Posts Tagged ‘nuj’

NUJ on BNP: Putting words in journalists’ mouths

October 21st, 2009
Calm down dear, its only a political debate!

"Calm down dear, it's only a political debate!"

From the National Union of Journalists today:

We believe the BBC is wrong to invite the BNP to appear on Question Time and will support any member who refuses to work on this week’s programme in line with the union’s code of conduct and conscience clause.

The NUJ applauds journalists in the BBC and elsewhere around the UK who are subjecting the BNP’s racist propaganda to professional scrutiny – and exposing their lies where they find them.

There is no opportunity for this sort of forensic examination in the knock-about soapbox environment of Question Time.

Interesting. I’m not here to debate the presence of the BNP on QT. Indeed, this post should stand whether I agree or disagree.

My issue is with the NUJ deciding to speak on behalf of its members without having asked them in the first place.

If public opinion polls are to be believed, the nation is around 60 per cent in favour of the BBC’s decision. Therefore, it’s likely a sizable portion of NUJ members are in favour too.

Not all, maybe not even a majority, but enough to question the NUJ’s judgment in declaring the Union as a whole is against the show.

By releasing a statement like this, its effectively putting words into its members’ mouths without asking permission.

Why The Journalist needs Michael Cross as editor

October 13th, 2009

Why join the NUJ? That’s what I asked, months ago, in response to my alienation at the union which should have helped me in an hour of need.

The NUJ is stuffy, out-dated and, for journalists like me (i.e. non-print, non-ancient), largely irrelevant.

That’s my opinion and I’m sticking to it. Many disagree – good – but many don’t. Problem is, while the disagreers are frowned upon as being poor team players, I doubt any of us don’t want the NUJ to be a roaring success.

A crucial part of resurrecting the NUJ lies with communication. On the social networks, they’re doing OK. Good not great. Every now and then they’ll pop up in my Facebook inbox and ask me to send a message of support, or to sign a petition and so on – the usual union-y type things.

But that’s where it ends. I don’t know how they got on (badly, usually, but the Union has to publicise this as well).

More importantly, I don’t feel, in any way, part of a community of journalists. Or at least, I didn’t when I was a member – I cancelled my subs when I left university.

That’s why the upcoming vote for the new editor of the NUJ’s magazine, ‘The Journalist’, is so very important. A good magazine can go a long way to solving all the problems I spoke of above. With a strong website, it’ll grab in people like me – the future of journalism and the NUJ – and re-ignite debate among the journo masses.

If you want this to happen, you should vote for Michael Cross.

I’ve known Michael for a few years now. I met him through the brilliant networking site Journobiz (a site which, incidentally, feels more like a union to me than the NUJ ever has). As a very successful freelance journalist, his advice has always been extremely valuable in steering me along the right path. Not to mention his encouragement which is always genuine and sincere.

But that’s not why you should vote for him. After all, he’s not going to spend his time giving everyone advice. But what he will do is put tons of creative energy into the Journalist, drawing on years of knowledge that has made him wise and experienced – but not old-fashioned or in denial about journalism’s future. He’s a man that loves the print press, but isn’t in love with it. He knows that good journalism is good journalism – and, above all else, he knows what makes journalists tick. He knows what we need to know. And he knows how to tell us.

If you’re a member of the NUJ, I urge you to vote for Michael Cross.

NUJ follow up: I’m still not convinced

February 12th, 2009

I’ve been doing some thinking about this whole NUJ thing. My post the other night reads very ranty — indeed, I guess it is very ranty — but I’m pleased to see that many readers of this blog agree with what I’m getting at.

And, from the defence, I received some rather predictable responses against my argument.

I’ll start with this point, from Joanna Geary (formerly Birmingham Post, now The Times):

I have much sympathy with your argument, although £13 a month for legal protection may be worth it and it is for that reason I am still an NUJ member.

Of everything I received (and blimey, there was a LOT) this was perhaps the most useful. £13 a month, as Joanna says, is very good to get legal protection.I can’t argue with that.

But it’s comments like this from ‘Chris’ (no link given) that remind me why I wrote that post:

But you wait till you’re staring down the barrel of redundancy – through no fault of your own, just because it happens that your team is being shut down.

