Archive for the ‘The Web’ category

Webby Awards

May 2nd, 2007

The Webby Awards were announced today.

The BBC won the best news site for the third year running. Good. Interesting to note that the BBC’s design is now pretty outdated when compared to that of the NYTimes or even Channel Four News. Refreshing, then, that people have voted for content over aesthetics.

See the complete list of winners here.

Blogging the launch

April 25th, 2007

Ray Hartley is blogging the launch of a new South African daily – The Times.

And, on the the other side of the world, Rupert Murdoch is having a bit of a panic about what to do with his newspapers. At least he’s not burying his head in the sand, unlike some editorial ostriches.

The Times they are a changin’ (their website)

April 14th, 2007

Khoi Vinh of the New York Times has written about the redesign of the The (London) Times’ shiny new website and why it’s a damn good effort.
Read it here.

(Thanks to Martin Stabe for bringing this to my attention. Go read his blog.)

Iran Rants

April 8th, 2007

Much has been made today about the news that the Iran captives have been given permission by the MoD to sell their stories.

Most commentators that appeared on TV were ex-soliders or seamen etc, and they seemed unanimously against the idea (at least I think it was unanimous, I spent most of today cramming chocolate into every last inch of belly — so I didn’t see too much TV).

There was one person, though, who made a very valid point about those condemning selling stories. They were all famous. And how did they become famous? By writing books, articles and whatever else about their experiences in combat… selling their stories.
Which lead me to think it wasn’t that they were annoyed with the stories being told, but rather the manner with which the ex-captives would go about it. Is there anything less gracious about sticking your story in the pages of the News of the World rather than amongst the hardbacks in Waterstones?

You could argue, successfully I’d say, that the tabloids would stretch and skew the story and make it a tad more dramatic to make it seem even worse than it perhaps was. But that is unavoidable. A solider writing his or her own book will also exaggerate to a point — except it won’t be in big bold headline font. An all round classier way to make money.

I’ll be looking at the coverage these captives get with great interest.

Some other reads from today

[THE OBSERVER] Lesley Thomas: Posh girls fight, borrow and steal too

I was debating bringing attention to this piece as this post will be categorised as ‘Good Reads’ — and this load of drivel certainly isn’t.

Drivel is maybe a little harsh. But this author has written about her anguish over the portrayal that it was only black women rushing into that Primark opening on Oxford Street last week. I hadn’t noticed. I don’t think anyone had, really, so this column is really just an excuse for her to say “Hey! I’m black! Let me write!”. Sadly The Observer replied with an optimistic “Hey! She’s black! Let her in!” attitude.

I’m not suggesting for one minute that the only reason she writes for The Observer is her colour — of course not — but I do resent having my intelligence insulted by an article that is so blindingly obvious that it beggers belief why Lesley Thomas thought we weren’t aware of it.

[GUARDIAN UNLIMITED] Bobbie Johnson: Blogs turn 10

Wow. Ten years these blogs things have been hanging about. Which makes me part of the old school, I think, as I started my first blog back in 2001. I took it offline a few years later and had it made into a book! Highly recommend.
This article from the Tech Guardian’s Bobbie Johnson takes a look at some of the defining moments in blogging history. The thing I like about this is the sheer range of things that are deemed historical. Iraq bloggers to prosititutes to teenagers pretending to be dead. All very different events with one thing in common: people talked about them.

[GUARDIAN UNLIMITED] Roy Greenslade: Celebrities playing paparazzi in surreality TV show

Shamefully, I’d never heard of this Greenslade man, but it appears he’s 1) very famous 2) very clever 3) doing just what I’m trying with this blog… but a lot better.

So, jealousy aside, I can admit that his post on the new ITV show ‘Deadline’ (in which a load of celebs run around trying to make a magazine) is pretty much spot on.

One commenter points something out as well: It’s a magazine, with a team. The team will, eventually, get kicked off until there’s a winner. Which leaves the problem of what happens when the team is too small to run the bloody magazine?!

We’ll see. Or rather, we won’t. It’s on ITV2, and who’s watching that? No-one.

One final thing, I’ve added a comment spam filter to this site so that now I won’t be advertising for viagra, sex toys or hot latino women. Well, not on this blog at least.

Podding along

March 20th, 2007

Good read on The Guardian’s Editor Blog today. It asks whether anyone actually listens to podcasts. I think no, not yet, but eventually they will.

The article has taught me a new word too: smorgasbord. Love it.

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: ‘We won’t show you any more footage’

December 30th, 2006

It’s happened. Saddam has been executed. Gotta admit, I was shocked at the timing of it all…but then I guess there’s never a good time to hang a murderous dictator.

I’ve been at work all day, so haven’t been able to follow the coverage too much. What I did notice, though, from the Six O’Clock news, was the great care taken to ensure good reporting didn’t override good taste. In other words, how much of this execution should be shown?

Sadly I don’t have Al Jazeera back at home. I wonder if their content was any different from the BBC report, in which veteran reporter (and the receiver of Dave-Lee-worship) John Simpson uttered the words “we won’t show you any more footage” when it got to the, excuse me, exciting bit: the hanging itself.

