This is how to write a feature.
This is how to write a feature.
Dave Winer’s latest post, Online journalism remains unexplored, gets this right, I think.
We still tend to see the internet either as a place/space/platform where we can carry on doing whatever it is we’re doing, but just get it out there quicker and cheaper.
Money quote:
… for the most [journalists] have gone to the Internet with a feeling of necessity not wonder.
That said, he’s hard on journalists, whom he accuses almost of setting up roadblocks and checkpoints between the reader and the source.
Is that all we do – just get in the way? Does our disintermediation (his word) add no value to the reader at all?
The Guardian launched a five-year plan in 2011 to move “beyond the newspaper” to an 80/20 digital/print split.
The Daily Telegraph (the first British newspaper on the web) announced plans in 2014 for a new editorial structure designed to use “digital content as the backbone of each printed edition” of the newspaper.
Said to be an acceleration of Telegraph Media Group editor-in-chief Jason Seiken’s “vision to transform the organisation’s print-focused mindset into a digitally led approach”, the new structure will have five main elements:
We’ll get there.
The Telegraph model seems like a good place to start.
There’s a lot to think about in this upbeat report from mediatel newsline from the annual PPA conference on Thursday (21 May) – with the headline theme being that “magazine brands will continue to move far beyond the printed page”.
And to j-schools?
I happened upon this quote from Adam Gopnik of the New Yorker while doing some research on a social media project. (Yes, again with the serendipity.) Continue reading
Have a quick read of this AP story about Apple, dated January 27, 2015: Continue reading
I was doing some unrelated research and came across this quote in a piece by Clay Shirky (19/09/2014).
Check the date. It was right then; it’s unlikely to be wrong now.
Try to imagine a world where the future of print is unclear: Maybe 25 year olds will start demanding news from yesterday, delivered in an unshareable format once a day. Perhaps advertisers will decide “Click to buy” is for wimps. Mobile phones: could be a fad. After all, anything could happen with print. Hard to tell, really.
So the question is: are we facing the future of print in our teaching?
If you don’t know Mark Steyn’s work (and why would you?), this is a great introduction.
It’s an excoriating attack on US media reaction to the Boston bombing.
Across-the-pond life
It resonates loudly on this side of the pond as well – because, let’s face it, he could be talking about the Guardian, Channel 4, the BBC, etc., etc., etc. …
The Guardian, BBC and Telegraph rarely speak with one voice, but they agree on one thing: the number one mistake people make at job interviews is failing to prepare. Continue reading
Huffpo’s here. The Huffington Post’s UK site was launched last night at a gathering and twitterfest (#huffpostuk) of the great and the good. Continue reading