Archive for October, 2007

Mindy McAdams advice on liveblog

October 12th, 2007

Have been meaning to blog more about this for a while, but things have got me tied up.

The SU elections are coming up very soon. As I’ve written previously, we’re going to attempt some live coverage of the event.

I emailed blogging expert Mindy McAdams to gather some advice. She very kindly replied with these tips which I’d like to share:

1. Contents of the video: Talking heads are sooooo boring! What will the video be about?

2. Editing video is very time-consuming. Planning up front means less time wasted in the editing process. Shoot LESS, and then the editing goes more smoothly.

3. Stacks of mini discs on somebody’s desk: Audio also requires editing. Heaps easier than editing video, but still, it does take time. So if each of your reporters would download Audacity and my short how-to guide, they could edit their own audio, and it would all be ready sooner.

Cracking advice. Video content is not something I’ve thought about too greatly, I must admit, as it is an area of journalism I’m not too good with. For that reason, I’ll be enlisting the help of Danny Clough to direct the TV side of coverage. He’s not aware of this yet, mind, but he’ll be more than up to the task.

Talking heads, as Mindy said, are boring. Mike Beddoes at the SU suggested we cover the ‘hustings’ instead. Hustings, apparently, are debate and Q+A sessions for the candidates. I never knew. Anyway, it will be much more exciting to have video footage of the candidates being grilled. What’s more, this gives us the chance to get a ‘practice’ run in — hustings is a few days before the election result night.

Of course, I’m still keen to get some more advice. I’ve started to set up the site for the coverage at www.thelinc.co.uk/elections/ … obviously it hasn’t been fiddled about with just yet.

While on the subject of The Linc, Issue 4 is now safely tucked into newsstands. Hurrah. Could have killed myself over some of the typos though. That’s what happens when you produce a newspaper at stupid hours I guess. Still, I’m pleased with it.

Setanta not paying lower league clubs?

October 11th, 2007

This is from the match day programme at York City on Saturday:

We are particularly disappointed as a club that having appeared on television three times this season that we have not yet recieved payment due for any of these games. In addition to that we have not yet recieved the payment for appearance on television from our games with Morecambe at the end of last season in the play-offs.

Those words come from the finance director at York. The playoff games he speaks of were covered by Sky, but the other three were this season in the Conference — covered by newcomers Setanta Sports.

I wonder if the other clubs have received their money?

It’s just not cricket

October 10th, 2007

It’s nothing to do with the media — sorry — but I just had to share with you this effort from my housemate Nick: The University of Lincoln Cricket Society Initiation Night Rules. (Word doc)

Bedlam.

Hooray! It’s ShortList Thursday!

October 7th, 2007

Aah, the intricacies of distributing a free magazine…

More responses to Jurassic Newsrooms

October 4th, 2007

A few more responses have cropped up from around the blogosphere. Most notably from Roy Greenslade.

More on Roy’s comments later, but first, I’ll turn my attention to Linda Jones’ posting:

STUDENT (and freelancewritingtips.com contributor) Dave Lee takes Phillip Knightley to task for saying that ‘print journalists should just do print.’

In his post calling for journalists to face up a changing media landscape, alongside illustrating it with an image of nauseating bloke in a purple dinosaur suit, Barney, (last seen on the telly in this house singing Yankee Doodle Dandy before us common folk could afford DVDs) Dave asserts:

Sadly, I’m sure Knightley is one of a huge number of journalists that share the same view. They’re stuck in the past. He criticised computer-aided-reporting as being a poor way of working. No way. What better way of gathering the opinions of thousands than through the internet? Get out and talk to people, by all means, but remember what your goals are.

I really can’t follow Dave’s argument here – remember what your goals are? My goals are to tell people’s stories. I’m not going to be doing that very well by continually shouting out for case studies online, emailing questions and trusting what I find on Google or Wikipedia.

It’s the testimony of a single witness to an atrocity, say that can often make the most difference, or the compelling and painful story of a survivor. And to get that we erm, need to talk to them, yes we can get in touch through a blog, or make a podcast – but these are just the means of contact and delivery. The basic journalistic skill, that Knightley evidently has in spades, is getting the best out of the interviewee – however that interview is fixed up, or reported. How much do such new media methods really add to knowing what questions to ask and getting the answers needed?

What we have here is a question of purpose. The goals I speak of are incredibly simple. There are only two: 1) Tell the story in the best possible way and, 2) Do it in the quickly.

Now when I say quickest, I’m not saying we should all rush out stories as soon as we can. No no. As reporters, we must take time to carve out the story to its fullest potential. However, there is a lot to be said for finding something out and then telling people as soon as possible. I like that sort of journalism. I’d be pretty miffed off with a reporter that holds back an important story in order to persue an added quote. Tell us the facts — and add the quote later. The internet allows us to do this so so easily, newspapers not so.

