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Blog community doesn’t care for mag’s view of social workers

Posted by Martin Stabe on 17 September 2007 at 16:52
Tags: Blogs, Daily Mail, Daily Telegraph

Community Care has had to close a comment thread on one of its blogs after a string of nasty comments on a post attacking the Daily Mail’s coverage of social work.

The post, by the RBI magazine’s deputy editor Janet Snell, promises a story in this week’s issue that will examine how, from its point of view, the Mail and the Telegraph had “hijacked” the story of an expectant mother who may have her child taken into foster care at birth. The magazine promises to put forward the social workers’ point of view.

Suffice to say that many commenters on Snell’s post do not share the her benign view of social workers.

“I had no idea that there was such a strong and virulent hatred of social workers,” says RBI’s head of blogging Adam Tinworth in an interesting post explaining the rationale of the decision to end the comments thread, a first for RBI’s B2B sites.

The silver lining, Tinworth notes, is that the discussion on the blog has become more active since the “Daily Mail incident”. His theory: the row drew more attention to the blog, and the sight of an active comment thread may have given timid readers the sense that the had “permission” to start leaving comments on the blog.

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Multimedia from the Telegraph newsroom

Posted by Martin Stabe on 3 April 2007 at 12:34
Tags: Daily Telegraph, Journalism, Soundslides, Telegraph Media Group, Telegraph.co.uk

When Press Gazette editor Dominic Ponsford spent Budget Day in the Telegraph’s new multimedia newsroom, we sent along photographer James Young.

Some of his pictures appeared in the magazine this week, where we were able to print them large enough to do the new Telegraph newsroom justice. A slideshow featuring more of Young’s stills, along with a commentary from Dominic, are now available in a multimedia slideshow over on the Editor’s Blog.

Owing, perhaps, to its apparent no-photography policy in the first few weeks after opening the new facility, new pictures of the newsroom appearing online have attracted considerable interest in the media blogosphere.

Jeff Jarvis took a tour last month, shot some video, and explained in yesterday’s Guardian why many people admire the new facility.

There will probably be plenty more material like this after the Telegraph’s blogger open house in a couple of days.

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Nominees announced for newspaper innovation gong

Posted by Martin Stabe on 21 March 2007 at 13:20
Tags: BBC, Daily Telegraph, Financial Times, Guardian, Guardian Unlimited, MEN Lite, Manchester Evening News, Newbury Weekly News, Newbury today, Pinkun.com, Reading Chronicle, Sunday Telegraph, Telegraph.co.uk, Times Online, telegraph, thelondonpaper

Reading Chronicle editor Simon Jones has good reason to be boastful: his paper’s Polish edition has been nominated for The Fujifilm Grand Prix Award for the “most significant contribution to future newspaper success” at the 2007 Newspaper Awards.

The Kronika Reading is certainly in good company. Other nominees for the award are the Telegraph’s new newsroom, the Financial Times’ mobile news reader, the Guardian’s afternoon PDF edition G24, and free papers MEN Lite and thelondonpaper.

Meanwhile,
BBC News Oniline
, Guardian Unlimited, the Manchester Evening News, Newbury Today, Pinkun.com, Telegraph.co.uk, and Times Online are nominated for the “Electronic News Site of the Year”, an award described as “The Press Computer Systems Award for all electronic news sites”.

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Beyond the blogwagon: Why the Telegraph blogs

Posted by Martin Stabe on 1 November 2006 at 15:38
Tags: Blogs, Daily Telegraph, Journalism, Sunday Telegraph, Telegraph.co.uk

Shane Richmond, who oversees the blogs at Telegraph.co.uk has risen to Andrew Grant-Adamson’s implicit challenge for newspapers to justify their experiments with blogging.

At newspapers and elsewhere, Richmond says, blogs are about supplying niche content — not material rejected from the paper, but material too detailed to have the sort of mass-market appeal that a newspaper needs.

“There is only so much space in the print edition each day and competition is strong. The blogs give us an opportunity to focus on stories that the paper hasn’t been able to cover, or to look at an angle on a story that there wasn’t space to develop in print,” Richmond writes, essentially echoing some of the things that the New York Times’ Neil Chase suggested last week.

Richmond says the Telegraph’s 34 bloggers got 357,000 page views in September, or 10,500 hits per blogger.

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Colin Randall’s new blog

Posted by Martin Stabe on 25 October 2006 at 10:55
Tags: Blogs, Daily Telegraph, Journalism, Telegraph.co.uk

Rick Waghorn, the Norwich football corresponent who started his own website after being made redundant by the Norwich Evening News, recently suggested to me that any journalist who has made enough of a name for themself as an individual brand would be well-positioned to follow his lead.

One ideal candidate, Waghorn suggested, would be Colin Randall, the former Daily Telegraph Paris correspondent who was made redundant last month despite earlier being celebrated as an example of a traditional Telegraph reporter who had established a strong personal following for his blogging.

