Center for Citizen Media Rotating Header Image

Self-Referential Linkage by Wall Street Journal

In a story about Yahoo’s latest executive reorganization, the Wall Street Journal gave credit where it was due, sort ot.

The paper noted that news of the changes had appeared earlier on AllThingsD site and Valleywag. Dow Jones owns AllThingsD. It doesn’t own Valleywag.

I linked to both sites in this posting. The Journal only linked to one. Guess which.

There’s a word for this: cheesy.

Minnesota's New Daily "Paper"

Ken Doctor asks if MinnPost.com is A Broadside of Next Wave Journalism. He observes that the local daily papers have been laying off scores of journalists, for one thing:

All publishers like the Star Tribune and the Pioneer Press have done is create a small opening. Yes, they are reeling, but they are still taking in hundreds of million of dollars in ad and circulation revenue and trying to transform themselves for the new Internet age. Still any siphoning off of a high-demographics news audience (one Internet advertisers covet) is bad news for the already-declining online growth rates of the dailies.

Read it all for the best analysis i’ve seen so far of this situation.

El Tiempo: Blogs and More

El Tiempo, Colombia’s national daily paper, has been moving at a fairly good speed to incorporate conversational media into its corporate and journalistic DNA. It’s clearly among the leaders in Latin America, if not the leader.

Guillermo Franco, the paper’s online editor, and several of his colleagues gave me a virtual tour of the site’s Participacion area yesterday. It’s impressive.

In addition to about 10 staff blogs, the paper has signed up about 200 citizens in a blog network covering a wide variety of topics. Comments are enabled on stories, and the forums are well-attended. All this attracts a fierce online debate, I’m told, including some angry postings that probably wouldn’t pass muster in most American papers. The politics of Colombia are beyond fierce; they are often literally deadly, and El Tiempo is in the middle of the debate.

Eltiempo Comments

The paper has an interesting approach to comment registration and display. A commenter needs only to provide a valid email address to post, but El Tiempo has created a superset of commenters who agree to give more detailed information — including a phone call from the paper — confirming their identity. Comments from the people in the latter group are highlighted on the site under a tab called “Comentarios destacados,” with the others under a tab called “Otros comentarios” — and Franco tells me the quality of the comments from the “destacados” group is high.

El Tiempo has a number of other sites, including several devoted to e-commerce. I’m intrigued with the just-launched vive.in, a site aimed at cultural activities (around Bogota in its first incarnation) with a major social networking component. With little publicity, Franco says, the beta site has already attracted some 5,000 signups.

Keep an eye on what these folks are doing.

Why American Newspapers are Dying, Part MMCCDXVI

Editor & Publisher: Many Won’t Run Next Two ‘Opus’ Strips With Sex Joke, Islam Reference. At least 25 of the 200 or so “Opus” client newspapers might not run the Sunday-only comic’s next two episodes, which feature Islamic references and a sex joke.

Puritan prudishness and political cowardice: Now there’s a combination that’s just certain to attract more readers.

On the Road: Bogota

Columbia MapI’m in Colombia to give a talk tomorrow at a media conference sponsored by Andiarios, Colombia’s national newspaper association, and the U.S. State Department (which is paying for this trip). El Tiempo, the big local daily paper, ran a pre-conference interview, translated from English to Spanish by the paper’s manager of new media, Guillermo Franco, whom I met when he was a Nieman Fellow at Harvard several years ago.

I’ll be talking mainly about citizen media, of course, but in the context of freedom of speech and of the press. Such traditions, which we take for granted in the United States, aren’t as universal in Latin America, among other places where telling people the truth can bring genuine danger to the truth-teller.

It does here. The political situation, which is becoming more stable, is hardly calm, and journalists are on the front lines of the conflicts. As Reporters Without Borders notes in its 2007 report on Colombia, three journalists were killed and many others were forced to leave their regions or even the country after being threatened.

(Corrections to my earlier spelling on Colombian geography. This is inexcusable, and I apologize.)

Jobs Open at UC Berkeley Journalism School

The University of California, Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism has several job openings: technology training instructor and a couple of Web developers.

The technology training instructor runs workshops for mid-career journalists on new technologies reporters and editors should be using, as part of our Knight Digital Media Center.

The two Web developers work on the various web sites run by the school and its affiliated programs.

Here are links to the job descriptions, including the URL for applying online:

TECHNOLOGY TRAINING INSTRUCTOR

http://journalism.berkeley.edu/jobs/details.php?cat=jedu&ID=5855

WEB DEVELOPER

http://journalism.berkeley.edu/jobs/details.php?cat=newmed&ID=5854

China Continues to Pressure New Media

AP: Chinese blog providers ‘encouraged’ to register users with their real names. Blog service providers in China are “encouraged” to register users with their real names and contact information, according to a new government document that tones down an earlier proposal banning anonymous online blogging. At least 10 major Chinese blog service providers have agreed to sign the “self-discipline pledge” issued by the Internet Society of China, the state-run Xinhua News Agency reported Tuesday.

So it’s yet more Big Brotherism from a regime that considers intellectual freedom a danger to the state.

Anonymity has its place in the world, and a dictatorship is one of those places.

Digital Journalism Jobs Replacing (at least some) Traditional Ones

Mark Glaser (PBS MediaShift): Traditional Journalism Job Cuts Countered by Digital Additions. If you follow the world of traditional journalism, you can’t help but notice the seemingly constant stream of layoffs and buyouts at news organizations. But media observers don’t often emphasize the flip side: As newspapers and broadcasters slice their senior-level workforce, they are also quietly building their digital and online teams.

That’s not all. There’s never been a better time to be a media entrepreneur.

The gloom and doom may not be overstated for the traditional business model and methods. But the world, as usual, is more complex than the bad news suggests.

Neglecting to Mention That Other Mortgage-Meltdown Villain

Howard Kurtz, in his Washington Post “Media Notes Extra,” has an appropriate caution for journalists:

Memo to the media: Everyone who is defaulting on a home mortgage is not necessarily a victim.

He points out that people who took huge risks were reckless, and goes on to note that there’s “plenty of blame to go around.”

Let’s hope he eventually goes beyond the real estate and financial industries — probably the biggest wrongdoers where villainy occurred — and looks hard at the role of the press in this debacle.

Broad Brushes on Big Canvasses

Danny Glover (National Journal): Gross Generalizations About Old And New Media. It’s just plain wrong to demean an entire segment of the media, whether old or new, based on the flaws of a few practioners within it. The modern media world would be a far better place if the converging interests would crank the cynicism and animosity down a notch or three.

Looking forward to that day.