New media methods add a huge tool to the reporters arsenal. I’m not dismissing traditional journalism. In fact, I don’t really like calling it traditional journalism at all: It’s journalism, full stop. What I’m saying is do both. The internet can help you find better interviewees. New angles. Extra facts. You can approach stories that you know little about, find some debate on the web, and find yourself awash with opinions and knowledge.

Yes, go out and talk with people, it’s essential. But the internet is the greatest tool we have. To question its value is ridiculous. Oddly enough, I know Linda does use the internet extensively to get case studies and leads — so I’m not sure where her argument stems from.

Here’s what Roy Greenslade said:

Naturally enough, I’m with Lee on the journalistic value of the internet. I’m also surprised that Linda doesn’t grasp that the reason we have come to appreciate faceless, nameless contributions is precisely because they come from people who are out there, talking to other people and witnessing events.

Where I depart from Lee’s argument, and wonder if he has been carried away with a misplaced missionary zeal, is his desire to dispense with the kind of journalistic qualities that Knightley represents: dedication, diligence and the desire to delve and dig for months on end.

I’m not for a moment wanting to dispense with the journalistic qualities that Roy mentions here. I’d be a fool to want that to happen.

There needs to be a distinction between using computers and the internet to aid reporting, and using computers and the internet do a report. At my university, you’ll find some great student journalists. I’m looking forward to reading and watching information and seeing some old coursemates popping up all over the place — because they will. These journalists are the ones that actively report on stories. They’ll ring people, visit people, invite interviewees out for a sly pint or five in the attempt to grab a slightly better quote. We all love it.

But, inevitably, there will always be student journalists that regard Google as their informer, and email as their number one form of contacts. It’s horrible. I’ve had ‘budding’ reporters report back to me after being assigned a news story for The Linc saying: “Oh, I haven’t got any quotes, because they didn’t reply to my emails.”

I scream a little inside, and drop the story, naturally.

Sadly, I think a lot of the people commenting on my blog posting about Knightley associate computer reporting with that kind of scenario. Lazy, bad journalism.

But those who fully utilise the internet to report do, I’d argue, a better job than people who don’t.

Knightley added to his comments about print journalists just doing print by saying that journalists are now too busy faffing about setting up cameras and blogs to concentrate on the reporting. What I’d be inclined to think about that comment is that for someone who perhaps isn’t entirely comfortable with using that equipment it’s a big burden. I fear Knightley’s argument that the technology isn’t neccessary actually arises from a problem of not feeling confident in using it. It adds complications.

But, modern journalists shouldn’t be like this. It’s a piece of cake to turn on a camera. There is no reason why we can’t all be multimedia journalists.

Anyway, again, thank you for all your comments. The lecture was recorded — and I’m trying to get hold of the recording so I can share it with you all.

If any of you are in and around the Lincoln area on Monday, the next guest lecturer is David Woodfall. Richard Keeble emailed me the details:

David Woodfall has worked for 20 years as a photographer specialising in issues concerning our relationship with the natural world. He has won a number of international awards including sections in the BBC Wildlife Photographer of the Year award  and Natures Best (USA). He set up the agency Woodfall Wild Images, www.woodfall.com in 1995 and this now represents 130 photographers around the world specialising in environmental issues, wildlife, landscape and conservation issues. In 1995 BBC Wildlife magazine described him as the poet laureate of British and Irish landscapes. He is mostly glad to support Swansea City.

It will be held in the Cargill Lecture Theatre at the University of Lincoln at 6pm. Drinks and nibbles afterwards.

Jurassic Newsroom (cont.)

October 2nd, 2007

My response comes from this post yesterday. Thought I’d give it a bit more prominence.

Thanks, everyone, for your comments.

Linda Jones: Dave, so a man who helped break stories such as as the Kim Philby spy scandal, the Profumo sex scandal and the effects of thalidomide on babies comes to your university and talks about how he’d like to see a continuation of ‘quality journalism,’ good on him I say – but that could come from all sorts of means now, couldn’t it? I don’t think that makes him a dinosaur, he could teach all of us a lot, much more than Barney, that’s for sure.

No I don’t think trusting what a load of faceless people you have never met who get in touch through the internet will ever be a substitute for getting out and talking to people.

What exactly do you mean by:

Get out and talk to people, by all means, but remember what your goals are.

Of course people care if reporters are brilliant.

It’s not clear from your piece what else Knightley said except for ‘print journalists should just do print.’ I can see why that would cause uproar, but I’m really not sure that he should be criticised so harshly for having an opinion based on years of experience at the top of a profession you are aspiring to enter.