And what’s this? The current Private Eye notes Randall has started a new blog.

Randall is certainly well-positioned to make good use of the medium.

He understood how blogging can benefit a newspaper correspondent better than most journalists. In July, sources he developed by blogging allowed him to break the story of the sacking of France-based British blogger La Petite Anglaise.

“I’m an old-fashioned newspaper hack and I’ve come to blogging late in life, but I’ve tried, like all the other foreign correspondents at the Daily Telegraph, to enter into the spirit of things and do it with a fair amount of enthusiasm,” Randall told me at the time of his scoop.

He described blogging as “part of the armoury of the journalist of today” and said that about a dozen French blogs were part of his routine reading.

“I regard anything that moves as a potential news source, so I’m looking at the French newspapers, magazines, TV, radio and if I come across someone’s blog in France, I’ll read that,” he said.

Randall also understands the changing relationship between journalists and their audience, and is respectful of those who shaped the blogging subculture before the big media types showed up.

He said: “I always take the view that the reporter who blogs, although he’s regarded as a professional, is really the amateur in this field. It’s the amateur bloggers who are the true professionals. They know what they’re doing; they know how to link with each other.”

And the increasing reader interaction that blogs brings is also not alien to Randall.

Under former Telegraph editor Max Hastings, Randall said, it had been considered a “black mark offence” if a reader complained that a reporter had failed to reply to a letter: “It was instilled in the editorial psyche in Max’s regime that if a reader took the trouble to write, you took the trouble to reply. But today, when you get 30 or 80 replies to each posting, you cannot stay sane and reply to each of them. You end up replying very selectively.”

Although the blog added significantly to his workload as a Telegraph correspondent, Randall began feeling an obligation to his blog readers to continue posting. After returning from a two-week summer holiday, he said he felt “duty bound” to write a blog post.

He said: “I felt out of a sense of duty not just to the paper but to what becomes part of your readership. People look to you, they expect it, so it can take over your life. The trick is to resist that.”

For the Telegraph, Randall tended to blog whimsical items to that he thought “have no chance of getting into the paper” or to elaborate upon stories he has written for the main site.

He said: “There is this rather uneasy developing relationship between print and new media where we’re being encouraged to write blogs — but what do you reserve for the blog and what do you keep back for the paper?”

An independent Colin Randall blog, perhaps freed from those considerations, will be a welcome addition to the blogosphere; the Telegraph may still come to regret its decision.

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Lewis as Telegraph’s Mao?!

Posted by Martin Stabe on 11 October 2006 at 13:44
Tags: Daily Telegraph, Journalism, Telegraph.co.uk

Roy Greenslade wins the dodgy analogy of the day award for his latest post about new Daily Telegraph editor Will Lewis.

“Lewis is, in effect, going to be Mao Tse Tung in the Telegraph’s Great Leap Forward,” writes Greenslade.

Greenslade must be expecting, um, a few problems in the new Telegraph offices in Victoria.

Wikipedia’ entry for Great Leap Forward notes: “The plan is generally agreed to have failed in its intentions, leading to millions of deaths plus widespread economic dislocation, and is widely regarded both in and out of China as an unmitigated policy disaster.”

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Additional links for Wednesday

Posted by Martin Stabe on 11 October 2006 at 13:39
Tags: 18 Doughty Street, Blogs, Daily Telegraph, Guardian Unlimited, Journalism, Podcasting, Telegraph.co.uk

  • The First Post: The spin man takes on the Binman
    Benjamin Pell, aka “Benjie the Binman”, is back in the news. Apparently these days he spends most days in the High Court, “exercising his legal right of access to documents produced in open court”.
  • Cybersoc: Would Guido really ‘not get out of bed’ for £21k in blog ads?
    Robin Hamman challenges blogger Guido Fawkes’ assertion (in this parish) that he would not get out of bed for the pay be
  • Cybersoc: Guardian looking for a discussion moderator
    Guardian head of blogging Kevin Anderson needs a moderator to look after Comment Is Free comments for a few weeks. An unenviable task, no doubt.
  • Buzzmachine: Shoot the geeks
    Jeff Jarvis is unimpressed with last night’s debut of 18 Doughty Street, because of their use of “needlessly complicated” software technology.
  • Frank Barnako’s Media Blog: 3 best categories for your podcasts
    Frank Barnako at Marketwatch tracks down a study showing the best ways to make money from podcasts: talk about family, science or games.
  • Editor’s Weblog: Telegraph to rival iTunes?
    Telegraph.co.uk is launching a music downloading site, based on its Perfect Playlist.

