Paying Local News Sites? – NateNe.ws

March 29, 2009

natenews-logoOver at NateNe.ws, Nathan Baker is asking the Nashville’s Technorati for feedback on why they don’t financially support their local news bloggers. He runs down a personal list of sites that should be paid since they fulfill the role of news gatherers. [Yes, I am on that list and he'd be at the top of mine. Since we're both slummin' it, we're trading links instead.]

Via NateNe.ws:

I’ve been immersed in Nashville’s tech scene for a year, and I already know it’s obviously vibrant, talented and welcoming. Nashville’s tech mass is big enough to be dangerous and small enough to be more efficient than larger cities. Therefore we have the unique advantage of creating the innovative tech culture we desire, faster than anyone expected. On the top of my Utopia Nashville list: We should value local online content by supporting a few blogs financially.

I’m sort of interested to hear what others have to say about supporting the people who produce the local news essentially free of charge (*ahem*nashvillest*ahem*).


Are We Talking About Dead Trees or Journalism? – News Revolution

March 16, 2009

deadtree

Why aren’t more journalists overwhelmingly excited to be alive and practicing their craft right now? We are living in the middle of a revolution — not just for the production of news as a business, but for the entire world. The way people communicate, learn, live, grow and appreciate… it’s all changing because of the Internet and we are bearing witness to the birth of a new era.

Start acting like it.

I’m serious. Why the hell are we talking about what happens when newspapers are gone? They are made from dead trees. They do not define our role as journalists. After reading Clay Shriky’s  blog post Newspapers and Thinking the Unthinkable , I can’t help but think the old guard is holding us back…

“When someone demands to know how we are going to replace newspapers, they are really demanding to be told that we are not living through a revolution. They are demanding to be told that old systems won’t break before new systems are in place. They are demanding to be told that ancient social bargains aren’t in peril, that core institutions will be spared, that new methods of spreading information will improve previous practice rather than upending it. They are demanding to be lied to.

There are fewer and fewer people who can convincingly tell such a lie.“

Everything just *clicked* in my mind after reading that paragraph, which is not particularly awe inspiring, especially if you’ve been plugged in to the media machines who’s warrior employees are the very same people that want to be lied to.

And they do — they want to be lied to about the newspaper industry’s relevance, so they create a master plan to save the old institution. This plan fails, and we get an article much like Kathleen Parker’s column in the Washington Post in which she labels newspaper reporting and editing as the essential linchpin to keeping society free and open.

“But the greater truth is that newspaper reporters, editors and institutions are responsible for the boots-on-the-ground grub work that produces the news stories and performs the government watchdog role so crucial to a democratic republic.

Unfortunately, the chorus of media bashing from certain quarters has succeeded in convincing many Americans that they don’t need newspapers…”

Yes, this may be true of “boots-on-the-ground grub work” right now, but saying it will disappear completely is like saying food will cease to exist if farmers stop producing crops as a profession.

I’m sorry, Ms. Parker, but we don’t need newspapers. We don’t need linchpins to keep a complex process working to ensure there is a watchdog role. What we need is for everyone to start watching.

What we need — what we have — is a revolution.

We are at the very base of the biggest change in society since the printing presses emerged and telephone lines divorced communication from time and space. Individually we have the ethical conditioning to lead the way better than anyone else, yet, most of us are ignoring it or worse, refusing to let the old era go.

What will happen when newspapers do eventually die? Who cares. If your purpose is ensuring the presence of good journalism, start acting revolutionary.

Original Image Credit: Louisa Catlover (via Flickr)


An Illogical Pile Of Buzzwords – Tennessee Newspapers ‘Partnership’

March 13, 2009

newspaper

I don’t want to spend much time talking about the recent “partnership” between the four largest newspapers in Tennessee who will now “share” content instead of pulling stories from the Associated Press’ newswire. What they are doing is not sharing, and I don’t care how you dress it up. I’ll give you four big reasons why this deal is really an illogical pile of buzzwords…

Content sharing IS NOT Link Sharing (and therefore, not really sharing at all)

OK, so the big four in Tennessee have decided to share content. Wonderful, but why is this necessary? For the print editions, this actually does make quite a bit of sense. You are swapping the stale national news and a few tidbits of local (that no one who owns either a Television or computer really bothers to read) with richer state oriented news from other areas of Tennessee. The AP costs lots of money and I’m assuming the “partnership” would lessen those fees significantly.

