Archive for October, 2008

Blue Square are an embarrassment to football

October 25th, 2008

The Blue Square Premier division — formerly the Football Conference, the 5th tier of English football — is not known for high-standards on the pitch.

But it wouldn’t be unfair to expect professionalism off it.

Yet, the league’s sponsors, Blue Square, seem hell bent on making it hard for themselves.

All through last season, fans from Blue Square Premier (BSP) clubs were taking part in local keepy-uppie competitions. Two fans would go on to compete in the final at Wembley, taking place the same day as the playoff final.

So far, so good, and the prize money was a massive £100,000 for the winner, plus £20,000 to his favourite BSP team.

It got to final day. The two keepy-uppie hopefuls were led onto the pitch to compete one last time. But, and here’s the crucial bit, the competition was changed. No longer was man vs man in keepy-uppie. Nope! Instead, each person had to try and kick a ball into a blue square. The players were one penalty area, the box was on the half way line.

In short, while not impossible, it was very, very, difficult. Believe it or not nobody won the prize, and the £120,000 stayed in the pockets of Blue Square.

Both clubs complained about the game, and Blue Square responded:

“Although the final game was difficult, it wasn’t impossible, and from a Blue Square point of view the prize money was insured to the extent that a winner would have been more beneficial to the overall competition. We were genuinely cheering on every single finalist in the hope that they would manage to scoop the prize.”

I bet you were.

But wait, there’s more.

Over on their official BSP website, their journalists have been hard at work. Yup, hard at work getting things wrong.

Take a look at this: a cock-up of epic proportions. Here’s what went wrong:

1. The journalist used the internet as his/her sole source, and didn’t fact check

2. The website wasn’t a news outlet, but one maintained by a football fan at Rivals.net.

3. The football fan in question supports Cambridge United — and the article focuses on the money troubles of Histon FC. So, the fan would have no inside links there (presumably. And you’d check, wouldn’t you?)

4. Histon FC and Cambridge United are fierce rivals. They are about 10 miles apart, if that.

So the journalist used an unverified source, from a website written by a fan of a rival club. Great work.

The saga gets deeper when you realise that the apology was made after a complaint from Histon — rather than the journalist finding out it wasn’t false. The importance of that? I’d say it’s unfair to brand a website, even a fan-written one, as inaccurate if you don’t actually check.

But, on the plus side, the site reports today that one of Cambridge’s top strikers, James Constable, has been called up the the England C squad.

Shame that James Constable in fact plays for Oxford United, and has never played for Cambridge in his life.

Nevermind.

[EDIT: The James Constable error has been corrected. I wonder if they check the web to correct their errors too?]

Full text on Guardian RSS feeds

October 25th, 2008

The Guardian has become the first major newspaper to post their articles in full in their RSS feed. Glorious news.

It’s a move that’ll delight readers, but even more importantly, it’ll delight Google. From the Google Reader blog:

This is a huge first step in making more content available in more places, and we applaud the Guardian for taking it.

There is no more important a relationship that an online presence can establish than one with Google.

Now come on, all you others, keep up.

McCain vs Obama — the dance off

October 25th, 2008

In a surprising twist in this year’s election campaign, both John McCain and Barack Obama have opted for a 4th televised battle. This time, in an attempt to woo younger voters, the candidates ditched the traditional debate format and went for… a dance off. Enjoy.


Unbelievable McCain Vs. Obama Dance-Off – Watch more free videos

Why I can never trust travel journalism again

October 22nd, 2008

Trust in the media is something we talk about on a grand scale. The Queen having a strop, for instance, or the uproar over You Say, We Pay on Richard and Judy.

We dissect the issue of trust when there’s been a major breach. But what of the minor ones?

I’ve long since got over the fact that some content is magazines is made up. Those sex stories in lads’ mags, for example, are not really sent in to the title. Rather, some delightfully imaginative staffer pens out some filthy fantasy.

It’s a white lie. A fib. I can deal with things like that, because they’re damn entertaining to read. Not a problem if they’re not true — I’m not relying on Nuts for tips in the bedroom, thanks.

I’m a lot more concerned about something I learned just this week. Over on a forum I frequent, a member posted a dilemma. A press trip to stay in a hotel (for reviewing purposes) was all set to go ahead. Booked it, packed it, etc. But then the magazine folded. The now angry hotel wants the journalist to pay in full anyway. The journalist explains:

“The hotel (a very swanky expensive one) offered three nights on a comp basis half board plus four nights on a media rate.

