Center for Citizen Media Rotating Header Image

Tony Hillerman, R.I.P.

The New York Times’ obituary of Tony Hillerman, dead at 83, covers his life and work with great detail. He was indeed one of our finest mystery writers. His work centered around the Southwest and were set around Native Americans and their lives.

But I wanted particularly to mention his 1971 novel, The Fly on the Wall, which I consider one of the best about journalism. It’s quite dated from a several standpoints, but it goes deep into the recesses where reporters and politicians live in often-rancid symbiosis.

Certainly Hillerman deserved his acclaim for the Navajo stories. Journalists and the people who care about the craft should read this one, too.

Journalistic Inanity: Surprised by Supply and Demand

Associated Press: September new home sales rise by 2.7 percent. Sales of new homes recorded an unexpected increase in September as median home prices dropped to the lowest level in four years, the Commerce Department reported Monday…

In the universe most of us inhabit, crashing prices generally lead to more turnover.

Barcelona Blogger Meetup Tonite (Friday)

We’ll be at Dos Trece at 8 pm. Location: c/Carme 40 at the corner of c/Doctor Dou.

Kosmopolis, Barcelona

Kosmopolis BannersIt’s great to be back in Barcelona, after a too-quick visit to Greece, for a conference that is not the usual kind for me. This one is called Kosmopolis, an “International Literature Fest” spanning the next three days. I’m honored to be included on the program, which starts this evening.

Greeks Bearing Blogs, and Brickbats

Traditional journalists, and traditional journalism educators, remain pretty suspicious of blogging in lots of places. But if what I heard in two days of conferencing in Athens and Thessaloniki (the latter is Greece’s second-largest city) is an indication of the overall situation, there’s a larger-than-usual gulf between older and newer media in the land where inquiry and reason helped shape Western culture.

The problems people see with blogging and other conversational/social media were high on other speakers’ topic lists. In particular, worries about anonymous (or pseudonymous) online attacks came up again and again.

It’s a real issue. But it’s part of the larger issue of how we help consumers of news and information be better at separating what’s reliable and what isn’t. Here’s a slide I showed in my talk:

Slide about anonymous speech

The point is that while anonymity is a vital tool to preserve, we should strongly encourage people to stand behind their own words. And, crucially, we should have a default position when we see anonymous speech: Don’t trust it.

In fact, when it comes to anonymous or pseudonymous personal attacks, the default position should be to actively disbelieve what we’ve read or heard. We should not give the cowards who post such things any slack at all. There are exceptions, but rare ones.

Like students everywhere, the ones I met at Aristotle University’s Department of Journalism and Mass Communication were bright and eager to figure out their future. They are heading into a journalism market dominated by what sounds to me like something of a cartel at the pro-journalism level. But Greece isn’t immune from economic realities, and it’s a reasonable bet that what’s happening to Greek media companies will look, in the end, like what’s happening in the U.S.

So, as I told them, I hope they’ll consider inventing their own jobs.

Craig Wherlock, a Brit teaching English in Greece, blogged about the day in Thessaloniki here. He points to other coverage, mostly in Greek:

Τα ΓΙΑΤΙ και τα ΔΙΟΤΙ των ΗΜΕΡΙΔΩΝ και των ΣΥΝΕΔΡΙΩΝ
Ανέκδοτο περί συνεδρίου συμμετοχικής δημοσιογραφίας
Όταν τα παραδοσιακά μέσα κάνουν έφοδο στα νέα…
Συνέδριο; Δημοσιογραφία;
Συμμετοχική Δημοσιογραφία: Blog και Νέα Μέσα
Δημοσιογραφία και πολίτες ΙI ή ένα συνέδριο γι’ αυτά
Livestreaming από τη διημερίδα
What is journalism?
Λα-λα Λόλα να ένα blog
New Media Conference συμπεράσματα
Social Media Tales: ένα συνέδριο κι η σφαγή των αμάχων
Οι δικές μου εντυπώσεις από τη “διημερίδα”

Off topic: I was lucky enough to visit the royal tombs in Vergina, not far from Thessaloniki. The director of the museum there gave several of us a private tour (including a look — no photos allowed — at Philip II’s bones) of a site that makes the word “history” come truly into focus.

I can’t wait to go back for a longer visit.

Blogger Meetup in Barcelona Friday?

I’ll be in Barcelona later this week. Might be fun to connect some bloggers, perhaps Friday. More later…

Two Weeks Left to Apply for New Community Information Grants

Do you have an idea for a community information product or service? There are just two weeks to go — November 1, 2008 is the last day anyone with a good idea can submit an application to the Knight News Challenge media innovation contest.

The worldwide competition offers up to $5 million and seeks innovative ideas for a digital news and information projects, including: Improving local online news; bringing Web 2.0 tools to local neighborhoods; publishing platforms to support conversations in specific geographic communities.

Remember, there are just four rules for applicants to follow:

1. Use or create digital, open-source technology as the code base.
2. Use news and information to serve the public interest.
3. Benefit one or more specific geographic communities.
4. Be innovative.

For the first time, the contest offers more than fifty coaches standing by online in the ‘”News Challenge Garage” to help innovators apply.

Last year’s winners received prizes ranging from $15,000 to $876,000. They included individuals, philanthropic organizations and for-profit businesses, such as the Bakersfield Californian newspaper. Ten winners were from the United States, and six were from Canada, England, Lithuania, South Africa, Zimbabwe and Russia.

The contest is run by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.

For more information and to apply visit www.newschallenge.org.

Pathetic 'Journalism"

Politico: Gameday, turning the most important election of our lifetimes into “who won the day.”

Pathetic. Politico wants to be taken seriously. This is why you can’t.

Furthering Citizen Media: Interview

David Silverberg interviewed me for a series he’s running on DigitalJournal.com. My entry is called “The Journalist With a Business Edge“.

Why People Consider Journalists Lower Than Dirt, Part 83,704

Dean Reynolds, CBS News: Reporter’s Notebook: Seeing How The Other Half Lives – From The Road: Maybe a front-running campaign like Obama’s that is focused solely on victory doesn’t have the time to do the mundane things like print up schedules or attend to the needs of reporters. But in politics, everything that goes around comes around.

This is a threat to punish Obama with negative coverage because his staff is not as, whimper, attentive to reporters as it should be. Because the candidate has a fuller schedule that leaves less time for “relaxing,” as the journalist says.

Oh, the humanity!

This is reminiscent of the 2000 campaign, when Al Gore was insufficiently fawning of the press and when the Bush campaign realized that if you cater to the physical needs of the reporters they’ll file more friendly stories. Bush pretended to personally like the reporters, while Gore made no secret of his overall disdain for shallow political coverage.

Guess whose coverage was vastly more friendly. Yep.

What this says about journalistic integrity is frightening, but it’s a reality.