Content sharing for the Web publications makes absolutely no sense at all. In fact its completely contrary to how the Internet behaves. Now if you had people who understood how the web functioned in the first place then you might be able to maneuver around these hurdles and factor that into the partnership. Reproduced content on four different web sites means absolutely nothing to me what-so-ever. It’s exactly what was wrong with regurgitating the AP wire stories. Instead of “sharing” content that you will very obviously attribute to the other news organizations, why not give a quick introduction tailored to your audiences understanding and then link to the original content (the deal limits content sharing to some asinine guideline of two lines plus the headline). See, that’s what real web sites do. (The exception being large publications that dwarf smaller publications who may have broken good news. Definitely not the case here). Big media should already be link sharing good content and they shouldn’t need a partnership agreement to do so. It also shouldn’t be limited to just the big four.

Divide by four &  Subtract Three

If a story merited coverage that was a bit strenuous and off the beaten path, newspapers would buckle down and produce an original piece of journalism worth of their own publication’s slogan. Four big newspapers meant that there could be four completely original pieces of journalism that would fill in the cracks when examined together. This will now be divided by four, and as  newspapers cope with finances in “today’s economy,” overworked editors will opt to spread their coverage elsewhere, since one paper is already doing a report on a particular topic. Instead of four good articles, you’ll eventually end up with just one.

The “partnership” will also enact the subtract by three equation, in which there are eternally three less pairs of eyes looking at bad reporting so that they can determine that it’s indeed bad reporting. Sometimes it’s tough to catch the big errors. I’ve made plenty of them and I’m glad to have had others giving it a second, third and fourth look.

One Huge State News Media

By enacting their own Tennessee newswire service, all four of the big newspapers walk a very thin line between acting like one giant media company with four separate bureaus.  Of course, this isn’t actually the way they see the “partnership” and each paper still retains their editorial independence. They will try to accommodate each other and as a result all of them will become weaker.

A Financially Driven Decision

This is perhaps the most important reason why the partnership between these newspapers is not what it appears to be. They did not decide to share content in the name of good journalism or to improve the quality of information being reported. The partnership was forged entirely because of financial reasons. They eliminate the fees paid out to the Associated Press and replace it with what they would assume is a superior localized wire at a much cheaper cost. At the same time, they support each other rather than outside entities and the all benefit.

Maybe that will work, maybe it won’t (probably it won’t), but don’t walk around professing that the newspapers finally figured out how to share. No one is qualified to make that judgment at such an early stage in the media’s news era.


Why I’m Done With SPJ, ONA & Others – NewsGeeks

March 12, 2009

Letters asking for renewal dues start popping up in my mailbox around this time of year. I’ve received one from my local NPR affiliate station, about a hundred from Wired Magazine and two from the Society of Professional Journalists. The amount of funding each letter is requesting isn’t terribly unreasonable… mostly.

I won’t be sending in my membership dues to the SPJ. This is the first year I’m not being counted as a student so the dues are significantly higher. Sure, I can afford to pay them, but I’m not so sure I want to bother. It’s been well over a year since a local chapter scheduled a meeting — and even when those meeting actually happened, it was always a $25 meal and I never quite connected with any of the contacts I’d made.

For me, it was listening to fundamentals of journalism, and its hard not to see value in that. But the climate has changed. The conversation has shifted to financial models and how to best use technology at a news organization.

If I were seeking information about using technology effectively or how to run a business, the very LAST place I would look is at an SPJ meeting. I’m sorry, but that’s the god’s honest truth.

Other organizations that are geared more towards the discussion of online media aren’t much better. Most of the people who are in charge come from the organizations with the most problems. It’s not their fault of course, but their perspective is skewed. They are talking to large groups of journalists who don’t know how to best use technology and social media within their reporting, and they don’t have much of a clue either — not because they aren’t intelligent but again, because they are unable to bring forth a different perspective.

I love my fellow journalists. I think they are smart, resourceful and nearly always interesting to converse with. I tend to hang out with a lot of people who are just like that but who aren’t journalists. With the way the economy is going combined with the outlook on our industry’s job growth, pretty soon we’ll all be former editors, reports, writers, anchors and producers. We’ll all just be citizens sitting around a pub table evangelizing about news. And at that point we’ll all need to be journalists. Every one of us.

That’s why the NewsGeeks meetup was formed. I want the community, I don’t want the emotions from the industry. I don’t want an agenda or a topic of discussion. I just want to chat with other people who like to dissect the news and how the news travels on social media.

I’m not against the SPJ or ONA…(or any other journalistic organization for that matter) because they do a lot of activism that most people wouldn’t realize. But the community in the pre existing organizations is as gone for me as the job openings at metro newspapers.


Speaking at PodCamp Nashville: LiveCasting

March 7, 2009

Come hear me speak at PodCamp Nashville March 7 at 12:30 in Vanderbilt’s Owen Graduate School of Management — Details here.