I guess it was just right though. The vision of a man about to meet his death was harrowing to say the least. In this case at least, our own imaginations could never surpass what actually happened to Saddam today.

For the record – I don’t agree with the hanging. But that debate’s for another day…and another blog no doubt.

UPDATE:

I’ve changed my mind about the broadcast of the hanging footage.

2006 has been the year of the citizen journalist. This video* (of Saddam being executed) is the climax to a year where the public created the news in every sense of the word.

Many don’t agree with execution. I don’t. But I do think these clips should be seen. By shielding ourselves from images like this, we are shielding the reality. If it shocks us that much, and causes that much outrage, the question needs to be asked: should it have been done?

The clip signifies two contradicting triumphs of Cit-journos. The quality is woeful. It’s shaky, grainy, dark – but yet, more real than any news footage could hope to be. Some media outlets haven’t embraced citizen journalism very well yet. Well it’s time they did.

Today’s events have made it more important than ever.

*WARNING: The video does show Saddam being executed. This isn’t the faded out version that was shown on the BBC/Sky etc today. You will see Saddam Hussein dying – view at your own risk. But please do.

Free chocolate!

December 23rd, 2006

This post was going to be quite good. But it isn’t. Sorry about that, but let me explain.

You see, it was going to include the front pages of the days tabloids. After my post last night about the Suffolk Murder case, I was hoping to review what the papers had done in response to the CPS’s request for responsible journalism. However, the website that displays the pages on the day they come out has now expired – meaning you have to pay. I don’t expect anyone to do this, so I’ll have to just go on memory from the day.

Turns out the red tops were very responsible indeed. The front pages were well behaved. A little too well behaved I think, to the point it was almost humorous to see. They were making it blatantly obvious that they were being good girls and boys, at least for today. Between you and me, I don’t think it will last.

The inside pages were an early reminder of what the tabloids might aim towards. The Daily Mirror’s report on the story had “RIPPER” written above the photo of Steve Wright – the accused. The careful balance of public interest v contempt of court/human rights is regularly crossed. At the moment, I think the coverage is a little sharp, but I’d expect it to take a tame turn when the trial of the defendant – possibly Steve Wright – draws near.
Keeping on the same subject, but deviating slightly, I want to talk about the media’s new found love of Myspace. When the Suffolk suspect Tom Stephens was arrested, all the media outlets – particularly the BBC – used his myspace page as their source of info on the man. Correct me if I’m wrong, but this is the first time that the web has been used to gather information on a subject in this manner. His page was swiftly deleted from myspace. I’m curious to who decided this. Was it Tom*? If so, fair enough. But if it wasn’t, I wonder who. If it was myspace themselves (i.e. good ol’ Rupert Murdoch), then I question their motivation. Innocent until proven guilty, of course, so why delete a profile that didn’t breach the T&C’s of myspace?

And that’s not the only story: Myspace is hitting the news in many ways this week. A poor man (left) from the North-East has been booted out of his new home in Barrow-in-Furness in Cumbria due to comments made on his Myspace page. Steve Beall called the town, bluntly, a shithole. The residents of the town trashed the Thorntons that he was taking charge of as manager.

Thorntons issued this rather cute statement:

“We wish everyone in Barrow-in-Furness a merry Christmas and a prosperous New Year. As a gesture of goodwill, anybody visiting our store until Christmas will receive a free chocolate.”

My brother defends his choice to not ‘jazz-up’ his myspace page because he says you never know when it will come back to bite you. I guess he’s right.

I’m still keeping mine though.

*Tom Stephens, I mean – not the annoying little Tom who is everyone’s ‘friend’ on myspace. The little punk. Friends of mine actually believe that lovely Tom runs the whole empire…blissfully unaware that it’s a great big corporate superpower run by Rupert. Grrr.

My Tornado Hell!

December 19th, 2006

A week or so ago, a tornado swept through a London residential area. It was rather dramatic, but nothing too impressive. No Hurricane Katrina here.
The Evening Standard (London) have printed an eyewitness’ account of the day. It’s terrific, for all the wrong reasons.
You’d think they’d been hit by the worst natural disaster since the dinosaurs snuffed it.

See for yourselves at: http://mytornadohell.livejournal.com

My favourite passage has to be this gem:

“Since then I’ve been in an emotional cyclone. I already had a brilliant trauma specialist therapist. I went to see him on Thursday evebning [sic]. I’ve felt a desperate need not to be alone, to keep in touch. (We’ve stayed with friends rather than in a hotel because I want to be with people I love.) I haven’t slept much. I’ve shivered brutally. For three nights, I saw the tornado coming towards me whenever I shut my eyes. I’ve jumped at loud noises, panicked hearing sirens, cried endlessly. Sat in my car and screamed and screamed hysterically at such unfairness. Fought the desire for cigarettes and alcohol after 18 years’ abstinence. Despaired of my loss of earnings. Felt like never living in my house again.”

Blimey, that’s quite a tornado. Not only did it mangle a few roof tiles, but it seemed to make the author gain heroin-addict symptoms. Incredible.

(Thanks to Michael Hewitt at Journobiz.com)