Linda, I’m not disputing Knightley’s track record. It’s incredible. What I do dispute, however, is the hypocritical manner in which he presented his thoughts. “Become better journalists” was his message, yet he was against the use of technology to achieve this.

Ask yourself: What are the most poignant pieces of journalism in the past 12 months? Who produced them? When you think of the coverage of the July 7th bombs, what footage sticks out in your mind? I bet it’s the one with people in the tunnel, shot with a mobile phone…

For me, the hanging of Saddam Hussein is proof enough that conventional journalists just can’t do their job without the help of Joe Bloggs (Joe Blogs?). If we didn’t have that grainy footage of Saddam’s hanging, would we really understand the extent of how barbaric it was? The ‘official’ footage of Saddam’s hanging was so censored it was like making stone into sponge. How frightening, I thought, that none of the news organisations pressed for more footage/sound from the official source. They KNEW it existed.

I disagree with the notion that people care about reporters being brilliant. In my opinion, people care about REPORTS being brilliant — not reporters. Big difference I’d say. Knightley recalled that back in the day newspaper journalists were sometimes as famous as the people/events they were writing about. Knightley clearly longed for such days to return. Good riddance to them, I say. When journalists become more important than the story, then mistakes have been made. I cringe everytime I see “Lunchtime News with Kay Burley” on Sky News. Who gives two hoots if it’s Kay Burley?

Nigel Barlow: Burma is a great example of how citz journalism works.It has been difficult for Western journalists to enter the country and has been for decades.The last atrocities in the late 80’s resulted in thousands of deaths,vaguely reported and the junta stayed in power.Now with the advent of the internet and mobile phones,the news has got out that much quicker.The result?Uneccessary deaths probably avoided and the world is more aware of the problem……

Nigel, I couldn’t agree more. Knowledge is power etc. Put knowledge in the hands of the people and the only thing that can come from that is good. Even if it takes a while.

Pat Smith: Good points Dave. If Knightly thinks that “print journalist” as a specific profession will even exist in 10 years, he’s living in cloud cuckoo land. Reporters from local weeklies, big city regionals to the nationals are all doing video, print, web, audio, etc… so get used to it.
Case in point – Press Association doesn’t appoint wire journalists anymore, just multi-media journalist. And they’re the guys writing most newspapers anyway.

Patrick — that’s interesting about PA. Makes sense though. One of Knightley’s gripes (if I may call it that) was that print journalists are now being asked to fanny about with video cameras when conducting interviews. I don’t see that as a problem — unless, of course, you’re not confident in using them, which I feel may be the problem that is rooted deep within many working (and student) journalists.

For those that don’t understand social networking and why it’s brilliant

October 1st, 2007

EDIT: Whoops! Seems you folks using Internet Explorer (boo hiss etc) lost the sidebar on this site because of the social networking clip. So I’ve got rid. If you want to see it, click here.

The Good Old Days

October 1st, 2007

“Print journalists should just do print.”

Who said that? Phillip Knightley. The room practically exploded. Is this man serious?

Knightley’s guest lecture tonight (at the University of Lincoln) was a clear reminder of the old-fashioned dinosaurs that still lurk in today’s journalism. His lecture, which should have been titled ‘The Good Old Days’, analysed the decaying quality of journalism in the UK — a fair point — but badly put.

He insisted that coverage from Burma would have been better produced by foreign correspondents, and not, as it has panned out, citizen journalists. It would provide better coverage, he said.

Here are your options: Boring, long distance shots of conflict with a voice over and then a quiet piece to camera, or, footage from within the conflict, capturing every emotion of the protests in harrowing — but neccessary — detail.

I know which I’d prefer.

In Jon Snow’s autobiography (which comes highly recommended), he tells of how some journalists in foreign countries would simply stay at the hotel and wait for news to come in on the wire. Then, when they know the story, they’d head out to film their piece to camera before calling it a night. This seems to be happening in Burma now. I’m not blaming these journalists, as it’s a very dangerous place, but for an experienced journalist like Philip Knightley to come out with such a ludicrous statement has really baffled me.

Sadly, I’m sure Knightley is one of a huge number of journalists that share the same view. They’re stuck in the past. He criticised computer-aided-reporting as being a poor way of working. No way. What better way of gathering the opinions of thousands than through the internet? Get out and talk to people, by all means, but remember what your goals are.

Knightley seemed to long for the good old days of newspaper journalism. Where people read the newspaper and enjoy its writers. He cited India as a good example of how newspapers can take off — the popularity of papers over there is massive.

Knightley seems to think a shift in journalism styles will bring readers flooding back. What he doesn’t realise is that people DON’T CARE. They don’t care if a reporter is brilliant. All readers want is the best source for news. Which, I’m afraid to say Mr Knightley, is the internet.