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Are you up to it?

Posted by Dave Lee on 21 May 2008 at 01:16
Tags: Newspapers, Online, Student Journalism

If you can pull yourself away from staring at Roger Black’s beautiful blog design long enough to read his post, it raises some very good points indeed.

Newspapers have about a year to get rid of all the people who can’t pull their own weight and to redeploy all the smart energetic journalists who can find the great stories and push them out to print, web and video. Some papers still have lots of talent, but they must push it to the front so readers can find it and find that they like it. Papers which continue to bury the smart people (or have already driven them away) will not make the cut. With the current recession, if newspapers don’t move quickly, the market will crush them.

How true is this of our newspapers? It can only be a good thing for student journalists. But do we have the skills necessary to make full use of this unique opportunity to capitalise on the mass exodus of deadwood journalists?

[via Fleet Street Blues which, if you're job-hunting, is a great resource]

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Channel 4 search the social-networks, and so should you!

Posted by Dave Lee on 11 May 2008 at 15:04
Tags: Online, Student Journalism, Television, facebook

A little while ago I joined a very important cause. Yup, the ‘Put Dr Pepper in all UK McDonalds‘ campaign is one I feel very strongly about. I, along with (at last count) 976 others, are pressuring McDonald’s relentlessly to give in to our demands.

Anyway, I’m not here to promote the group — JOIN IT! — but it just goes to show how Facebook, with all its faults, can be a great source for journalists.

Take Cathy, for example. She works for Channel 4. Or rather she works for a company that has been contracted by Channel 4 to make a documentary. One of their classics, no doubt, with those really horrid Ronseal-ish titles like “The man with ten arms and a head that is swollen a bit”.

The documentary is about fast food, and people who love it. But, rather than spend ages dragging herself to every grease-factory in Britain, Cathy has gone for the jugular: our Dr Pepper group. Right now she is doing the rounds on Facebook with this message:

“Hi everyone, I’ve joined this group as perhaps some of you will be interested in a documentary we are making for Channel 4. It’s a film about people who are obsessed with fast food! I am looking for people who LOVE fast food.

We’re talking true love here - Perhaps you need your McMuffin fix to get going in the morning? Or you are planning to have your wedding reception at Pizza Hut? Or have you only eaten at KFC for the past two years?

The programme will take a light-hearted look at how fast food has won a place in the hearts of the nation, and reveal this affection through the eyes of the people who love it the most!

If you are passionate about KFC, McDonalds, Burger King or Pizza Hut, or have any other fast food obsessions, get in touch and I can tell you a bit more about it. If you send me a message I can reply, or if you want to leave your phone number I’ll give you a call.

Thankyou!
Cathyx”

I’m sure Dickens* would spin in his grave at the method, but it’s hard to deny its usefulness.

Students are Facebook professionals. Student journalists, then, should be all over the social-networks like wasps on your Cornetto. Any other examples of the mainstream media embracing the power of new media to get to the people?

(* Did you know he was a journalist too? I didn’t until this week. Interesting stuff!)

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Making the best of J-school

Posted by Dave Lee on 2 May 2008 at 15:12
Tags: Online, Student Journalism

Dinsa Sachan has just posted this question on Journobiz. I thought I’d share it and, hopefully, find her an answer:

I see lots of “I am quitting the print media.” posts, not to mention the rants about the deteriorating state of journalists. It can be a bit daunting for someone who’s starting j-school this year. Even then, I believe there are people out there who are having one heck of a time and earning a pretty penny as journos.

My question: How do I get there? What skills do I need to develop and what knowledge do I need to internalize between this time and my first job interview that’s going to be get me right up there? I’m not expecting you to dish out some magic potion here. I’m specifically interested to know what distinguishes a good journo (or j-student) from a not-so-good one?

Additionally, what pitfalls do I need to avoid?

Over to you…

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How to use Google to run your student newspaper

Posted by Dave Lee on 30 April 2008 at 09:30
Tags: Newspapers, Online, Student Journalism, The Linc

I once read a student newspaper which listed Mr G Oogle as their pictures researcher. A bit cheeky, yes, but it now seems Mr Oogle could in fact pay a huge part in making our student newspapers better.

One of the challenges student newspapers face is the lack of communication between staff. We don’t have the luxury of news meetings every morning. Heck, some of us don’t even have the luxury of a room to do it in. Many a student paper — and indeed, many a ‘real’ newspaper — will have to rely on frantic emails, text messages and phone calls to get copy in and ready to be printed.

