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Tom McHale

Cable news chatter is changing the electoral landscape - 0 views

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    The increasing polarization of cable news is transforming, and in some ways shrinking, the electoral landscape. What has emerged is a form of narrowcasting, allowing candidates a welcoming platform that helps them avoid hostile press questioning and, in some cases, minimize the slog and the slip-ups of retail campaigning.
Tom McHale

AOL's Tim Armstrong: The Power of Local Journalism - Forward Thinking by Michael J. Miller - 0 views

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    Tim Armstrong , CEO of AOL, said he believes the next phase of the Internet is about content. And he told the audience at D8 that AOL is working on the "future of journalism."
Chris C

Public Insight Network - 0 views

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    This is an example of how one organization in reaching out to readers to become a network of sources for stories.
Tom McHale

U.S. has same number of newspapers now as in 1890s | Poynter. - 0 views

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    Stanford has used data from the Library of Congress to illustrate the spread of all kinds of newspapers across the U.S. from 1690 to 2011. Users can see which cities had multiple papers and click on them to learn more about them.
Katelyn G

David Carr: The News Diet Of A Media Omnivore : NPR - 0 views

  • We are entering a golden age of journalism
    • Katelyn G
       
      This really tells the truth of what is going on. We ARE entering a new age of journalism and the world really needs to know.
  • It's connected to the cloud, I can make digital recordings of everything that I do, I can check in real time if someone is telling me the truth, I have a still camera that takes video that I can upload quickly and seamlessly.
    • Katelyn G
       
      times are changing and the way we do things are too. The article relates to society because everybody now a days can do these things. And they can usually do these things in the palm of their hands.
  • checks his Twitter feed every morning and has The Wall Street Journal, The New York Post, The Star-Ledger and The New York Times delivered to his house.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • the future of newspapers, error correction, his own media consumption, religion and the accountability of social media.
  • his iPad
  • They're able to both consume and produce media at the same time.
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    Carr joins Terry Gross on Fresh Air to discuss his Twitter usage, the future of newspapers, error correction, his own media consumption, religion and the accountability of social media. He says that he thinks of Twitter as a personalized "human-enabled RSS [feed]" that allows him to follow what his friends are reading and thinking about at any given moment.
Tom McHale

MediaShift Idea Lab . What If We Had a Nutrition Label for the News? | PBS - 0 views

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    Alisa Miller's TED Talk brilliantly illustrates what news industry observers have been warning for years: Our news diet is distorted. We get very little news about places outside the United States, and that amount dwindles further when we remove Iraq from the equation. If you look at our supply of news from places outside the United States that the U.S. is not directly involved in, the effect is even more pronounced. the Center for Civic Media, under the leadership of Ethan Zuckerman, is embarking on a project to build the tools to empower the individual, and the news providers themselves, to see at a glance what they're getting and what they're missing in their daily consumption. We seek to provide a nutritional label for your news diet.
Tom McHale

[Handout] Teaching in the Quickly Changing Digital Age: An SND Takeaway | jeadigitalmed... - 0 views

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    One thing we kicked up and shared with the group was this takeaway handout on some things we find helpful. It's filled with Twitter accounts to follow, events to attend and places to start.
Connor Donnelly

In real-time, journalists' tweets contribute to a 'raw draft' of history | Poynter. - 0 views

  • When historians look through the Library of Congress’ Twitter archive years from now, Andy Carvin’s tweets will be among those that help tell the story of the Arab Spring.
  • Carvin worked with Twitter for six months to get the archive, which includes his 96,000+ tweets dating back to February 2007.
  • Carvin’s archive made me think about the value of Twitter not just as a real-time tool, but as a record of history.
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  • “Generally, when something big is going on, I’m in the zone and not thinking of much else except capturing what’s happening and figuring out what’s true. I definitely try to add context when it seems appropriate, but it’s really directed at real-time consumption.”
  • But collectively, tweets tell stories — about media scandals, natural disasters, political speeches and more.
  • If journalism is the “rough draft of history,” Twitter is the “raw draft of history” — imperfect and less polished, but important nonetheless.
  • In a phone interview, he said tweets are “not decisive by themselves, but certainly if properly cataloged and researched, they will make a meaningful contribution when someone writes the history of what we’ve sewn together over the years.”
  • But while consecutive tweets can be helpful in the moment, the need for context becomes greater over time.
  • “If you look back at the books written on history, among the most valuable contributions are when historians are able to get their hands on a leaders’ diary or a leaders’ letters,” Crowley said. “It helps when you’re able to understand what a historical figure was thinking and seeing and doing at a particular time and then add context.”
  • We do feel that as a means of communication, tweets become a part of history.”
  • It would help, Crowley said, if there were a tool that made it easier for people to discern meaning from tweets and other information streams over time.
  • “Certainly in the context of Twitter there are memorable tweets that reflect the drama of a particular moment, but the dilemma for Twitter, which is to some extent the challenge for all of us in this information revolution, is how do you discern meaning from this overwhelming array of information that we are now exposed to?”
  • Storify is a great tool for pulling together tweets to tell a story, but it doesn’t let users see trends over time.
  • When he looks at it, he’s reminded that Twitter has become “both a professional and personal journal.”
  • In some ways, tweets are like modern-day journal entries that writers choose to share publicly.
  • “can have particular meaning in the moment, but obviously they evolve. And in order to make sense of tweets, you’ve got to be able to look at them in a broader context.”
  • Smith’s tweets convey scenes, emotion and dialogue that tell a story about the earthquake
  • Similarly, Carvin’s tweets tell a powerful story about the turmoil in the Middle East.
  • “give a perspective of what a development means at a particular moment.”
  • “It’s a lot of fun to be able to engage in these kinds of debates, and I try to take some time to do it every day
  • We don’t always know when or if we’re going to make our way into history. We may never invent something revolutionary or find a cure for cancer, but we can contribute to history in our own small ways — 140 characters at a time.
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    We may think of our tweets as real-time snippets of information. But collectively, tweets tell stories - about media scandals, natural disasters, political speeches and more. Over time, these stories become part of an important historical record - one that's made up of a multitude of voices, opinions and ideas. If journalism is the "rough draft of history," Twitter is the "raw draft of history" - imperfect and less polished, but important nonetheless.
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    This article talk about how tweets from other people can have a large impact and can contribute to history.
Tom McHale

