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Bill Kuykendall

Report Proposes New Steps to Support Quality Public Affairs Reporting - The Journalism ... - 0 views

  • As the news business continues to confront fundamental economic challenges, a report, released on Oct. 19, 2009 by Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism, proposes new steps for maintaining a vibrant, independent press, with special emphasis on local "accountability journalism" that is essential to civic life. The report, "The Reconstruction of American Journalism," was written by Leonard Downie, Jr., former executive editor of The Washington Post, and Michael Schudson, a Journalism School professor.
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    As the news business continues to confront fundamental economic challenges, a report, released on Oct. 19, 2009 by Columbia University's Graduate School of Journalism, proposes new steps for maintaining a vibrant, independent press, with special emphasis on local "accountability journalism" that is essential to civic life. The report, "The Reconstruction of American Journalism," was written by Leonard Downie, Jr., former executive editor of The Washington Post, and Michael Schudson, a Journalism School professor.
Bill Kuykendall

About the Lens Blog - Lens Blog - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "Lens is the photography blog of The New York Times, presenting the finest and most interesting visual and multimedia reporting - photographs, videos and slide shows. A showcase for Times photographers, it also seeks to highlight the best work of other newspapers, magazines and news and picture agencies; in print, in books, in galleries, in museums and on the Web."
Bill Kuykendall

If news orgs & journos won't provide local civic news, who else could? | Knight Digital... - 0 views

  • “My Ohio State colleagues took the initiative last November to convene a community conversation to discuss the implications of the report for Columbus. They could not get a single mainstream media news outlet (print or broadcast) to participate—although public and alternative media were well represented…”
  • “What would it be like to organize an entire college or university education around the idea of journalism? I am not talking here about what we think of as vocational journalism education. The idea is not to make everyone a professional editor or reporter. I am talking, instead, about conceiving an entire program of liberal education that takes as its central theme the idea that the new media phenomenon is potentially making everyone a journalist.
  • I’ve long believed that basic journalism training would benefit everyone, and that journalistic assignments could start as early as elementary school. Shane points out that his vision of journalism-centered higher education could help solve three major social problems: The shortfall in local news production around the country. The well-documented deficiency in college student writing. Low civic literacy: Americans’ generally poor knowledge about how social institutions work, and who makes the policy decisions that affect their lives. Shane also observed that involving students in local journalism “wins the educational trifecta”: Students would tackle meaningful and intellectually challenging issues. Students enjoy dealing with such issues. Students would develop marketable skills while also learning to function effectively as citizens.
Bill Kuykendall

Doing journalism in 2010 is an act of community organizing - 0 views

  • Too few emerging online journalists understand that the function of news publishing has changed in the Internet era. Simply reporting the news, however you might define that, is no longer enough, not when you are publishing in such a competitive environment. The journalists who succeed online are the ones who understand that they are no longer simply reporters... they've become community organizers.
  • you have to have a community that supports you, if you want to make a living online.
  • your past earns you nothing online. Whatever audience you will have there, you must build yourself
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  • Communities form around common needs and purposes, as will yours. So start by identifying what you can offer a community and which community might need what you can offer.
  • Engage the community by building upon the relationships you've built to enlist community members to do whatever their talents and skills best allow them to do in service to the community's cause.
Bill Kuykendall

Nieman Reports | Long-Form Multimedia Journalism: Quality Is the Key Ingredient - 0 views

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    Interview with Brian Storm, president of MediaStorm, NYC
Bill Kuykendall

Techmeme Offers Tech News at Internet Speed - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • relies on software algorithms to collect technology news in real time into what is essentially the front page of an ever-changing industry newspaper.
  • turns to humans to filter the ever-growing number of articles and blog posts published online each day
  • Mediagazer, a new sister site for media industry news.
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  • They also play a crucial role in contemporary journalism, as media outlets and amateur reporters churn out an ever-higher quantity of often lower-quality content
  • Humans do things software cannot, like grouping subtly related stories, taking into account sarcasm or skepticism, or posting important stories that just broke.
Bill Kuykendall

AP Stylebook Adds 42 New Guidelines for Social Media - 0 views

  • The AP Stylebook has released its new social media guidelines, including the official change from “Web site” to “website” (a move first reported back in April) and 41 other definitions, use cases and rules that journalists should follow.
  • Finally, the AP also offers some basic rules of thumb for how social media should and shouldn’t be used by journalists, with a focus on making sure they continue to confirm sources and information they find on blogs, tweets and other forms of social media.
Bill Kuykendall

The Bay Citizen - In Battle of the Weeklies, Local Focus Is the Key - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • When you pick up the paper, with its solid reporting on local politics and strong point of view, you know what to expect. A well-defined sensibility, deep local roots and a focus on its one and only market give the publication staying power.
  • In the Internet era, there are plenty of options for those attracted to an alternative sensibility. But even if the Salons of the world capture some of that audience, there’s still a place for the distinctively local approach — and chains, by their nature, find that harder to cultivate.
  • But a strong local voice and brand identity are key to possible new strategies in areas like live events production and participatory journalism. Even on the Internet, where scale matters, local coverage remains a promising frontier.
Bill Kuykendall