But you can make it easier on yourself. It’s not tough, it’s not complicated and it’s not expensive. It’s free!

How to use Google to run your student newspaper

Recently, I was wowed by the internal software used by a big media company here in the UK. It was their own little world — news would come in from various wires, internal messages and memos would fire back and forth and boy… the shared contacts directory was really something to behold. The whole set up will have cost them thousands.

But wait! Look at what you can do with Google:

1. Email. Ok, that’s obvious. But if you have your own webspace (i.e. you host a website for your publicatin) then you can install email inboxes for all your team, using a you@yourpublication.com style email address. What’s great about it is that the software used is the same as Gmail. In other words, it’s very, very good. What’s especially handy is the way you can customise it. Below is a screenshot of our inboxes. Note our logo (pointless, but pretty…), and more importantly, notice the quick contacts down the left hand side. Each member of the team can be messaged with a simple click. If they happen to be online at the same time as you, you can even send them an instant message, msn-style.


The popular Gmail interface can be customised to match your newspaper’s style.

2. Calendar. You’ve seen one calendar and you think you’ve seen them all. Wrong. Take all those email accounts you’ve just set up after step one. Then imagine that each of those log ins can contribute to one mass calendar, with everyone’s entries appearing in a different colour so you know what’s what. You’ll never miss a diary-event ever again. At a glance, you can see who’s covering what and when. Not only this, but you can view the calendar, and edit it, using your mobile phone. If you’re the editor… how great would it be to be able to automatically email your entire team an hour before your editorial meeting? Bliss.

3. Documents. Now this is the best part. Using Google Docs, you can upload all your copy into one place. Your subs can access it and edit it in real time. You don’t even have to be in the same room. Using spreadsheets, why not make an online contact directory, just as we did below. Like the calendar, all your team can access and edit this. An invaluable tool. Just think of all the people you speak to in a year, and imagine how useful a printable, searchable copy of them all will be.


Names are added in the same way as in an Excel spreadsheet. Also, note the tabs at the bottom for different type of contacts.

More information about how to install and use the Google software package can be found here. Good luck!

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Who’s using Dreamweaver then?

Posted by Dave Lee on 24 April 2008 at 18:14
Tags: Courses, Newspapers, Online, Student Journalism

Here’s a good interview in the New York Times for the web buffs among us, but it also has some interest for those who aren’t so tech-savvy.

The interview chats to Mr Khoi Vinh, design director of NYTimes.com, and is about how they came to build the New York Times website.

I’m basing this on little more on my own opinion, but I can safely say the New York Times website is the best newspaper site in the world. It’s incredible. Spend a few moments surfing around their multimedia and admire how great it is. It’s a style of publishing that journalism students everywhere should be learning to emulate.

Dug within the interview lies yet another comment which substansiates the claim that Dreamweaver is a tool that, really, shouldn’t be taught in our online classes.

Vinh says:

“It’s our preference to use a text editor, like HomeSite, TextPad or TextMate, to “hand code” everything, rather than to use a wysiwyg (what you see is what you get) HTML and CSS authoring program, like Dreamweaver. We just find it yields better and faster results.”

So, in summary, web designers aren’t using Dreamweaver. Web journalists aren’t using Dreamweaver. Indeed it seems nobody in the industry is using it. Which begs the question, why do so many journo-institutions insist on teaching it? I’m truly baffled.

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Want to work in newspapers? Take a look at this…

Posted by Dave Lee on 2 April 2008 at 09:30
Tags: Newspapers, Online

You don’t need me to tell you this, I hope, but if ever there was an obvious sign that online skills are a must, take a look at this news today (from Press Gazette’s Patrick Smith):

“The company was now seeking journalists with online journalism skills ahead of GNM’s move to a hi-tech, integrated newsroom in London’s King’s Cross at the end of the year”

That company is the Guardian, one of the country’s leading online news sources.

What this tell us is that not only are they planning something special with this new newsroom, but that they are so committed to online journalists that they are prepared to show the unwilling the door. If you don’t know online, you’re not needed. Simple as that.

I’m sure I’m not the only journalist that feels a little fuzzy inside when thinking of new hi-tech newsrooms. I wonder if the Guardian will take the same approach as the Telegraph with the ‘hub’ concept. More about that here.

