Archive for November, 2008

Internet Explorer fixed

November 7th, 2008

Those of you viewing this blog in Internet Explorer may have noticed that the sidebar on the right was floating away off the page. It was almost as if it was ashamed to be next to the content. Who knows.

Anyway, thanks to — I’m not kidding — Dr Magoomagraf, who also uses this brilliant theme, the sidebar is now neatly tucked up as it should be.

I’m very grateful. I have a habit of changing my theme every four weeks seconds, and when I finally found one I LOVE, it looked odd in IE. But now it’s fixed, hooray!

As a token of my gratitude, I’m pointing you all in the direction of ZooInMyBelly.com, a truly magical site that makes eating fun for children. And, if I’m honest, adults too. Now I’m not sure which animal in my belly appreciates steak, chips and beer, but they’re going to get very well fed.

BBC Internet Blog: How should we use our Twitter?

November 7th, 2008

Making my debut on the BBC Internet Blog today. Would like feedback on how we are to use our Twitter feed.

Read the post here!

Adam Smith: I’ve changed my mind

November 6th, 2008

I like him. I still think he’s a bit stupid, but I like the fact that, if he’s honest with himself, he knows he was a bit stupid too.

Best of luck to you, Adam.

EDIT: If you were wondering about the copy that got filed that fateful night, you can read it here. It has been removed from the Mail’s site, but thanks to the wonders of Google we can still read the cached version.

Nick Robinson: Can you, will you… answer the question?

November 6th, 2008

Great interrogation of Alistair Darling by the BBC’s political editor Nick Robinson today about the interest rate cut. You can see it here. I’d embed it for you, but the BBC don’t let me (or anyone, for that matter).

Mr President

November 6th, 2008

This is my favourite Obama front page. What’s yours?

[via NewsDesigner]

Birmingham Mail reporter: “I’m a bit of an idiot really”

November 6th, 2008

One night a little while ago I sang an awful karaoke attempt of Heal the World and, in a less than sober state, duly lapped up the moment while being recorded on a friend’s mobile. I woke up dreading what could appear on Facebook the next day.

Today I feel decidedly less stupid. Imagine waking up and remembering doing this?

Oh dear. Here we are, then, this reporter, the Birmingham Mail’s Adam Smith, who is clearly (and the brummies might say) “off his tits”.

Journalists being drunk isn’t a new craze by any means (hurrah!), but what Adam’s done is a tad more serious. He’s noted the fact that he’s gone — on the Mail’s payroll, let’s not forget EDIT: It was a voluntary trip — to Miami to report the election. By his own admission, Miami wasn’t really an exciting place to be. Everyone knew it would end up going Democrat, as always.

He was there because it was “where the party is”. And, he admits, he can’t get enough of the women. He’s clearly doing a great job of attracting said women while he sits on a bench in the dead of night writing away on his laptop. Hardly the Diet Coke man.

But sadly for Adam, that’s not it. He openly delves into his journalistic technique of copying and pasting from the BBC website. He acknowledges the flaw of what he’s doing, saying that while history is being made, the B’ham Mail readers are merely getting his take on history and, well, he’s bladdered. He may have even started the first paragraph with something like “You know what readers, you’re my best mate. I bloody love you.”

He finishes on a high. He resigns. “Fuck you,” he says, flicking a v-sign at the camera. And in an instant, a journalism career is ruined.

Fool. His copy was, I’m guessing, originally here, but it has since been wisely removed.

[via Hold the Front Page]

EDIT: The journalist has made some comments via YouTube:

Right, the thing is, right I’ve just woke up. And seen this video, which I don’t really remember. I’ve been told to phone the Birmingham Mail because I am in trouble. I was off duty, I am on official holiday working at the South Beach Miami Barack Obama campaign where I had just done a 18-hour shift trying to make the world a better place. Please check every BBC News outlet and see if I have cut and pasted anything. I have not, it was a joke and should be taken in the spirit it was said.”

