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Tom Johnson

Investigative Reporters and Editors | Listserv archives - 0 views

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    Listserv archives IRE and NICAR offer several opportunities for members and even non-members to exchange ideas, information, techniques and war stories. Joining is easy. If you are an IRE member, you may view the list archives: * Click an archive link and login with any e-mail address on record with the IRE office. Click "Get Password" if your first visit, to receive your LISTSERV password (separate from the IRE website password). Most users will login with the e-mail used for their IRE login account. Please e-mail listmaster@ire.org if you need help or have any questions. IRE-L archives. NICAR-L archives. IREPLUS-L archives. CENSUS-L archives. The following lists are less active: CFIC-L archives IRE-EDU-L archives IREBC-L archives
Tom Johnson

Narrative + investigative: tips from IRE 2012, Part 1 - Nieman Storyboard - A project o... - 0 views

  • Narrative + investigative: tips from IRE 2012, Part 1 At last month’s Investigative Reporters & Editors conference, in Boston, hundreds of reporters attended dozens of sessions on everything from analyzing unstructured data to working with the coolest web tools and building a digital newsroom. The conference, which started in the 1970s, after a Phoenix reporter died in a car bomb while covering the mob, is usually considered an investigative-only playground, but narrative writers can learn a lot from these journalists’ techniques and resources. When might a narrative writer need investigative skills? A few possible scenarios: • When developing a character’s timeline and activities beyond the basic backgrounding • When navigating precarious relationships with sources • When organizing large and potentially complicated amounts of material • When gathering data and documents that might provide storytelling context – geopolitical, financial, etc. We asked This Land correspondent Kiera Feldman to cover the conference with an eye for material that might be particularly useful in narrative. She netted a range of ideas, tips and resources. Today, in Part 1, she covers areas including documents and data, online research and source relationships. Check back tomorrow for Part 2, “Writing the Investigative Story,” with best practices from Ken Armstrong of the Seattle Times and Steve Fainaru of ESPN.
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    Narrative + investigative: tips from IRE 2012, Part 1 At last month's Investigative Reporters & Editors conference, in Boston, hundreds of reporters attended dozens of sessions on everything from analyzing unstructured data to working with the coolest web tools and building a digital newsroom. The conference, which started in the 1970s, after a Phoenix reporter died in a car bomb while covering the mob, is usually considered an investigative-only playground, but narrative writers can learn a lot from these journalists' techniques and resources. When might a narrative writer need investigative skills? A few possible scenarios: * When developing a character's timeline and activities beyond the basic backgrounding * When navigating precarious relationships with sources * When organizing large and potentially complicated amounts of material * When gathering data and documents that might provide storytelling context - geopolitical, financial, etc. We asked This Land correspondent Kiera Feldman to cover the conference with an eye for material that might be particularly useful in narrative. She netted a range of ideas, tips and resources. Today, in Part 1, she covers areas including documents and data, online research and source relationships. Check back tomorrow for Part 2, "Writing the Investigative Story," with best practices from Ken Armstrong of the Seattle Times and Steve Fainaru of ESPN.
Tom Johnson

IRE Hands-On Training Materials | Tableau Public - 0 views

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    IRE Hands-On Training Materials To use these files, you need Tableau Public Desktop. It's free-- just click the orange "Download" button in the top right part of the page. Unfortunately, it's Windows only at this time, so you'll need Parallels or Bootcamp (or a friendly colleague with a PC) to run it on a Mac.
Tom Johnson

NIC AR-L LISTSERV Archive - Subscriber's Corner - 0 views

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    Login: tom@jtjohnson.com Pswd: hunter
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