Does news HAVE a future?

April 28, 2007

It’s probably still a rare thing for a blogger to actually advertise a rival blog in a post, but here goes. This deserves a shout. I got this message from Steve Borris, the associate director of the Center for the Application of Information Technology at the Washington University in St Louis. I’ve had a quick tour of “the future of news” and it’s probably going to become a regular stop on my rounds of the blogosphere. It’s covering some of the same ground as me, but ventures into technology a bit more than I might do. The “future” of news and journalism is a subject close to my own intellectual interests and my own passions about the future of journalism (but not as we know it). I will add a permanent link in my own blogroll, but for now, check it out. Here’s the gist of Steve’s message:

Hello,

I would like to call your attention to “The Future of News” blog that was launched last month. It is a spin-off of a college course by the same name that I teach at Washington University in St. Louis. This site provides a vision of what news will look like 5-15 years from now. It also provides ongoing commentary on how closely day-to-day events fit this vision. While most web-based information on the future of news tends to focus on the perspectives of those involved with current news organizations or technology, this site will also incorporate perspectives from history, political science, consumer marketing, economics, and finance. This should be evident in the three permanent articles that I have posted on the site: News as it was meant to be, Four advances that set news back, and The future of news.


Celeblogging – so yesterday

April 28, 2007
“Celeblogging” – the tasteless art of tittle-tattle about two-bit half-wits that we’re sick of hearing about.

Does Australia, or the world for that matter, really need or deserve another senseless and humourless website devoted to blogging about celebrities? Well, apparently one company thinks there’s money to be made by mining this weak vein once again. Here’s a story from Friday’s edition of crikey, which outlines the deal.

Crikey 27 April 2007
Look out, wonkettes: Defamer hits Oz

By Jane Nethercote

Defamer now has an Australian lovechild.

Based in LA, the original Defamer blog — part of the Gawker Media stable along with Gawker , Wonkette and Valleywag – takes Hollywood gossip for a smart and riotous spin.

Australia is getting some of the action. Not that there’s been much fanfare — Crikey only discovered the active site yesterday thanks to a bit of procrastinatory internet gambolling. Gawker Media’s gadget blog Gizmodo also has an Australian spin-off .

The two titles are published in Australia by Allure Media — an outfit that was established by Netus, an investment company which sets up proven tech-based business models in the Australian market. Netus, which is financially backed by News Limited, is run by folk like eCorp alumni Daniel Petre and Alison Deans who helped bring eBay to Australia (as MediaConnect/ITJourno (via Squash) has noted).

Crikey understands that Netus initiated the arrangement, approaching Gawker Media to do a licensing deal. And although it’s stopping at two blogs at this stage, Allure Media in fact has “rights to all the Gawker titles”, managing director of Allure Media Chris Janz tells Crikey.

But we shouldn’t expect an Australian Wonkette any time soon. They’re stopping at one gossip publication for now.

Defamer was chosen for Australia, rather than its more famous sister blog Manhattan-based Gawker, because the Hollywood focus translates more easily for an Australian audience. And Defamer Oz will be sharing copy with the US version.

As for the Australian content, it’s in good hands. At the helm is Jess McGuire who established herself as an Australian blogosfigure at pop culture mecca Ausculture which brought us all-important live blogging of Australian Idol and Big Brother, Neighbours wraps, Dolly Parton Appreciation Week and turkeyslapgate.

So will the bitchy and witty Ausculture vibe penetrate Defamer Oz? “I would hope so”, McGuire tells Crikey. There are “no plans of impersonating Mark [Lisanti], editor of Defamer. The good folks that are getting me to do it, knew what they were getting into. I won’t change my writing style too much … Though perhaps I “won’t be as rudely angry about political issues”.

The Defamer approach is to “not ever really be cruel” and “that’s my philosophy” for the Australian edition, she says. The aim is to produce something that’s shamelessly pop culture-based but more clever than one-trick ponies like puerile gossip blog Perez Hilton. “I can’t fathom why the Australian media is bending over backwards for Perez Hilton”, says McGuire. “He’s not a good writer … I have a problem with the media fel-ating him”. There are “far better bloggers in the States writing about pop culture”.

Still, she concedes, “there’s a market for everything”.

Yep, including a “bitch slap” festival between the Defamer crew and a two-bit, “blogger to the stars”, Perez Hilton.

The sooner we get over our obsession with celebrity, the better. This stuff is so purile it makes reality television look positively Shakespearean, not!

Just a thought: Isn’t Perez Hilton that little dog that Paris carries in her Gucci tote along with the cocaine, marijuana, s*x toys and video-camera?



What to do with a drunken sailor?