I’ve promised them I will try very hard to get something placed elsewhere BUT they have come back and said the hotel now wants to charge me the media rate for all seven nights and it’ll only be B&B.

So the stay will now cost me around £600-700 extra. Not good news.”

Not good news at all. But by far the most alarming part of those paragraphs were the words ‘media rate’.

One member shares my concern:

“I might be missing something here but how can you review a hotel when the hotel knows you’re reviewing it?”

To which comes this reply:

“I’d love to be able to review in secret but given my editors aren’t in a position to pay my expenses, the only way most of us can do travel pieces is by being hosted on press trips of one sort or another.”

Which is backed up further by another member:

“Straight hotel ‘reviews’ are pretty rare in travel journalism, really…they’re much more likely to be just mentioned in the fact box, with maybe a name check in the text for letting you stay for free. The nature of the assignments (ie. they would cost several thousand pounds to do) mean that in fact almost everything within travel journalism is paid for by someone other than the journalist.”

Thus rendering them useless, no? If hotel staff know you’re there to review the hotel, you can bet you’ll be getting preferential treatment. Quicker food, the best rooms, friendlier staff. In fact, I bet in the staff rooms they’ll have a list of which rooms have people paying ‘media rate’.

One member points out:

“I wonder how many negative reviews are written by journalists on freebies. It’s no wonder sites such as Tripadvisor are proving so useful.”

Quite. It goes back to a post made by former-Press-Gazette-now-PaidContent journalist Patrick Smith, who questioned the validity of film critics:

“A more extreme and amusing example of obscure film-blurbism Guy Ritchie’s not-awful-but-completely-bewildering Revolver (about gangsters, unsurprisingly). The film was universally panned by critics, yet huge billboards appeared around towns declaring it ”Brilliant…Guy Ritchie back to his best!”

Fair enough if that’s what you think, except that the line is from The Sun’s online film e-zine Film First which had bagged a WORLD EXCLUSIVE interview with the director, as The Guardian pointed out at the time. Private Eye established that the “brilliant!” part of the quote was from none other than The Sun’s Page 3 girl Ruth (she makes a brief appearance in the film).”

Are journalists really going to pan a hotel when they know that if they big it up, they’ll probably get another free trip again soon?

Perhaps more worrying is this scenario from another member:

“I only adored one of the hotels (one was fine but naff, and the other was fine but austere) they only used the one for the hotel I genuinely loved. I still got paid for all my work.”

So not only can we not fully trust motives behind hotel reviews, we also don’t get to see the ones that don’t get a favourable write up. Why is this? If it’s a high-profile hotel which turns out to be a complete stinker, isn’t the press in place to provide the service of warning us?

From when I was in New Zealand, I recall Jim Tucker telling me about how he went around Wellington reviewing restaurants. This wasn’t a press trip, and I’m certain Jim didn’t let them know he was there to review the food. His reviews never saw the light of day. Why? Because he dared to criticise.

We often call for high-profile journalists to declare their interests. In fact, a member of the same forum that I’ve been quoting from here has suggested we produce a national register documenting those interests. Great idea, I say. And, let’s not forget Robert Peston who is being ‘looked at’ because of some of his financial coverage. I believe we’ll find that Peston is merely a brilliant journalist and an astute financial genius, but we just don’t know how cosy he is to the people he reports on.

They’re more serious examples. But why not apply this practice to all journalists? If a hotel review has conducted with the hotel’s prior knowledge, then I think we, as readers, have a right to know this.

Showing appreciation to Journobiz

October 22nd, 2008

For quite some time now I’ve been a member of Journobiz, a brilliant online community for mainly freelance journalists. Not only is it a great resource (if you’re looking to crack open a freelance market, look no further), but it’s full of great, friendly people.

I realised that I don’t often talk about Journobiz, despite owing SO much to it. So, I thought it might be a decent idea to make this little button, so that if you’re a member, you can display it proudly on your blog… or wherever you please.

I’m happy to host it, so feel free to just use the HTML code provided below.

I'm on Journobiz, and so should you be!