Journalism.org- The State of the News Media 2009 - 0 views

  • The State of the News Media 2009 is the sixth edition of our annual report on the health and status of American journalism. Our goals are to take stock of the revolution occurring in how Americans get information and provide a resource for citizens, journalists and researchers to make their own assessments.
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    Welcome to the website for The Future of Media and the Information Needs of Communities in a Digital Age. The goal of this project: to help ensure that all Americans have access to vibrant, diverse sources of news and information that will enable them to enrich their families, communities and democracy.
Bill Kuykendall

One-Third of U.S. Without Broadband, F.C.C. Finds - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • For many Americans, having high-speed access to the Internet at home is as vital as electricity, heat and water. And yet about one-third of the population, 93 million people, have elected not to connect.
  • the overwhelming majority of people who have Internet access have broadband.
  • “Now we’re at a point where, if you want broadband adoption to go up by any significant measure, you really have to start to eat into the segment of non-Internet-users.”
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  • nonusers are disproportionately older and more likely to live in rural areas. Those with household incomes of less than $50,000 are “much less likely” to have broadband access, according to the F.C.C. report.
Bill Kuykendall

Starbucks Gets Its Business Brewing Again With Social Media - Advertising Age - Special... - 0 views

  • "This was not [built as a] marketing channel, but as a consumer relationship-building environment."
  • intersection between digital and physical
  • "The experiences you have online can translate to rich offline experiences."
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  • An added benefit of Starbucks' social-media progress has been the ability to quickly manage rumors that could have dogged the company for days.
  • Starbucks launched two iPhone apps in September, one for general café purposes, with store locators, details about specific blends and nutrition information, and the other to support its loyalty card. Moving forward, Mr. Bruzzo said the company will be looking for ways that consumers can connect with each other from inside the apps. In the meantime, Starbucks is testing functionality that allows loyalty-card holders to pay with their phones.
  • The brand relies on the 28-year old to translate the Starbucks experience for the online community, search out confused or disgruntled consumers, chat about store offerings and even crack jokes.
Bill Kuykendall

71 Journalists Killed in 2009; 29 Died in Philippines Attack - NYTimes.com - 1 views

  • Twenty-nine of those deaths came in a single, politically motivated massacre of reporters and others in the Philippines last November, the worst known episode for journalists, the committee said.
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    ""They are turning the technology that should liberate the press, against the press - this is a worrying development,""
Bill Kuykendall

About the Center For Future Civic Media | Center for Future Civic Media - 0 views

shared by Bill Kuykendall on 22 Feb 10 - Cached
  • The Center for Future Civic Media is working to create technical and social systems for sharing, prioritizing, organizing, and acting on information. These include developing new technologies that support and foster civic media and political action; serving as an international resource for the study and analysis of civic media; and coordinating community-based test beds both in the United States and internationally.
  • We use the term civic media, rather than citizen journalism: civic media is any form of communication that strengthens the social bonds within a community or creates a strong sense of civic engagement among its residents. Civic media goes beyond news gathering and reporting. MIT students are experimenting with a variety of new civic media techniques, from technologies for protests and civil disobedience to phone-texting systems that allow instant, sophisticated votes on everyday activities. The Center amplifies the development of these technologies for community empowerment, while also serving to generate curricula and open-source frameworks for civic action.
  • “participatory culture”
Bill Kuykendall

YouTube - The world's most generic news report - Charlie Brooker's Newswipe - 0 views

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    Newscasting: The Way It Is
Bill Kuykendall

Transom Special Feature: In Verse: The Making of "Women of Troy" - 0 views

  • “In Verse” is a multimedia reporting project combining poetry, photography and sound. The documentary poems will be broadcast on Studio 360 with Kurt Andersen the weekend of November 6, 2009. The first installment of the project, “Women of Troy,” documents the lives of working mothers in Troy, New York–once one of the richest cities in America, thanks to its role in the industrial revolution. Now roughly 19 percent of the population is living below the US poverty line.
Bill Kuykendall

Media Cache - For U.S. Newspaper Industry, an Example in Germany? - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • U.S. publishers come in for withering criticism in a report this month from the German Newspaper Publishers’ Association.
  • While daily newspaper circulation in the United States fell 27 percent from 1998 through 2008, it slipped 19 percent in Germany. While fewer than half of Americans read newspapers, more than 70 percent of Germans do. While newspapers’ revenues have plunged in the United States, they have held steady in Germany since 2004.
  • Most German newspapers are owned by family concerns or other small companies with local roots,
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  • German publishers have been much more reticent about the Web, in some cases keeping large amounts of their content offline.
  • Germany has a strong local press;
  • the Internet generates only low-single-digit percentages of most German newspapers’ sales, while online revenue has reached double figures at some U.S. papers.
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