Category Archives: In the News

Applications Up at Columbia J-School

It’s a fascinating trend that journalism school applications are increasing at the same time as the fortunes of the journalism industry seem to be dramatically decreasing. Columbia Journalism School reports applications are up an astonishing 40 percent since last year. Here’s the story in InsideHigherEd.

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A Bill to Save Newspapers

A Democratic Senator has introduced the Newspaper Revitalization Act that would allow struggling newspapers to become non-profit organizations with tax breaks that might help them survive. Here’s the Reuters story.

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Sunshine Week

The Student Press Law Center is celebrating Sunshine Week, designed by the American Society of Newspaper Editors to emphasize the importance of open government and freedom of information, by sending records requests to 1oo public universities and colleges about student disciplinary procedures.

With the help of journalism students and instructors at the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee, the University of North Texas and Humboldt State University, the SPLC sent out identical letters to 95 public and 20 private institutions in early to mid-February. Some schools required an additional form. The request asked for the total number of complaints investigated by the student disciplinary body, the number of those cases resulting in various types of punishment, any breakdown by the nature of the complaints, data related to sexual assault complaints, and the number of cases referred to the student disciplinary body by the police. SPLC Executive Director Frank LoMonte said the request focused on institutions’ internal disciplinary procedures because in some cases these “mini-court systems” have evolved to deal with serious criminal complaints in near-secrecy.

 

“We decided to see what disciplinary records we could obtain, first, because we suspect there is quite a bit of confusion about the obligation to disclose some disciplinary information — or at least redacted statistical information — and second, because we think it may be surprising to the public how many serious incidents beyond smoking in the rec room are handled through these non-criminal channels,” he said.

 

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British Media Deathwatch of Reality TV Star Jade Goody

PD*27470548The British media is engaged at the moment in a bizarre deathwatch of a reality TV star, Jade Goody, who is about to die of cancer. Goody stepped into the media spotlight six years ago as a participant in the reality TV show, Big Brother. She became a national figure of ridicule for her gauche ways. For a while she was the celebrity that everybody loved to hate. Now, however, the tenor of the coverage of Goody, who has two young sons, has changed as she faces death. She has a notorious British publicist, Max Clifford, who has been doling out updates to the British press, like this one, which ran today in the Daily Telegraph.

 

 

Jade Goody tells sons she will be ‘a star in the sky’ when she dies

Jade Goody has told her young sons she will soon be a “star up in the sky” looking over them, according to Max Clifford, her publicist.

Here’s a great round up of the story in the New York Times, which addresses the strange kind of media creation Goody is. 

This is reality television carried out to its most extreme, grotesque conclusion, one not even envisioned in the film “The Truman Show” all those years ago. The question of why, exactly, the story is so compelling — how to negotiate the line between poignant and voyeuristic, whether newspapers are exploiting Ms. Goody or she is exploiting them — has twisted the media into knots, even as they provide daily updates on Ms. Goody’s deteriorating condition and state of mind.

They are motivated partly by guilt. Many newspapers have been intermittently nasty about Ms. Goody, holding her up as a sorry symbol of vulgarian, instant-gratification Britain, “someone who achieved a sort of fame for having displayed her incalculable stupidity on television,” as Rod Liddle wrotein The Spectator. Some people even suggested at first, as have many anti-Jade sites on the Internet, that she did not really have cancer but was just trying to get publicity.

Now that she is dying, many of the same papers are now squirming with unease at their collusion in the endless building up, knocking down and exploitation of a woman they always counted on to increase their own sales.

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Stony Brook to Hire 50 Journalists

Media Giraffe is reporting that Stony Brook University, which has a strong news literacy program, is putting its money where its mouth is :

 

Stony Brook University unveiled on Friday a proposal to hire 50 laid-off journalists to undergo training this summer and join dozens of U.S. university campuses in the fall to teach “news literacy” to non-journalism majors.

 

Howard Schneider, dean of the Stony Brook School of Journalism, announced the initative at the end of a three-day conference on news literacy. “Their salaries would be paid for by the grant,” said Schneider. He and Alberto Ibarguen, president of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, confirmed that Knight would provide a planning grant to launch the initiative.

The announcement was made at the end of a news literacy conference held at the Long Island campus this week. Lord knows there are enough journalists out there who need jobs. And with citizen journalism on the rise, teaching news literacy to non journalism majors can’t be a bad thing.

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Time Mag’s List of Endangered Newspapers

This link came in from Prof. Virginia Breen. The New York Daily News, where she and I used to work, is listed on Time magazine’s list of  the 10 Most Endangered Newspapers in America. Sob. We both still have a soft spot for New York’s Hometown Newspaper. Also on the list: The Chicago Sun Times, the Boston Globe, the San Francisco Chronicle, The Miami Herald. Sob.