What exactly is “LiveCasting”? If you don’t know, it doesn’t mean you’ve been living under a rock while the rest of us media folks have vastly advanced the social media scene. No, both Christian Grantham of Nashville Is Talking and Erin Cubert at The Tennessean asked me the same question when I proposed that we do a speaker session at PodCamp Nashville 2009.

Neither of them knew what it was initially because the term “LiveCasting” was made up to describe what Erin, Christian and myself do while we’re not doing the news. Mostly this will consist of updating microblogging services (such as Twitter), adding links to Social networks (facebook, digg) and even some pre audio / video interaction (ustream, skype) prior to posting a blog post or short video clip. However, if we’re communicating with a community, it will fall under the LiveCasting umbrella.

In most places of “work” these activities are all considered an entertaining waste of time and thus, most people wouldn’t hesitate to say we “play on the Internet all day long.” That’s simply not true, even if it’s an enjoyable way to spend time. To adequately fulfill the role of  journalist in today’s world, you’ve got to become the most active member of the community while your reporting the news.

So we made up the term LiveCasting, but in reality, we’ve all been doing it for quite some time.


A Facebook, Twitter Collision: As Told By Fishes…

March 6, 2009

Original Image Credit: mpv-sam.com

Original Image Credit: mpv-sam.com

It happened again. Facebook decided to absolutely change everything very quickly and drastically to “better accommodate” the true intent of the site’s purpose. But if you caught the initial reaction from media bloggers, you heard something like Facebook is copying microblogging platform Twitter.

No, this isn’t grade school and these companies definitely aren’t taking tests.

Anyone who knows me will tell you I’m not the biggest fan of facebook, however, that doesn’t mean I’m ignorant to how much value it holds. A large chunk of total web traffic to this very blog comes from facebook and it’s by far the best database of personal contacts that I’ve ever used. So when so called “professionals” covering the tech industry start labeling facebook as a wanna-be, copying, poseur; I have to restrain my urge to flame the comment sections.

The real explanations for  facebook’s changes are much more complex and quite intelligent from a development perspective. Silicon Valley Reporter Sarah Lacy wrote a great observation about the coming collision course between the over-valued facebook and over-hyped Twitter — both relative heavyweights in world of  social media.

And while I typically keep all of the content on my personal blog relatively local and news oriented, I’m cheating with this post. For those who don’t know, Lacy is originally a Tennessean — Memphis to be exact.


Nashville Scene Calls Out Nashvillest Over Titans Comment

February 2, 2009

nashville-scene-logoNashville Scene reporter Caleb Hannan decided to call bullshit on local news and events blog Nashvillest by butchering the lede of an article about Tennessee Titans’ defensive tackle Albert Haynesworth’s contract negotiations.1

Hannan was miffed after reading “Albert Haynesworth is being a brat about his contract extension, because $32 million just isn’t enough” in a post written by Nashvillest Editor Christy Frink via his Google Reader feed, according to comments. He then proceeded to post a rant that was longer than Frink’s entire recap of the morning headlines. (Below…)

Via Nashville Scene

This morning, Nashvillests Christy and Morgan referred to Titans All-Everything defensive tackle Albert Haynesworth as a “brat” for not accepting the team’s initial contract offer. As a restricted free agent, the Titans have exclusive negotiating rights with Haynesworth until February 27th. Thus far they’ve made one offer that wasn’t close to what Haynesworth says he’s looking for; something in the range of the $32 million given last year to Vikings defensive end Jared Allen...

The point he makes is valid (or as valid as possible regarding American professional sports) but why mention Nashvillest at all? In any case, it still does not excuse the failure to identify what exactly Nashvillest is and furthermore “who the hell are Christy and Morgan” as one Scene commenter put it. The lede just sounds like a blatant Oh-snap-no-they-didn’t moment.

While this is sports commentary, the last time I checked Web articles still play by the same rules as do other forms of written journalism — meaning you don’t make assumptions that the readers know anything.

Frink’s often snarky commentary isn’t a shining example of journalistic copy writing either and often assumes too much about the subject, which can be just as dangerous. However, Nashvillest is always  consistent when linking to the source of news rather than the source of drama surrounding it. Case in point: the Scene article didn’t link to The Tennessean but they did give one to the “brat” comment.

Provided things stay civil, it might be a good idea to get the two camps together for lunch to talk shop. But if that’s too much, I’d settle for a single Scene editorial staffer who wanted to actively participate in the Twestival: Nashville event Feb. 12.

EDITORIAL NOTE: Are any Scene reporters on Twitter? Please follow (@TChed or e-mail me if you know of any.)


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