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Media critics look at online Virginia Tech coverage

Posted by Martin Stabe on 18 April 2007 at 08:49
Tags: ABC, Blogs, CNN, Citizen journalism, Ethics, Journalism, Livejournal, Mobile Phones, NBC, New Media, Photography, blogging, onlinejournalism, usa, video

For a second day, there is much analysis from bloggers and media commentators about the online coverage of the Virginia Tech massacre.

Canadian journalism educator Mark Hamilton says it would be wrong to describe the Virginia Tech story as just another “victory” for the development of citizen journalism. We’re well beyond that stage, he suggests.

“What yesterday showed me was the new mediascape in action, a potent mix of journalists, witnesses and aggregators telling the story better than any of them could alone,” writes Hamilton in an excellent roundup an analysis.

Despite isolated examples of terrible journalism and terrible blogging, Hamilton concludes that both the professionals and the blogosphere’s irregulars did sterling journalism.

One particular item from the new mediascape that has attracted a lot of attention is student Jamal Albaughouti’s mobile phone video of the shootings, which was uploaded to CNN’s citizen journalism portal and has been viewed more than 2 million times. Jeff Jarvis criticises CNN’s apparent exclusivity deal with Albaughouti. Jarvis notes that the video is already available on YouTube.

“The value of an exclusive today lasts about 30 seconds,” Jarvis concludes.

NewAssignment.net’s Steve Fox, meanwhile, argues that the video “had no inherent news value and told no story.”

The London bombing showed us how anyone with a cell phone can capture images. But, that was after a news event had occurred. Our heralded citizen journalist captured sounds of people being killed, injured and maimed yesterday as it occurred.

Is this really the type of behavior to applaud, to train citizen journalists to take part in? More importantly, what’s the news here?

Finally, step back for a second. Play the video. And, imagine you have a son or daughter attending Virginia Tech, you can’t get ahold of them and you turn on CNN to find out some information and instead you come across that video.

Much attention is also focused on journalists’ use of students’ MySpace and Facebook pages to to make contact with and request interviews with victims and witnesses.

National Journal blogger Emily Goodin, for example, spots journalists from ABC and NBC television requesting interviews in this way.

Her commenters are very unimpressed. “maggots. feasting off the misery and horror of the families and friends of the victims,” writes Linda.

Journalist and Livejournal user Adam Tinworth, meanwhile, describes it the practice as “digital doorstopping“, and just a new form of journalism’s “long and dishonourable tradition” of treating victims of tragedies in this way.

Livejournal’s community architecture, Tinworth argues, makes it likely to seem like a semi-private place to its regular users, making outsiders’ overtures seem particularly intrusive.

“Barging into that community and asking for comment feels not unlike barging into a pub and asking somebody for comments,” Tinworth writes.

But in Slate magazine, media critic Jack Shafer praises journalists who have coldly pursued the story among the victims. It would be even worse if they didn’t pursue the story, he argues. In fact, he suggests, “viewers would riot”.

Update:
Dan Gillmor of the Center for Citizen Media has an essay on his blog which will be published today as an op-ed piece in the Washington Examiner. His eloquent conclusion is worth noting:

We used to say that journalists write the first draft of history. Not so, not any longer. The people on the ground at these events write the first draft. This is not a worrisome change, not if we are appropriately skeptical and to find sources we trust. We will need to retool media literacy for the new age, too.

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Beyond the blogwagon: ABC News and Mark Foley

Posted by Martin Stabe on 30 October 2006 at 12:32
Tags: ABC, Blogs, Journalism

Andrew Grant-Adamson struck a chord with his question a few days ago about what purposes are served by newspapers’ blogs — and, by extension, those being run by other major news organisations.

While many big media blogs are truly examples of “jumping on the blogwagon” in a rather sad attempt to appear hip to the latest buzzword, there are also plenty of good examples of how a blog can be a valuable journalistic tool.

Take the sex scandal that gripped America last month before leading to the resignation of Republican member of Congress, Mark Foley.

Representative Foley’s strangely personal e-mails to a teenage Congressional page were known to a number of Beltway journalists, but it was thanks to the blog run by ABC News’s investigative unit that the television network was finally able to break a story that the others had long failed to stand up.

Brian Ross broke the story of on the blog, The Blotter — but not until he had obtained confirmation of the e-mails’ authenticity from the Congressman’s office.

It wasn’t enough for the evening news bulletin, but it was plenty for a quick blog post. In addition to hundreds of often-dismissive comments, the post attracted new sources to contact Ross with sexually-explicit instant messages which ultimately lead to the congressman’s downfall.

Speaking to Mark Glaser of PBS’s MediaShift blog last week, Ross described the blog’s role in the story as “a kind of watershed moment for ABCNews.com”.

The story, said Ross, “broke because it was online and we got the feedback from those who read it and gave us more.”

The Blotter has caused a fuss at least once before: In May, Ross and Richard Esposito used the blog to break the news that the FBI had used anti-terrorist legislation to obtain journalists’ telephone records in the course of a leak investigation at the CIA.

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Carroll kidnappers demanded $8m

Posted by Martin Stabe on 13 April 2006 at 10:13
Tags: ABC, Iraq, Journalism, United States, War reporting

The man who negotiated the release of American journalist Jill Carroll has said that her kidnappers were demanding a ransom of $8 million.

Speaking to the American television network ABC,  Sheikh Sattam al-Gaood, a former business associate of Saddam Hussein and supporter of the Iraqi insurgency, described the kidnapping of the freelance working for the Boston-based Christian Science Monitor as “a mistake”.

Al-Gaood, who was one of the people thanked by Carroll’s family following her release, denied that he had paid the ransom demanded by her kidnappers, but had instead arranged to pay for widows and orphans of Iraqi insurgents.

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Al Jazeera’s Gizbert recounts Merseyside start

Posted by Martin Stabe on 7 April 2006 at 17:46
Tags: ABC, Al Jazeera, Iraq, Journalism, Regionals

The Liverpool Daily Post has a lengthy interview with Richard Gizbert, the TV reporter who won an Employment Tribunal hearing his dismissal from American network ABC News and will now be presenting a media programme for Al Jazeera International.

Before returning to Canada and eventually becoming an experienced war correspondent, Gizbert lived on Merseyside. He notched his first foreign news story at 16 while on a work experience stint on the Birkenhead News:

“I used to go to the chippie near the office for lunch because I was too young to go to the pub with the others. It was run by a Greek Cypriot family and their daughter kinda caught my attention. She went away and when I asked when would she be back her Dad said that they didn’t know - because she’d gone back to Cyprus for a visit and got caught up in the conflict between the Greeks and the Turks there at the time.

“And that’s when I got my first real story which had the headline WIRRAL GIRL CAUGHT ON WAR-TORN ISLAND. It was a very good local story. I kept it and still have it along with the ribbon-cutting photo captions and stuff.”

Gizbert was in Liverpool recently for the National Union of Journalists conference last month. At the conference, the NUJ decided to support Gizbert’s defense fund for ABC’s expected appeal agains the Employmnet Tribunal ruling. As we reported at the time, the escalating costs of the case have left Gizbert in debt.

“I’m worse than skint. In fact skint’s looking pretty good to me right now,” Gizbert told the Daily Post.

The NUJ is backing Gizbert’s defence because of the precident his case could set. If Gizbert prevails, journalists would be safe from being forced to accept dangerous assignments.

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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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