And then later:

Thanks for the kind comments, it has meant a lot to get the backing of so many people I respect. I’m currently in hiding at the Gansevoort South hotel in Miami tryin to come to terms what’s happened whilst sipping rum and coke at the pool. I guess I’m going to have to face the music when I get back.
Adam Smith, aka Steve Zacharanda
Technically, still a Birmingham Mail reporter.
But definitely editor and founder of Goggle-eye magazine and Cheeky Media.

Cheeky Media indeed!

BBC Election night: Where it went wrong

November 6th, 2008

Election night was great, wasn’t it? I managed to keep up ‘til about 3am, when Ohio officially came in.

My choice of coverage was the BBC. They did a lot right. But they did a lot wrong.

Jeremy Vine is a man I love to watch — or in his normal day job, listen to — and I was hoping election night would be his time to shine. I called it a coming of age in a piece for NewsWire in New Zealand.

But it was all a bit lost. Early doors — before any results came in — we were facing problems. The producers seemed unable to isolate Dimbleby’s voice out of Vine’s ear when he was using his funky touch screen. On one occasion, Vine whipped his ear-piece out, such was the extent of Dimbleby’s waffling in his ear.

Dimbleby is as much a fixture in election coverage as Peter Snow and his swingometer. But last night he looked tired right from the word go.

Amazingly, he made the most exciting night in world politics in a generation seem rather routine. More should have been made of Pennsylvania, that’s for sure, and when the final presidency-clinching result came in? I almost expected Dimbleby to come out with a cynical “who cares” remark.

I’ve seen the effort involved in the BBC election result service being a great asset to the coverage, but there’s no avoiding the fact it was SLOW on Ohio. Fox called it way before the BBC did. Fortunately, the pundits alongside Dimbleby made the public aware that Fox are unlikely to call a battleground state as Democrat given its fiercely Republican bias. They wouldn’t risk it. But Dimbleby refused to get excited. It wasn’t over until the fat BBC sang. Sadly, the other networks were on the encore while the Beeb was still enjoying the mid-way interval.

But where the American networks triumphed, the BBC innovated, right? Maybe. Their ‘less shouting, more statistics’ approach online was a breath of fresh air. Despite my insistence that tonight was going to be the night of social media and bloggers, I soon grew tired of some of the people online getting ahead of themselves. The BBC gave results, expert comment and quality journalism from the off. Good show. Except Dimbleby who, and the Standard agrees with me here, was off the pace.

Back on the television, we had the blog team. Or rather, two geeky-looking women in Times Square transfixed on their iBooks.

Who were they? We weren’t given so much as URL to check out their stuff. And we knew, before they spoke, that they weren’t great bloggers, or else they’d be working on the election in other, more productive ways.

Had Arianna Huffington been sat there casting an eye on the ‘sphrere then we might have had a reason to listen. But these two randoms offered no insight other than the ability to Google ‘Obama+result+florida” and hope for the best.

At one point, one of the bloggers said “My inside source in Florida says McCain’s lost”. Admittedly, she was right. But then many people predicted it. Here, the blogger was playing big-time journo. Inside source? Nobody says that anymore. If you’re going to say it, back it up. On television, you can’t get away with that sort of ambiguity.

I’m not blasting the role blogs played in this election. No way. I am, of course, a promoter of all things bloggy. I even toyed, today, with making my about page say I’m a social media evangelist — such is my determination that social media is the future of news.

But the BBC got it horribly wrong. These bloggers were little more than people with computers. They let the rest of us down. If the BBC plans to take blogging seriously in its coverage of the UK elections in May, they need to get themselves involved with the big name bloggers. Guido Fawkes springs to mind, but I’d be kidding myself if I thought the Beeb would take the risk.

The viewing figures for the BBC’s coverage were huge, but I hope that doesn’t breed complacency within the team producing the UK election show in May. Just because a lot of people watch it, doesn’t mean your coverage is good. If the World Cup Final was live on one channel and one channel only, then the viewers will be riveted no matter the quality of broadcast.

Yes, British viewers had a healthy choice — but only if they had Sky/Cable. And, since this was a night of bedtime viewing, many would have been restricted to the five trusty channels on analogue telly.

So, to sum up: Must try harder.

On a more cheerful note, well done America. While the front pages of today’s papers really, really sucked (owing to the time restraints), it was a wonderful moment seeing one Evening Standard seller shout “none left” outside Liverpool Street Station tonight.