Simply copy and paste this code into your blog’s sidebar. Wordpress users, you will need to create a new ‘text’ widget, and paste the following:


<a href="http://www.journobiz.com"><img src="http://showyourworking.com/jbizbadge.jpg" alt="I'm on Journobiz, and so should you be!" /></a>

Regionals should get their houses in order before trying to stop others

October 21st, 2008

I don’t think it’s fair that some of the local press is getting in a strop with Sir Michael Lyon’s plans for better regional BBC content.

Read this article in today’s Times for a bit of back story:

Newspaper groups are unhappy about BBC proposals to introduce ‘hyper-local’ news websites, covering a town or county, which they believe will stifle their digital growth, at a time when their profits are crumbling in the wake of the economic downturn caused by the credit crunch. The plans, though, have to be approved by the BBC Trust, which Sir Michael heads.

That paragraph, on its own, seems to present a good point from the regionals. Why should the BBC juggernaut — and it is a juggernaut, despite its well-publicised hardships — trample on the local press with its own hyperlocal offerings?

Chief exec of Trinity Mirror, Sly Bailey, has been doing the rounds lately. She’s been here there and everywhere defending newspapers. Her interview in Press Gazette was especially interesting — but since it’s not online, nobody can read it. Figures.

She pops up again in the Times piece:

Ms Bailey accused Sir Michael of holding “outrageous views” and making “an astonishing attack on the local press” and said that “research shows consumers rate regional press as more trusted than any other media, including the BBC”.

I trust my local paper. Why would I have any reason to disbelieve that a school put on a production last week? Or that someone is now 100 years old? I’m not dismissing local press as being trivial here, but my point is that it’s a lot harder for the BBC to maintain that trust when they deal with far more complex topics.

Here’s my main criticism of Sly and co.’s argument:

If the BBC doesn’t go ahead with its hyperlocal plans, will it mean local newspaper sites will improve?

I think we all know the answer.

My two most local newspapers — The Hunts Post and Cambridge News — aren’t doing nearly enough to engage with their readers online. The Hunts Post is a great newspaper. It has a small team. Too small, I’d argue, but that’s another issue. I don’t blame them for not spending too much time interacting online, because the paper still has a very strong print audience.

But the Cambridge News? Cambridge is a city of early-adopters. I once read that, as a percentage of total population, Cambridge has more people registered on eBay than any other European city. Sorry I can’t verify that with a source, but anyone who knows the city well wouldn’t find such a statement hard to believe.

Cambridge is a home to huge centres for the likes of Microsoft. Does its newspaper reflect that? I’d argue no, not at all. Their ‘blogs’ aren’t even blogs at all. Why is there not a news blog? Or a sports blog? Or, considering Cambridge is a hub for science in the UK, why not a science blog that is written in the same style as Bad Science in the Guardian?

If the paper has a Twitter presence, it’s not publicised enough. If they’re on Facebook, they’re doing a pretty poor job at making themselves known.

Now, it’s all well and good saying what’s wrong with a site. It’s another to prove it can be done better. Well there’s proof in Matt Gooding’s Cambridge United Blog. Matt writes for the Royston Crow — another newspaper starved of any kind of progressive internet publishing. I wonder if they know they have the likes of Matt in their ranks? A waste of brilliant blogging talent.

More to the point, though, if Matt is doing his Cambridge United blog in his own spare time, for free, using tools that are available for no fee, then why isn’t the Cambridge News? They couldn’t possibly complain of budget constraints. You know, even if they just aggregated his blog. Or linked to it. Or ANYTHING that acts as a service to readers to let them know that some brilliant, opinionated writing is out there.

The moral of this whole tale, of course, is that regional press haven’t dealt with the internet. It scares them. They don’t know how it works.

A friend of mine was recently told not to mention the internet in a job interview with a regional because “the editor doesn’t like it”. The editor should be sacked this instant. When I mention this tale on Twitter yesterday, I got a load of replies saying ‘I bet it was…’. All were wrong. But it goes to show that it isn’t an isolated problem.

If I was to meet Sly Bailey tomorrow, I’d tell her to wake up. Rather than have a go at the BBC for moving with the times, why not look into providing better websites yourselves. It doesn’t cost much. The site I created for Whitireia Journalism School in Wellington, New Zealand, earlier this year proves that so much can be done with so little time, effort and money.

I’m biased, of course, but I’d say Newswire.co.nz is a far better local news site than Cambridge News. Newswire’s total cost? About £200, plus my wage. Cambridge New’s total cost? I dread to think.