Newspapers are alive and well in small towns across America - latimes.com - 0 views

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    at the risk of sounding like I'm whistling past the graveyard, I'd like to point out that there are thousands of newspapers that are not just surviving but thriving. Some 8,000 weekly papers still hit the front porches and mailboxes in small towns across America every week and, for some reason, they've been left out of the conversation. So a couple of years ago, I decided to head back to my roots, both geographic and professional (my first job was at a weekly), to see how those community papers were faring. And what I found was both surprising and inspiring.
Tom McHale

Economist Debate: How is journalism changing in the digital age? - 0 views

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    The Economist Online is hosting a debate on the news industry at http://econ.st/p9l5yK and we would like to hear your thoughts on Facebook. Like many other industries before it, the news industry is being disrupted by the internet. Among other things, technology is undermining the business models of newspapers: the news organisations that employ the most journalists and do the most in-depth reporting. At the same time, the internet enables new models of journalism by democratising the tools of publishing, allowing greater participation from readers and making possible entirely new kinds of organisation, such as WikiLeaks. Do the benefits of the internet to the news ecosystem outweigh the drawbacks?
Tom McHale

MediaShift Idea Lab . Stop Yammering and Start Hammering: How to Build a 'Maker Space' ... - 0 views

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    Over the next four weeks, a very interesting experiment is going to unfold. The most exciting part about it is that it's entirely open source: You can observe it, interact with it, and improve it. We're calling this experiment the "learning lab." It's the second stage of the Knight-Mozilla News Technology Partnership, which kicked off in May with an online competition that solicited 300 news innovation ideas from people around the globe.
Tom McHale

The State of Media: Content at a Crossroads - 0 views

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    Media is changing. In fact, our very concept of what media is is undergoing a transformation as well. I can explain the changes or I can simply show you this video. You'll think it's adorable, but it's sure to make traditional media types' blood run cold. Watch and then we'll continue.
Tom McHale

Bulletins from the future | The Economist - 0 views

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    The internet has turned the news industry upside down, making it more participatory, social, diverse and partisan-as it used to be before the arrival of the mass media, says Tom Standage
Tom McHale

Twitter for Newsrooms as a relationship-building guide » Nieman Journalism La... - 0 views

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    the launch of Twitter for Newsrooms, an official comprehensive guide on using Twitter in the world of news. The guide, also known as #TfN, was developed by the Twitter Media team and aims to be a one-stop shop, from learning the basics up to more advanced ways of using the network in journalism.
Tom McHale

Factbox: News that broke on Twitter - Yahoo! News - 0 views

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    Here are five prominent news events that broke on Twitter:
Tom McHale

Story, interrupted: why we need new approaches to digital narrative - Nieman Storyboard... - 0 views

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    The way we tell stories in print has been mostly the same for some time now. Space constraints and graphic layout have made the narrative flow a broken one. With the advent of digital devices and rich new ways of shaping content, the pressure is on to rethink how we produce and present our stories. Looking into why the broken-narrative experience happens may help us figure out how to prevent it in digital publishing.
Tom McHale

Bulletins from the future | The Economist - 0 views

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    The internet has turned the news industry upside down, making it more participatory, social, diverse and partisan-as it used to be before the arrival of the mass media
Tom McHale

How you can use social machinery to power personalized news delivery | Poynter. - 0 views

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    In the process of adding friends, following people and retweeting things, we have created a mosaic of what we like, which can be used to train Web services. We don't think about it, but it's there. And it's all out there. What you're seeing in these services and many more are early stages of a new layer spreading across the Web - the social layer. It's becoming key to how online content companies deliver information that increasingly flows through Twitter and Facebook. The social layer of the Web is the next phase. It uses our data and social graphs as machinery to power new services that have nothing to do with updating your status, "liking" or retweeting. It's just the Web, transformed into your Web.If you haven't already, take a couple of minutes to try out Intel's Museum of Me. When you log in with Facebook, it creates a stunning video tour of a futuristic museum about your life and friends.
Tom McHale

Audio: Michael Oreskes: A veteran journalist discusses the future of news | Need to Know - 0 views

shared by Tom McHale on 19 Apr 11 - No Cached
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    Over the coming days, we will be talking to publishers, editors and entrepreneurs about the myriad challenges facing the industry and focus on solutions that can point the way to a revitalized, sustainable model for journalism in the 21st century.
Nick J

A Welcome Letter From Don Graham - 0 views

shared by Nick J on 20 Apr 11 - No Cached
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    Trove harnesses smart, flexible technology that learns from the choices you make. Some have called it "Pandora for news," and the serendipity in its suggestions, pulled from around 10,000 sources, makes Trove a powerful tool for information discovery.   But it's not just algorithms that drive Trove. Our editors are constantly working to inject the latest news onto the site's home page and into channels of information that users can choose to follow. Meanwhile, our crew of engineers keeps Trove in a state of perpetual evolution.   As a Trove user, you'll have the power to create your own channels, which you can use to follow the people, places, things, and information sources that catch your eye. Starting up your Trove experience is easy; the site uses Facebook Connect to deliver to many users a slate of channels based on their already defined interests
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