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Images of German School Shooting

 

Here’s a picture which ran in Der Spiegel, a German magazine, showing the pixelated faces of students at the German school which was the scene of a horrific shooting earlier today. Compare it with the third picture in the CNN slideshow below, which shows the children’s faces. Creates a very different effect. 010201460808002

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Here’s the CNN slideshow. Check out the third image.

 

 

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CNBC Gives Financial Advice | The Daily Show | Comedy Central

If you haven’t seen it already, here’s the Jon Stewart’s slapdown of CNBC that’s been making the rounds on the blogosphere. Talk about PR disaster for the channel.

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Student Photographer to Face Trial

A student photographer from Pennsylvania State University is facing trial for refusing to disperse after a riot broke out after a football game at State College, Pa. last Fall. What’s interesting about this case is that the judge says the media has “no greater right” to be at the scene than the general public. But the defense lawyer says the photographer, who had a fancy camera and looked like a news reporter, was targeted for arrest while people who were taking pictures with their cell phones were not targeted. The lawyer says representatives of the media are entitled to greater access because of their role in getting the word out, not less. Here’s the story by the Student Press Law Center.

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Twitterfall

It’ll make your head spin, but check out Twitterfall. Tweets from Twitter appear in real time on the screen providing a fascinating look at what people are Tweeting about. Journalists have been using Twitter as a way of learning about breaking stories as well as a way of getting hold of eyewitnesses.

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Staff of College Paper Strike

Staffers at the University of Oregon’s student newspaper, the Daily Emerald, went on strike Weds., saying they would not go back to work until their demands were met. The dispute is over student control and editorial independence all playing out against a backdrop of severe money problems. Here’s how the students described it in their story on DailyEmerald.com.

Here’s the newspaper’s advisor, Steven Smith, an Emerald alum and former editor in chief of The Spokesman Review in Spokane, Wash.,  giving his resignation to the board of directors. He copied the letter to Poynter Online’s Romanesko:

Good morning,

When it comes to unwise and futile gestures, I take a back seat to no one. So I can’t in any way criticize the staff of the Daily Emerald for taking a stand on behalf of principles in which they believe even though I think they are being shortsighted.

I love the University of Oregon and I love the Daily Emerald. I have done my best throughout my career to show support for both institutions. Finding myself in conflict with the paper’s student editors is personally painful.

So, it is clearly in the best interests of all involved that I withdraw my offer to work with the paper in the coming year.

Perhaps with the field clear, the board and the staff can focus on the one issue that matters, the paper’s survivability.

I am going to ask the Emerald to reimburse me for non-refundable expenses incurred in advance of my trip to Eugene next week, something less than $300.

Thanks for your consideration and support during this difficult time. Please know that I wish you and the staff all the best.

steve

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Students Help Cops Zero in on Chandra Levy Suspected Killer

CNN reports that a group of criminal justice students from Bauder College in Atlanta helped the police narrow in on the immigrant suspected in the 2001 killing of Washington D.C. intern, Chandra Levy.

They spent hours with the slain intern’s mother, Susan Levy, who flew from her home in California to Atlanta just to talk to them. Chandra Levy had studied criminal justice in college, too.

They began with a list of five suspects, then narrowed it down to one. On December 28, they mailed their findings to the police chief in Washington, D.C. They never heard back.

But on Saturday, the text and phone messages began to fly. There’s a suspect, they told each other with excitement. An arrest is imminent.

“It completely validates 15 months of work,” their teacher, Sheryl McCollum, said that Saturday morning. “We knew this case was solvable. There was no reason for it not to be solved.”

Here’s the whole CNN story: LINK.

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Michelle Obama’s Right to Bare Arms

Michelle Obama catches some heat for baring her arms in her official portrait LINK.

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In Defense of Newspapers

Check out this fascinating post from Economic Principals.com that argues that 

Newspapers have survived three big challenges to their authority: the rise of general interest magazines from the1890s, of radio news from the 1920s, and television news from the 1950s. Each time newspapers got on top of the competition by entering the new businesses themselves, and by extending their coverage of their rivals’ spheres. “

He goes on with compelling arguments that although the “agony in the world of print journalism is very great” if it can adjust to the changing times, it will, as it has before, survive.

I hope he’s right.

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Conrad Black Gives Jailhouse Interview

Former newspaper magnate, Conrad Black, who’s serving six years for fraud, gives an email interview from the inside. Doesn’t sound too bad. He’s apparently practicing the piano, freelancing up a storm and eating granola. Here’s the interview in the Canadian National Post LINK.

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