What will be most telling will be the response to my criticisms. There won’t be any — except maybe from Matt Gooding and those at Newswire. Why? Because they’re in control of their online identities. The likes of the Cambridge News won’t be aware of anything I’ve said. I hope they can surprise me, I really do.

I’ve used the Cambridge News as my example, but to steal a Sarah Palin-ism, I think it’s fair to suggest that Cambridge News is a microcosm of the UK regional press.

Many regional papers would be happier if the internet didn’t exist.

But here’s the good news: There’s still time. It can still be turned around. There is enough money in the kitty, and enough readership to give any regional paper some online success. Whether they rise to the challenge or not is up to them. If they don’t they’ve only got themselves to blame.

My dream job lies with the ‘Huffington Experiment’

October 17th, 2008

(This post forms part of the Tomorrow’s News, Tomorrow’s Journalists topic for October: What is your dream journalism job?)

I was considering not entering this round of TNTJ posts. You see, the thing is, I’m looking for a job. And while the whole world of journalism seems to be at your mercy while you’re studying, many of us will find that opportunities seem to seize up somewhat when you ask for the ‘m’ word.

Yup, I’m talking about money. Nobody has any. Every job I see is short-term this, casual that, freelance this, temporary that. It seems the staffer is dying a slow, painful death.

So that’s why I was hesitant about writing this post. After all, if I came on here and outlined a dream job, I am, potentially, putting any employment opportunities that come my way at risk. I don’t want someone to arrive at this site (or my own blog) with the purpose of perhaps offering me an interview or even job and then being talked out of it by my ambitions of something else, something greater.

But let’s be clear. Ambition in this world is like currency. With ambition, you can straddle the days of photocopying or pint pulling safe in the knowledge that it’s all a means to an end.

Every employer out there should be looking for ambitious people. People who get an itchy backside if they stay in one position for too long. You know, maybe journalism is destined to be a short-term contract kinda industry anyway. How fresh can Bob’s input be, when Bob has been at his desk for 20 years? Bob doesn’t believe in video, blogs or social media. He’d much rather get out and talk to real people, he’ll protest, but you’ll be watching him for a long time before he gets out of his chair — and that’ll be to go home.

Journalism can’t afford to have Bobs anymore.

My dream journalism job would be to play some part in the next step in what I have been calling ‘The Huffington Experiment’. Do you read the Huffington Post? You should, there’s some really great stuff on there.

It may be sickening Liberal, yes, but one thing the Huffington Experiment shows is that online newspapers WORK. They work very well. What the Huffington Post does well is showcase its own journalism alongside good journalism elsewhere. It’s what Jeff Jarvis has been banging on about lately — the link culture of the web.

Readers aren’t fools. They know that they can find stories on many sites. They won’t just stick to one place. If I were to narrow my reading habits greatly, I’d say I was a Guardian reader. But a quick look at my viewing history today will show you that I have read the Times, the Telegraph, the BBC and even the New York Times all in the past two hours. Has the media junkie ever been so well served?

So we should stop pretending that our website — whoever we may be working for — is looked upon as the best source by our readers. It won’t be. It’ll be one of the sources, yes, but not the definitive one.

So then, back to me (ha!). The next step of the Huffington Experiment is where I want to be. Bring the style and drive of the Huff Post to British shores. Quite frankly, I don’t care if I edit the thing or just write for it. All I need to know is that it’s there.

Take the overheads out of printing and distributing and channel them into brilliant journalism. Hell, why not use a model similar to that of Spot.Us? We won’t subscribe the the outdated wire services. If the wires have a good story, then we’ll just, y’know, link to it.

We’ll use cheap yet powerful tools to produce stories that are spearheaded by passionate, talented journalists. Journalists whose spirits haven’t been splattered all over the office walls of some management monkey who is demanding 500 words of regurgitated copy by the next hour.

Creating Britain’s first fully-online national newspaper. Seeing it flourish as a hotbed for the country’s finest news, features and opinion. Bringing everyone in Britain to the forefront of what should have happened years ago — interactive, people-powered news.

That’s my dream journalism job.

(But in the mean time, folks, you can download my CV here!)

TheMoveChannel.com, shame on you

October 17th, 2008

I’ve just seen this on the Journobiz forum. Sadly, someone out there will do this for them. In some ways, it sums up everything that is wrong about the media industry:

TheMoveChannel.com, the leading international and UK property portal, is looking for an editorial intern to assist the property news editor and marketing manager.