April 27, 2007

From time to time you’re going to here from my mate Bruce. He’s on the first leg of a journey, short-handed sailing around Australia. Whenever he’s in broadband range he’ll be sending emails with lots of great photos of him and his yacht H2O. He’s got friends on board and – if fate hadn’t intervened (landing me in Auckland a few weeks before he sailed) – it would be me on the deck, beer in one hand, tiller in the other, as Bruce throws another mackerel on the barbie.
Here’s a grab from his last message, with his account of the night which sealed the unfortunate fate of three sailors who went missing from a catamaran in the same stretch of lonely ocean.

As the coastline between Bowen and Townsville was pretty uninteresting with
only one or two swelly anchorages, we made the decision to sail directly to
Townsville (about 120NM), sailing through the day and night, my first night
sail on H2O. Sailing in the morning got off to a slow start but by noon the
wind had picked up, pushing us along at 5-6 knots and we began to worry that
we were going too fast and might get to Townsville too early, arriving in
the night. So to play it safe, we reefed the main and after nightfall, took
3 hour shifts at the helm, keeping a good eye out for tankers, trawlers and
other travellers of the night. The night, however, proved uneventful until
about 3am when we heard a sea rescue plane asking if any ships were either
at or near Davies Reef. We were to find out the following morning that a
coastal surveillance plane had spotted a 12m catamaran drifting off the
reef, 80NM out to sea with no one on board. You may have read about this
rather unfortunate event in last Saturday’s papers – three men lost at sea
in mysterious circumstances. It turns out that they had left Airlie Beach
on the day we departed Hamilton and we probably just missed seeing their boat
as we crossed from Hook to Gloucester Island. Our biggest concern, however,
was contacting our families to let them know that it wasn’t us!

Bruce and Michael are fine, if a little shaken. Here’s a recent snap of Bruce with lunch (sashimi anyone?)


Barenaked Ladies

April 27, 2007

Before we go on, I think it necessary to explain my reference to Barenaked Ladies in the previous post.
Here’s a clip that says it all really. [Rated G - for parents to enjoy with their children]

You can find out about this fine bunch of Canadians at the BnL Official website. Ahhh, this is pure Martini music. “chin chin”. I’m off for a medicinal, right now:

the “medicinal”

  • 3 parts gin (from the freezer)
  • 2 parts dry vermouth (from the fridge)

Pour liberally into an old wine glass, add three olives on a “twizzler”, stir with finger, enjoy with television after a hard day blogging.


NRA hiding behind a conservative smokescreen

April 27, 2007

NRA-ILA :: In The News

I’ve been keeping an eye on the National Rifle Association’s website in an attempt to find some argument from them in the wake of the Virginia Tech killings a week ago. So far nothing. I’ve mentioned this before and you can trackback to see the history of this post.
This evening I found this (link above) and a couple of others like it on the NRA “news” website. Basically an aggregation of the pro-gun defences and a series of attacks on everyone except the gun-owners.

It doesn’t cut it. The NRA has not itself put out any kind of meaningful statement. And the one they did post, essentially saying “no comment” until all the “facts” are known about VT has been taken down.

Instead they’re letting the right-wing columnists and bloggers do their dirty work. If I had a gun, I’d…
Well, in the words of the Barenaked Ladies, “there’d be no tomorrow”.

I wonder if those bright sparks over at “shoot-em up central” have any idea how ironic and stupid this kind of promotion actually looks now.

Here’s one of the NRA’s “happy snap” images of what a well-armed college kid might want to carry to their next biology class.


The YouTube Election

April 27, 2007

Free Times – Columbia’s Free Alternative Weekly:

In this week’s Free Times, Dan Cook commented on the ways in which YouTube may become an interesting media battle ground in the 2008 US Presidential election. Noting that unauthorised clips of several candidates had made it to the site, he went on:

“It’s looking more and more like a YouTube election season after John McCain made his way to the site in a big way last week with comments he made about Iran. Speaking on April 18 at a VFW hall in Murrells Inlet, S.C., McCain was asked about whether the United States might launch air strikes against Iran. McCain responded making a reference to the song “Barbara Ann” by The Beach Boys, saying, “That old, uh, that old Beach Boys song, ‘Bomb Iran.’” He then sang a mock version of the chorus, “Bomb, bomb, bomb … .” Though the comment was clearly made as a joke — McCain’s position is that bombing should only be used as a last resort — the episode highlighted once again how the democratization of media is throwing scripted presidential campaigns off balance. Previous videos that have made waves this election season include an amateur Barack Obama ad that lampooned Hillary Clinton and a video of Sen. Clinton singing the national anthem off-key.”