It was almost as if people had to read it in a newspaper in order to really believe it.

US Election online watcher’s guide

November 4th, 2008

NOTE: This page will be updating regularly from now until God-knows-when. Send me your suggestions here or leave a comment on this post.

Exciting times, folks. The hysteria surrounding these American elections really does make the British politics system Palin comparison. Geddit? (Sorry.)

After a brief Twitter chat with a friend, I thought it would be a good idea to make a little guide to all the best places to follow news and opinion as the action unfolds.

So here we go. If you have suggestions of your own, please comment/Twitter/or email. This is by no means a complete list — more the places I’ll be keeping an eye on as the action unfolds. Items listed in bold are personal recommendations.

VIDEO (streaming) – I’ll try and update these on the night as/when they go live

BBC News Channel (UK ONLY)
BBC US Election special section (Video link to come once online. My colleagues on ‘The Editors’ have explained all the things they have planned)
Sky News – Deadline USA (it’s not online yet, but look out for a CoverItLive! page on Sky, it could be good)
Fox News (US ONLY? Not working for me in UK)
CNN Politics
Al Jazeera English (Al Jazeera is also running this Facebook app)
ABC News (potentially awesome. Loads of video, but no live feed it seems. Judging by the comments on their lead story — 26,000 and counting — ABC could be the place for heated debate)

SOCIAL MEDIA

Twitter Election 08 (good for an overall snapshot, although I’m convinced it’s going to go down during the night)
Digg Elections 08 (great for the more quirky/viral viewpoints)
Election applications on Facebook (official election day ‘event’ is here)
Wikipedia (dedicated section that could be a handy resource… or may descend into mindless vandalism)
TwitterVoteReport (this’ll be the grand old duke tonight. When it’s up it’ll be up, but boy, when it’s down it’ll be very down. Hopefully it can stay alive — fantastic idea)

PRINT

Times Online: White House 2008 (The London Times is so confident in its coverage it’s been forced to take out a Google ad. Ahem)
New York Times: Elections ‘08 (nothing too exceptional here, but it’s hard to knock the quality of writing in the Times)
USA Today: Politics (some real nifty interactive features here. And they’re in partnership with ABC News too, so expect some good video)

WEB

Yahoo! Elections (shaping up to be exceptional coverage. Forums, RSS feeds, blog feeds, interactive quizzes and applications. I’ll have Yahoo! open for much of the night. Hardly surprising they’re expecting a big turnout)
MSNBC Deadline Dashboard (I like the name of this… ‘dashboard’. A dashboard is certainly what it is. Change the page to your heart’s content. And turn the USA blue…)

OPINION + BLOGS

Huffington Post (heavily pro-Obama, but plenty of lively writing from big-name bloggers)
Caucus Blog (New York Times)
Guardian Comment is Free US (more of a group blog feel to it for varying viewpoints)
Guardian Deadline USA
Tomasky (Guardian)
Justin Webb (BBC)
Mof Gimmers (Shiny Media)

SATIRE

The Onion

OTHER

PoliticalBetting.com (have a tipple on the results) » Read more: US Election online watcher’s guide

I’d like to make a Google Reader bundle

November 1st, 2008

Seeing what RSS feeds other people subscribe to is a little bit like spying a new friend’s music collection for the first time. Seeing feeds you know and love brings out a bit of excitement in all of us.

ScreenShot014Anyhow, was looking at the Google Reader blog just now and noticed this post about the feeds Google engineers are subscribed to.

Very nice! I thought. Even better is the ability they give you to add these feeds as a ‘bundle’. A pre-packaged set of feeds that you can add to your Google Reader list all in one click.

How bloody useful.

Academics out there: Imagine how handy it would be to produce RSS feed bundles for your course. A Web 2.0 reading list, if you will.

Journalists out there: Imagine how handy it would be to be able to create a feed bundle which you could then share with your co-workers.

Publishers out there: Imagine how handy it would be to offer your readers a pre-made easy-install bundle of your publications RSS feeds.

Please Mr Google, allow us to make our own RSS bundles.