Wait till you’re being forced to accept alternative work in a place you don’t want to live or in an area you have no interest in.

Wait till you’re summoned to meetings for a “quick chat” and end up facing four senior managers using classic intimidation tactics.

Then you’ll wish you had a union rep by your side to help fight your corner.

It’s always good to have a union behind you if you’re facing redundancy. Now, I underqualify myself here, as not only have I never faced redundancy, but I work for a corporation that is arguably more ’stable’. In other words, licence fees are still coming in. While not immune, we are safer.

But my issue is that while the NUJ are fighting a corner, it’s all rather pointless. Take this recent example of an NUJ ‘fight’:

The NUJ has strongly condemned the decision of Independent Newspapers to enforce three redundancies at The Kerryman newspaper in Tralee.

Séamus said: “This proposal represents a direct attack on the editorial heart of one of the oldest and most significant newspapers in Ireland. The inevitable consequence would be a poorer newspaper, which would not adequately reflect the community life of Kerry.”

At a meeting with the union yesterday, management announced its intention to make three journalists redundant. The NUJ chapel held an emergency meeting at which management was urged to rescind the decision, which staff say will have a detrimental effect on The Kerryman and Corkman titles.

My issue with this goes back to my ‘SAVE THE JOURNALISTS!” argument. The NUJ is pouring its efforts into protesting job cuts, when really they should be coming together — as a union — to offer more productive aid to their members. Advice on training, re-skilling and re-deployment.

Ed Hart’s comment:

As an objective observer on this one, I have had good and bad experiences of unions. If I had to sum up what I would want a union to do and be, it is to work on behalf of its members. The problem is that some unions lose touch with what this means, and see themselves as lobbyists, or big movers and shakers; when in fact their remit remains low key, but essential to those who really should matter – their members. Do they occasionally forget who the customer is, and what their customer wants?

Helps me counter this argument from ‘thatstheway’ (uh huh, uh huh, I like it!):

Someone so self-consciously hip like you could have some input into its digital media strategy if you weren’t so busy doing precisely what you accuse the NUJ of doing all the time, which is complaining, and making digital media sound like some big deal that’s going to require your special skills alone.

I feel I could contribute with the NUJ no more actively than I could to ASLEF, the train drivers union. Why? I feel I don’t have a connection with their outlook in any shape of form.

I’m all for protecting the strength of print. By doing so, we uphold the values that have made our profession truly great. But I’m also aware that, like the industry, a union has to change and adapt. Sometimes there are battles that cannot be won by standing outside a building with a placard.

I think it’s time for the NUJ to take a step back and reflect.

It needs to swallow a bit of pride and admit that just because journalism is online, doesn’t make it bad. In fact, it can make it very, very good.

It needs to stop posting videos like this, which show not only a devestating lack of understanding about online media, but also an aggressive “We’re trained and you WILL employ us” attitude that we just can’t afford to have anymore.

Maybe what we need to do is knock our collective heads together and search for ideas of how the NUJ can modernise and become the forward-thinking union we all need it to be.

Because here’s the thing: I want to join the NUJ. One commenter on my last post accused me of having no sense of solidarity which, and I hope my friends would vouch for this, couldn’t be further from the truth. If the NUJ can bring itself up to speed, I would love to get stuck in and get my hands dirty.

I believe in the future of journalism. I believe that journalists will be as important in 50 years than they have ever been. I’m preparing myself, and training myself, for a world without newsprint. It’s time the NUJ got ready too.

Join the NUJ? Why?

February 10th, 2009

A colleague suggested to me today that I renew my NUJ membership. I’ve let mine lapse since my student days — the £10 or so I spent for a tacky piece of laminated plastic could have been better spent on, well, anything.

At the time, I was promised not only huge benefits of being a card holder — entrance to events, and so on; never happened — but also representation. A union that would stand up for my rights as a student journalist.

But, after getting this promotional bullshit fed to me at during an early lecture at university, I haven’t seen nor heard a NUJ rep since.

And not for want of trying, either.

Last year I did a placement at a well-known media company. I was, for want of a better phrase, taken the piss out of. They wanted me to do a job that was not only away from the area I wanted to work, but was away from the company’s BUILDING. Instead, I was logging in a ten minute drive away. No thanks — I’m not paying £25 a day (they don’t pay expenses, naturally) to offer free labour.