This is interesting from a media theory point of view and very useful to me. I’m just beginning to write a book about this, hopefully to be published next year in Australia.
It would be even better if Cook were right that this is the “democratization” of the media. My worry is that the YouTube generation don’t vote, many of them are perhaps still underage.
If they did mobilise, perhaps McCain would go down, but Hilary and Obama wouldn’t be far behind.

There’s similar stuff posted on YouTube about Australian Prime Minister John Howard, but the lampooning of the PM hasn’t made the news yet “down under”.
My favourite SATIRICAL YouTube clip of the PM is this little ditty: “John Howard is an ar$&l1cker” [RATED PG, occasional use of obscene humour]


One of the best and the brightest

April 27, 2007

David Halberstam dies on way to meet with Y.A. Tittle to talk about football

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist David Halberstam was killed Monday doing what he had done for more than four decades: chasing down a great story.

Halberstam, 73, died in a car wreck just a few miles away from a long-sought interview for a book he was planning about a legendary 1958 football game. Driving the author was a UC Berkeley journalism graduate student drawn by the chance to spend time alone with a living legend.

Menlo Park police are still probing the cause of the fiery three-car accident that injured two others. Halberstam, of New York, was in the front passenger seat of a car that was broadsided as it was making a left turn off the westbound Bayfront Expressway, which connects to the Dumbarton Bridge, onto Willow Road about 10:35 a.m., authorities said.

The car in which Halberstam was riding, an older-model Toyota Camry, was hit by a late-model Infiniti. When paramedics and fire crews arrived, they found Halberstam unresponsive and trapped in his seat, said Harold Schapelhouman, chief of the Menlo Park Fire District.

The engine compartment was on fire, and the passenger side of the car had been crushed, Schapelhouman said.

A rescue crew member was able to pull Halberstam from the car while another doused the flames, the chief said. The author had no pulse and was not breathing when he was freed, and efforts to revive him were unsuccessful, Schapelhouman said. Halberstam was pronounced dead at the scene.

The author appears to have died of massive blunt-force trauma, but an autopsy scheduled for today should confirm the cause of death, said Kristine Gamble, senior deputy coroner for San Mateo County.

Police declined to say who may have been at fault in the crash. Cars turning left at the intersection onto Willow Road may proceed only when they have a green arrow.

The Infiniti driver suffered minor injuries, and the driver of a Nissan coupe that apparently was hit by one of the other cars was unhurt, authorities said.

The Berkeley graduate student driving the Camry, Kevin Jones, suffered a punctured lung and was taken to Stanford Hospital.

“It’s just a really hard time for him. He’s feeling really sad and freaked out,” his wife, Lily Jones, said by telephone from the hospital’s emergency room. “It’s just a very traumatizing thing to have gone through.”

She said she had not discussed the accident with him in detail.

Halberstam was in the Bay Area to deliver a speech at UC Berkeley about what it means to turn reporting into a work of history, said Orville Schell, dean at Berkeley’s graduate school of journalism.

Halberstam won the Pulitzer Prize in 1964 at age 30 for his reporting from Vietnam. He later turned to long-form writing and wrote 21 books, including “The Best and the Brightest,” about how the United States became involved in Vietnam. His other works covered a wide range of subjects, including civil rights, sports and the auto industry.

But Halberstam’s own journalistic career was anything but history, said John Eckhouse, a member of the journalism school’s alumni board, which arranged the event this past Saturday.

“He had just finished the galleys on Thursday for his latest book, on the Korean War,” Eckhouse said. “He spent Saturday in his room at the faculty club. He said if he could come over to our (afternoon) event he would, but he had some editing to do, some writing to do.”

Halberstam’s Saturday evening speech was a rousing success, Schell said, with a packed house of journalists and members of the public.

“He was speaking about the need for passion to be a journalist, and the importance of it to the whole healthy functioning of the American political experiment,” Schell said. “I think those two things were what made him something of an evangelist to the role of the journalist in our society.”

Afterward, Schell said, he and Halberstam dined at Berkeley’s Chez Panisse, talking late into the night about the parallels between the wars in Vietnam and Iraq.

Over the years, Halberstam had developed a habit of alternating weighty historical books with sports books, and he planned to follow up his Korean War book with a work about the 1958 NFL championship game between the New York Giants and the Baltimore Colts, often called football’s greatest game.

The game, won by the Colts in overtime, is widely regarded as having contributed to pro football’s modern popularity.

In his typically careful preparation, Eckhouse said, Halberstam had tracked down former San Francisco 49ers quarterback Y.A. Tittle, who did not play in the championship but who had played the Colts two weeks before. Halberstam hoped to gain insights into the play of Colts quarterback Johnny Unitas.

