their importance.

That’s scary, but I don’t blame them.

You have to ask yourself, considering the fast-paced era of change journalism is currently facing, how my lecturers are supposed to cope? They are hired on the grounds of their experience and expertise.

It wouldn’t be unfair of me to say that none of the journalism staff are experts in the web revolution. With the exception of one who teaches the online unit, but he is more of a HTML expert than a Web 2.0 one.

Which brings me to the problems with how we’re taught about online journalism. The unit focuses on building a website. Why? As an online journalist, my job would be to gather content, in its various forms, and then put it in a format suitable for the web. I won’t be making HTML pages on Dreamweaver. Not a chance.

Knowing HTML in principle is useful – but being taught to use Dreamweaver is an utterly useless skill. We’ll only end up being re-trained in a year or two. Teach us the qualities that make a good online journalist – not how to use a piece of software that will be replaced next year.
But then, if none of the staff at Lincoln are, or ever have been, skilled online journalists – I can expect nothing more.

With all this considered, it’s no wonder that students like me come out of university with the sole intention in choosing a set career in one arm of journalism.

It is worth mentioning though that Richard Keeble at Lincoln does a very good job at expanding our perceptions on journalism with the series of guest lectures at the uni (lectures are announced on that website, and open to the public).

So far we’ve had people from almost all fields of journalism, including citizen journalism. In many ways, I consider this more valuable than much of the course itself.

Updated: Apologies to Martin Stabe who I referred to originally as Michael Stabe.

Stuck up old woman

January 15th, 2007

In today’s G2 there is an article by Germaine Greer. She writes about Russell Brand.

Now, I’m a big Brand fan. I have his DVD. Which, although not as funny as his radio show, is still a great laugh. Germaine, predictably, doesn’t agree.

Lets take a quick look at the history of Germaine Greer:

(From WikiPedia)

Germaine Greer (born January 29, 1939) is an Australian academic, writer, and broadcaster, who is widely regarded as one of the most significant feminist voices of the 20th century.

You’d expect her, then, to be fairly liberal. Which I suppose she is, but not in a good way. She isn’t liberal, more argumentative. And her article on Russell Brand today makes her sound like a stuck up old woman who is struggling to come to terms with the new age of controversy and liberalism.

What a shame.

Updated: You can download the Russell Brand podcast here!

Updated: Gordon Banksy

January 12th, 2007

What a save! Get free Banksy prints on his website, banksy.co.uk

Or don’t. It’s entirely up to you. You have to print them out yourself, I’ll add, Banksy suggests printing them in the office when nobody is looking.

Sneaky little git.

Update: I’ve spent a little while looking around his site (I’m timewasting) and I’ve found one of the most profound statements on the concept of fame and celebrity:

The time of getting fame for your name on its own is over. Artwork that is only about wanting to be famous will never make you famous. Any fame is a by-product of making something that means something. You don’t go to a restaurant and order a meal because you want to have a shit.

Can’t argue with that.