We are looking for an enthusiastic and friendly person willing to turn their hand to a wide range of editorial tasks, from compiling daily news roundups, to writing global property features and news articles to sourcing and editing images.

We would like someone with a ‘can do’ attitude who is interested in gaining some excellent experience in online editorial.

Interest in property and travel would be an advantage, but being keen is far more important.

Ideally we would like to find someone who can commit to a period of three months or even longer if possible.

We are based in Shad Thames, just by Tower Bridge, which is close to both Tower Hill and London Bridge tubes.

This internship is a full time position, from 9am to 6pm Monday to Friday, and is unpaid.

Please contact the property news editor Catherine@themovechannel.com if you are interested. We would need someone to start on or around the week commencing November 10th 2008.

Let’s dissect this a little.

The hours — longer than a usual working day.
The experience — Much better get two weeks on a publication people have heard of.
The term — three months?! Even longer if possible? That translates to three months… and then whatever they can get away with until the ‘lucky’ intern gets wise to their game.

Let’s be perfectly clear about this. I’m not against working for free early in your career. But this is not experience, or an internship. It’s work. If TheMoveChannel needs this person that much, they should pay for them.

When the office is messy, do they get a voluntary cleaner? If the toilet breaks, do they get an internship plumber?

No.

I’ve forwarded this on to the NUJ. It’s about time we all put a stop to this outrageous practice within our industry.

BBC triumphs with social media covering Obama/McCain debate

October 16th, 2008

You know what, I think they’ve cracked it.

Last night, I had just returned home from another cracking Journobiz drinks night, and was just in time for the third and final US Presidential Debate.

Since I don’t have the luxury of digital telly in my bedroom, I turned to the web to follow what was going on.

My first port of call ended up being my only port of call. The BBC’s online coverage of the debate was the best I’ve seen. Take a look.

On first glance, you’d be forgiven for thinking it was a bog standard liveblog. In many ways, it is, but look closely and you’ll see some brilliant additions to the format.

Most noticable is the video panel at the top. Nothing exceptional here — it was a live stream of the debate. Refreshing, I thought, that there were no tickers, timestamps or distracting logos anywhere.

Beneath was the live blog. We’ve all seen the format before: writer timestamps each snippet, and places it in an existing post. The same rules applied here, but with one subtle difference: you didn’t need to refresh to get the updates. Why is this significant? Well, bear in mind the video stream is on the same page, it would be very frustrating indeed to have to refresh and re-buffer the video just to see the text comments. Chances are you wouldn’t bother… you would just watch the video.

So far, so brilliant. It worked beautifully. The script was smooth, seamless and — with it’s tasty fade-in style appearance — was somewhat classy. By far the best I’ve seen. It was active and quick, but if you wanted to ignore it you easily could.

A few days ago I posted about how journalists should be using Twitter. That post focused on how journalists should be using Twitter themselves. Perhaps I should have written about what we should do with other people on Twitter. In other words, those thousands who are posting their opinions by the second. Surely it can be channeled into something useful?

Why yes! Yes it can. Someone at the BBC had the task of cherry-picking the best, most relevant tweets.

ScreenShot006

And I can say it was a success. It’s a shame that they didn’t make it more clear how to get involved in the discourse, however. There were no addresses to email, or numbers to text, and although I’m assuming that the moderator was following hashtags (#debate08), we weren’t told which tags they were.

Other improvements could have been a little more linky-love, as some call it. We got comments from bloggers — but none of them were linked to. Would it have been unfair to expect the BBC to publicise the authors of the comments deemed interesting enough to go on their site?

This is a format that can trump television. It’s engaging and polished. And, above all else, it packages social media in a way that goes beyond simple “Bill from Stoke says ‘It’s political correctness gone mad’” comments. Now we can enjoy thoughtful, intelligent reaction. Social media is coming of age and maybe, just maybe, it’ll save mainstream media.

Quote of the day…

October 16th, 2008

On my iGoogle page, I have a little feed of quotes. This one caught my eye today:

Normal is getting dressed in clothes that you buy for work and driving through traffic in a car that you are still paying for – in order to get to the job you need to pay for the clothes and the car, and the house you leave vacant all day so you can afford to live in it. – Ellen Goodman

How depressing.