(That said, once the matter was resolved, it turned into a very valuable placement which has lead to me making many good friends and career contacts.)

At the time, I emailed the NUJ for advice. As a student member, I asked, what rights do I have as part of this Union?

No reply. My £10 didn’t even earn me an email offering advice. No phone call, nothing. They couldn’t even be bothered to link me to a relevant part of their website for help. Which is a shame — because they do have a guide for this sort of thing (PDF). But try following their tips and insist on being paid a minimum wage for your placement — you’ll have a big red boot mark on your arse before you’d even sat down.

More recently — in my quest for NUJ help — after seeing several adverts for unpaid internships at websites that were making plenty of money, I emailed the NUJ to ask them if there’s anything they/I/we could do about it.

No reply.

Let me ask you this: Is the NUJ really standing up for journalists?

The answer for me is a very firm and direct no.

The NUJ is a cowardly union, hiding away in offices in which they wish were still furnished with typewriters and a smoking room. Their magazine, ‘Journalist’, is symbolic of their attitude to the changing media world. Only very recently has it become available online. As a downloadable PDF, that is. A pain to download, a pain to read — and completely anti-Google. Journalists looking for its words of ‘wisdom’ wouldn’t find them too easily.

Now when I say hiding — I don’t mean they’re not out there campaigning. They are. Very hard, in fact, with chapels springing up and making a lot of noise in places like the FT and in unison against the Birmingham media hub.

What I actually mean by hiding  is that they are cowering from the future. Here’s the NUJ, plowing money and effort into saying “STOP THE CUTBACKS!”… and then dealing with the blow with yet more anger and disbelief when it happens anyway.

If I were a member of the NUJ, I’d demand it help me as a struggling journalist. Where can I re-skill? How can the NUJ help me choose courses to enhance my online skills?

Simply: It can’t. Look at the diary — what do you see? Gloom — print this, rate cuts that. I’m not saying we don’t need meetings to discuss our rights in the workplace, but like the newspapers making the cuts, we are FIGHTING A LOSING BATTLE.

If the NUJ is really out there to act as a service for all working journalists, it needs to wake up. It needs to get over its fascination with tradition. It needs to pull its head from the sand, stand up and come up with a plan to really help those in need.

Right now, the only noise I hear from the NUJ is complaining.

“Save the journalists!” they’ll scream.

“But how we will survive? We can’t afford them,” say the newspapers.

“Well, er… we don’t know. Just SAVE THE JOURNALISTS, ok?”

Useless.

Justice for exploited journalism students

December 4th, 2008

Today I was interviewed by Gemma Pritchard, the editor of the Inquirer — City University’s independent student paper.

She was preparing a piece of coursework about students being exploited in the journalism workplace. She’s been in touch with various people — including the NUJ — to discuss the issue.

We came to the conclusion that the problem is becoming very serious — and it’ll only get worse.

So I’m now in the process of putting together a site that will allow student journalists to submit their stories about work experience. I will collate the information on a page, just like on AngryJournalist.

The difference, though, will be that students will be able to tell the site where they were working. This will be kept secret — experiences will not publically linked to the places of work, and viewers of the site will not be able to see which publications/media organisations have been named and shamed.

In a few months time, I will publish my findings. Will we see some companies appearing many times? Will certain complaints be exposed as happening to many students? I’m interested to see which patterns emerge.

In the interest of fair play, students will also be able to submit good experiences. The top three publications will be announced as well.

Why am I doing this?

I’ve seen both sides of the coin. I’ve worked for places that have exploited my eagerness to get work and to get noticed. But I’ve also worked for people who have benefitted my career greatly — and in turn I’ve done some good work for them for free.

Both sets should be made public. Students have a right to be able to tell all when it comes to work experience. Let’s be clear — this has gone way beyond making cups of tea — none of us complain about that — it’s about doing work that is, by UK law, illegal.

Problem is, until now, there has been no way of finding out where the problem really lies. A recent NUJ survey found frightening results, but without specifics, how can anything be done? It’s impossible.

Students are too scared to voice their opinions. Upsetting people can cost you your career — no matter how valid your complaint. This has to change.

Watch this space. If you’d like to help, email me.

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.