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Additional links for Tuesday

Posted by Martin Stabe on 10 October 2006 at 19:57
Tags: 18 Doughty Street, Blogs, Daily Telegraph, Digg, E-paper, IPTV, Journalism, Sunday Telegraph, Telegraph.co.uk, Wikis

  • Virtual Economics: Exploding the myth of the read/write web
    Seamus McCauly looks at the latest evidence of “participation inequality” — the fact that a tiny number of heavy users produce most of the material on user-generated and interactive web sites
  • Shane Richmond: News from nowhere (part I and part II)
    Telegraph.co.uk’s news editor looks at the problems that the newspaper faces in the age of e-paper and unbundled content in the first part of a must-read essay. Part II has some recommended solutions.
  • Dan Gillmor frets that “most won’t listen” to Doc Searls’ list of 10 suggestions for online newspapers. Maybe in America — but isn’t most of what Searls suggested rapidly becoming the conventional wisdom in (most) British newsrooms? Besides, the most radical idea about what the web can do for journalism— Adrian Holovaty’s “news as structured data” theory — was missing from the list(s) of suggestions.
  • Writing in the Los Angeles Times, Susan D. Moeller and Moisés Naím remind everyone what really matters while all eyes are on Google and YouTube: “The fascination with the transformational effect of all this makes it easy to forget what is essential to the information process: traditional ‘old media’ messengers such as Anna Politkovskaya.”
  • 18 Doughty Street launches tonight at 8pm.

1 comment

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Plagiarism row over Telegraph blog blunder

Posted by Martin Stabe on 29 August 2006 at 09:29
Tags: Blogs, Daily Telegraph, Journalism

Bloggers this weekend accused the Telegraph of plagiarism after a blog post written by a Chicago writer appeared under the byline of the paper’s New York-based correspondent Melissa Whitworth.

The post, written by blogger Claire Zulkey, was published last week on the US media news site MediaBistro. It later reappeared, verbatim save a new head and Whitworth’s byline, on Telegraph.co.uk’s Society blog. Zulkey was not impressed.

By Sunday, the Telegraph had removed the post and published an apology from Whitworth, in which he explained that she had e-mailed the post to her editor at the Telegraph because she thought he would find it funny, but that “somewhere along the line it was mistaken for my latest posting and published”.

Some of the bloggers who had accused the Telegraph of pilfering the post accepted the explanation and apologised.

Others, however, were less forgiving. One commenter on the Telegraph site responded that Whitworth’s mea culpa was “the lamest and most off-handed excuse I have ever seen and I feel insulted that you and the paper expect people to swallow it. I’ve seen better crafted excuses from a five-year old.”

The post that launched this row is certainly worth reading. It links to some writing advice by Copyblogger entitled “Five signs that your blog post is going horribly wrong“.

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Inside this week’s Press Gazette

Posted by Martin Stabe on 30 March 2006 at 13:23
Tags: ABC, BBC, Citizen journalism, Daily Telegraph, Economist, Guardian, Journalism, Mirror, Mobile Phones, NUJ, New Media, News of the World, Online, Regionals, Spectator, Sunday Telegraph, Times, War reporting

Some highlights from tomorrow’s Press Gazette:

The owners of the Daily Telegraph, the Barclay Brothers, have discovered that their ploy bringing libel cases under French criminal law — a tactic most recently deployed against the Times — cuts both ways. The Sunday Telegraph has paid out to the estranged father of comedian Jimmy Carr after his lawyers threatened drag the paper before a French tribunbal.

George Galloway has threatened to publish pictures of Mazher Mahmood after the News of the World’s “fake sheikh” attempted one of his famous sting operations on the controvertial Respect MP. (The Guardian’s Duncan Campbell today has more on the foiled “sheikh-down”.)

A former Times fashion journalist, Emily Davies, is at the heart of a plagiarism row after an American publisher gave her a £515,000 advance on a book. In a statement to us, Davies admits “genuinely accidental misattribution” of parts of the book proposal — but says there is “a dirty tricks campaign” to discredit her. Lawyers have stopped us from publishing Davies’s publicity photograph.

Regular Dog readers already know this, but the Guardian’s web site will make £1 million profit this year. This emerged at the MediaGuardian Changing Media Summit, where Channel 4 News presenter Jon Snow enthused about citizen journalism.

Roy Greenslade told a Newspaper Society conference that regional newspapers need to challenge to the online competition from the BBC. His most recent Daily Telegraph column is adapted from the speech. We hear that Greenslade, who recently resigned from the Telegraph, has some super-secret online project for the Guardian up his sleeve.

Multichannel television on mobile phones set to be launched by mobile network O2 within a fortnight, and if the results of a recent pilot of the service in Oxford is anything to go by, news is set to be one of the most popular offerings.

New Economist editor John Micklethwait says he wants to double the magazine’s circulation to 2 million readers worldwide over the next 10 years. Speaking of new magazine editors, we also have an interview with Matthew D’Ancona of the Spectator — he’s into punk rock, apparently.

The National Union of Journalists is backing Richard Gizbert, a London-based correspondent for ABC News, who was sacked after he refused to go to Iraq. The American television network is appealing against an Employment Tribunal ruling that Gizbert was unfairly dismissed.

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