And more about the Guardian’s redundancies can be found here.

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Greenslade: Hail City University’s student bloggers

Posted by Dave Lee on 27 March 2008 at 09:23
Tags: Courses, Online, Student Journalism, facebook

Guardian media commentator Roy Greenslade has been highlighting the fantastic efforts of City University’s student bloggers.

Among the posts, Matt Bolton’s interesting look into the Evening Standard’s coverage of the mayoral election raises some good points. Such a well written piece deserves plenty of publicity, so I hope readers of this blog will go and have a look at what Matt has to say.

The world of social-networking can be a bit creepy, reveals Kaya Burgess, who set up a fake Facebook account featuring an attractive female character he’d invented. A simple idea finely executed, Kaya’s article on the project reveals alot about the advancements of young men online.

Be sure to check out all the blogs Roy mentions in his post. If your’e not a blogging student already, it might just provide some inspiration.

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What we REALLY think about the UK’s newspapers

Posted by Dave Lee on 25 March 2008 at 19:24
Tags: Newspapers, Online, facebook

British editors:Want to know what students really think of your newspaper?

Take at look at these gems, plucked from the Facebook-o-sphere. You may remember Axe Grinder’s look at the reputations of journalists on Facebook — we all hate Piers Morgan, apparently — a while ago, but let’s take a look at the newspapers themselves.

If you’re a tabloid editor, look away now.

“The Daily Mail really are a bunch of f****** t****” has, at the last count, 7,268 members. That’s some serious hate right there. I looked for a positive Daily Mail group, but the friendliest I could find was this: If I see someone reading the Daily Mail, I assume they’re a bit thick.

Right up there with the Daily Mail is The Sun who, with the group “I f****** hate The Sun newspaper”, achieves an impressive member tally of 5,882. Not bad. I wonder if such a group would be allowed to exist if ol’ Rupert ever gets his hands on the social-networking giant.

As you would probably expect, the Daily Express has taken a bit of a Facebook-hammering since its recent apology of the McCanns. Plenty of groups about that. In the interest of balance, how about this group: “I read the Daily Express and I’m proud of it!” 17 members. Ah well, it’s the taking part that counts.

On to the broadsheets. The Guardian seems to be free from too much vitriol, but one plucky chap named Chris addresses one of the problems all Guardian readers have with his group: “I read the Guardian/Observer and am not a snob.”

Just time for one more: the Daily Telegraph.

Our friends down under don’t seem to like their Daily Telegraph, but the English one survives well intact. In fact, 556 people have joined the group “Daily Telegraph readers”. Bravo.

1 comment

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Liverpool paper top story: Buy some ad space, please

Posted by Dave Lee on 19 March 2008 at 10:00
Tags: Newspapers, Online, Student Journalism

Now I may be a little old fashioned when it comes to commercial influence in newspapers, but it disheartens me to see Liverpool’s LX News running with this lead story: Advertise to over 60,000 students.

At what point does the drive for funding hamper a student newspaper’s coverage? I’d argue this example of LX News is a push too far.

1 comment

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BBC to embed video in news stories

Posted by Dave Lee on 14 March 2008 at 18:26
Tags: Online, Student Journalism

In the coming weeks, the BBC will be embedding its video in news articles [via Journalism.co.uk].

No biggy, you’d be forgiven for thinking, but it will increase the viewing of online video by buckets.

And what the BBC does, everyone else will soon follow. Some have already started. Although I’d argue having a separate section for video — TelegraphTV — serves to keep the divisions between print and multimedia intact. Online news video is a different kettle of fish to the normal television news packages. For starters, a TV news package will have a nice voice over, pieces to camera and context-building footage. Online video doesn’t need this. Video clips serve to extend the understanding of the written article.

An example: this extraordinary piece from the New York Times.

Read the piece and then watch the video. Could any degree of quality writing really convey how incredible that stunt was? The man’s a death-defying maniac — but an even bigger maniac when you watch the video.

From a technical standpoint, embedded video on the BBC will bring multimedia to people who were previously terrified of messages that demanded they download Realplayer. Now, instead, they just have to click play. Lovely stuff.

In a nutshell: Online video is something we all need to get used to. Online journalists will not need to morph into television reporters, but we will need to learn how to piece news stories together using text, images and video in equal measure.

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