To get to the interview, Schell said, Halberstam approached the journalism school’s students, seeking a driver and offering unique compensation, as described in an e-mail from the school to the students: “He said he’ll give you a private seminar on the way back. Details are vague, but this could be a really cool opportunity.”

Kevin Jones, a student whose resume already included awards from stints as a freelancer and at several small publications, had seized on that chance to have some face time with a journalistic icon, his wife said.

“He just wanted to get a chance to talk to somebody that he thought was interesting,” Lily Jones said. “He doesn’t have class on Mondays, and he thought this would be great opportunity.”

Tittle said he was in his Mountain View insurance office waiting at 11 a.m., when he expected Halberstam would arrive. At 12:30, he said, his secretary came in and said he might as well go to lunch.

“I thought maybe something had come up with his family,” a shocked Tittle said Monday evening. “He was only 2 miles away, 3 miles away.”

E-mail the writers at jcote@sfchronicle.com and mstannard@sfchronicle.com.

This article appeared on page A – 4 of the San Francisco Chronicle

YOu can read more about David Halberstam in this Poynter Institute memorial


Leftwing union leaders still don’t know how to fight fair

April 26, 2007

have lifted this straight from crikey, it’s an important story and an indication that rank and file journalists who are lefties and unionists need to get together as activists, not rely on the head office honchos. I must add a caveat. I know nothing of Margaretta Pos’ politics, but it is the principle of fair and open elections that is important in this case.

Media union hardball and the $10,000 Tassie witch
Margaretta Pos writes:

When is an election not an election? When it’s held by the Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance. That’s right, the champions of a democratic society are not so keen on democracy in the ranks,

So much so, that the hierarchy has spent a staggering $10,000 to stop me becoming a federal vice-president, and Australian Financial Review journalist Mark Phillips from being one of 24 media delegates on the union’s federal council. (I am a freelance journalist based in Hobart and the immediate past Tasmania branch president).

Australian Electoral Commission ballot papers were posted on Monday this week — the same day as a leaflet was posted to 16,361 Alliance members, telling them not to vote for either of us. Our sin? We weren’t hand-picked. Meaning there are four candidates for three vice-presidents and 25 candidates for 24 delegates, which means there has to be an election rather than the semblance of one.

The leaflet was signed by Christopher Warren, as federal secretary, and Sydney Morning Herald journalist Ruth Pollard, as federal president, AJA section. It’s endorsed by 37 signatories, including the presidents or secretaries from around the country, bar Tasmania.

The leaflet states in small print that it’s paid for “by the friends and supporters of the journalism team standing for federal council”. Okay, so they paid for the leaflet. But who paid the whopping postage bill? This shady group? The Alliance?

No one contacted me to ask why I was standing or to discuss my candidacy. No one contacted Mark Phillips either. Goodness! Am I such a threat? The wicked witch from Tasmania whose broomstick must be snapped in two?

I’d heard on the grapevine there was going to be a union ticket which excluded me, so I emailed Christopher Warren last week, to ask how the decision was made and who made it. This was his response on Friday (20 April), when the leaflet he’d signed was ready for postage on Monday:

In relation to the election for federal vice-president: Ballot papers are being circulated next week. The Alliance has not — cannot — endorse any candidates. I know some officers have indicated their preference as individuals, which is their right as members of the union. However, there will be no official communication to members about any candidates beyond that circulated by the Australian Electoral Commission.


Boris Yeltsin – an obituary that tells the truth

April 26, 2007

Boris Yeltsin 1931-2007|Socialist Worker

The mainstream media has been hailing the late Boris Yeltsin as the man who helped destroy “communism” in the 1980s with his heroic leadership of the Russian people against a “fascist” coup by disgruntled elements still loyal to the old ways.
They say he was a lovable rascal. Boll!x
This obituary from Socialist Worker (UK) lays it out:

Yeltsin was curiously split. Right wing newspapers couldn’t decide whether to celebrate Yeltsin as “the man who brought down Communism” or lampoon him as a drunken fool who wrecked Russia’s economy.

Yeltsin was a privileged member of the Russian ruling class who dealt with the capitalist institutions of the West – the IMF and so on – in order to secure the ongoing wealth of his friends. The disaster that is Russia today owes a lot to Yeltsin and his cronies, including Putin.


With friends like these

April 26, 2007

McCain Launches Candidacy With Bush Critique – New York Times

Ah, spring has sproinged in the northern hemisphere and eager-beaver presidential candidates in the USA are ramping up their phony election campaigns before the primaries kick off in fall.
It’s heartening to know that even Republican old boots like John McCain are campaigning against George “Dubya” Bush.
Let’s just hope it does them no good at all. They’re all tarred with the same brush.