Sunday, May 10, 2015

Overcoming Phone Fears

Particularly a problem for Millenials?

For a generation who spent the hours after school Instant Messaging, calling can feel foreign — and presumptuous. "They don't want to wing it," complains writer Sandy Hingston in Philadelphia Magazine.

Wednesday, April 29, 2015

April 31, 2015

Last thoughts on Adrienne Samen



* But first: What is Criminal Mischief?

* People Magazine's version

* Oh no Adrienne

* But things got better

* I hope this isn't her

Facebook?


Who is Demian Bulwa? Questions?









Drones and Wearables

 from Digiday


At CES this January, we saw opportunity flying through the air with the advancement of drone technology.
Having had the chance to get my hands on the Iris+ from 3D Robotics, I was instantly energized by the potential this had for our team and for the industry at large. The “Follow Me” option (directing the drone to follow the user) and flight-planning capabilities (which allow users to set a shot pattern) give journalists the opportunity to plan shots ahead, something critical when you also need to be focused on what is happening, not just on flying your camera.
With its GoPro compatibility, it helps make entry into drone media much more accessible and attainable for the regular reporter and user, many of whom already incorporate GoPros into their storytelling. Other companies like Parrot with its Bebop Drone are also making drones much more user-friendly by integrating controls into a mobile application – meaning a remote control is one less thing to lug to a reporting site.
So using drones for reporting is obviously a “fun idea,” but is it feasible and is it important?
The FAA’s recent political decision-making around the commercial use of drones has made this a real possibility for reporting purposes. From using drones to investigate factory farms to monitoring police abuse during protests, journalists have already started adding these relatively low-cost devices to their news-gathering arsenals. On the “citizen journalism” side, we are seeing independent users creating incredible, sweeping shots – bringing viewers literally to new heights.
Although some argue they are restrictive to big idea concepts, these new rules will see an estimated 7,000-plus businesses obtain commercial aviation drone permits in the next three years. A number of them will be reporters and photojournalists. The FAA has even specifically engaged with the media community via university research programs to test the possibilities.
The time when drones will be in our news is not only imminent; it’s here.
Wearables
From the sky to our wrist, hot new consumer technologies will change the way users are obtaining news and, therefore, the way we produce it.
Though not the first in its category, Apple Watch shows huge potential to present news in a quick, digestible way. Just as Twitter limited social media users to 140 characters to get their point across, the Apple Watch challenges media to carry across the news within a 42 millimeter space.
At Salon, when designing our application for the Apple Watch, we encountered a problem we’re familiar with just from creating content every day: How do we meet the demand for “right now” updates while still providing the long-form content that our users appreciate? For us, the solution was integrating with the iPhone app — making the wearable and the phone work as a unified storytelling experience.
While wearables emerge beyond this, extending to embedded microchips to digitized contact lenses and even clothing, we will likely continue to see the survival of the slightly larger screen for deeper content engagement.
Virtual reality
At Sundance Film Festival earlier this year, big developments in virtual reality news and entertainment emerged.
While HBO and Fox Searchlight made some amazing announcements and accomplishments at the event, it was Vice that stole the show, from a media perspective. Presenting a 360-degree experience of the Millions March in New York City, a critical moment in the social justice movement sweeping across the U.S., Vice’s Chris Milk and Spike Jonze revealed what this technology can mean for news and storytelling. Given the technology, anyone today or even years in the future can experience a part of that powerful event.
From a hardware perspective, low-price options, like Google’s cardboard headset and phone integrated options like Samsung’s Gear VR, broaden access to these technologies and have the potential to open virtual reality media experiences to a wider audience.
These technologies are no longer sci-fi fantasies or Jetson flying car dreams. These products exist.
Media consumption leans toward frequent check-ins and a desire for a first-person narrative. Technologies like wearables, drones and virtual reality offer us a natural extension for our storytelling while delivering on the instant gratification and unique vantage point that users are looking for. I, for one, welcome the new wave of innovation and am excited by the opportunities it presents to the world of media.

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Assignment for Monday April 27, 2015

In this example, x 1 =2 and the tentative assi...
In this example, x 1 =2 and the tentative assignment x 2 =1 is considered. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
 A 300-word tentative beginning for your Big Story based on your reporting to that point. Take a look at the examples I have sent you. Note how I love anecdotes that lead into your thesis.

This is only a draft.

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

From Muck Rack

Lithograph of the Assassination of Abraham Lin...
Lithograph of the Assassination of Abraham Lincoln. From left to right: Henry Rathbone, Clara Harris, Mary Todd Lincoln, Abraham Lincoln, and John Wilkes Booth. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
"The AP's report of the Lincoln assassination. Took 76 words to get to the point. Where's the inverted pyramid, buddy?wonders
 Josh Katzowitz
 with CBS Sports, after reading the original AP report of Abraham Lincoln's death
 150 years after it was filed (which has gotten 2,500+ shares
 as of last count). "Whatever the opposite of inverted pyramid is, this is it," agrees
 Steve Contorno
 with the Tampa Bay Times. "I may use this--the original news story on lincoln's assassination--in class as an example of burying the lede," admits
 Gerry Doyle
 with the International New York Times. "I'm never letting an @AP
 editor give me guff again about anecdotal ledes," announces
 AP's Nicholas Riccardi
. While we're on the subject, the Washington Post thoughtfully collected several samplings of how newspapers covered the assassination
 a century and a half ago (1,600+ shares
). Plus, meet the little girl who told Abe  to grow a beard
 (1,200+
). Smart lass!




Thursday, April 09, 2015

Text of Email I Just Sent the Class

An optical illusion. Square A is exactly the s...
An optical illusion. Square A is exactly the same shade of grey as square B. See demonstration. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Attached is a sample Big Story. At the end is an outline. On the outline is a statement of theme. For Tuesday I want you give me a paragraph stating the theme of your Big Story *based on what you now know*. Preface it with, "At the moment I anticipate that this will be the theme of my story."

Of course, like a scientist, in your reporting you will explore all those things that contradict your possible theme. At the end of the reporting process, you will almost certainly have to rewrite your theme.

From the livescience blog:

The basic idea of a hypothesis is that there is no pre-determined outcome. For a hypothesis to be termed a scientific hypothesis, it has to be something that can be supported or refuted through carefully crafted experimentation or observation. This is called falsifiability and testability, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica.

Your Big Story will not be a scientific hypothesis in the narrow sense. But it can be a way of focusing your reporting and, perhaps, of discovering if you have a bias regarding your story that might distort your reporting.

Poking around on the web looking for definitions of hypothesis, I found one of particular interest. One possible definition of hypothesis is:

Educated Guess

Monday, April 06, 2015

Vox Links to the Collapse of the Rolling Stone UVA Rape Story

American Palladianism: The Rotunda at the Univ...
American Palladianism: The Rotunda at the University of Virginia, designed in the Palladian manner by Thomas Jefferson. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
link to commentary

take by a conservative lawyer on the threatened lawsuit

Why it matters:

Erdely and her editors had hoped their investigation would sound an alarm about campus sexual assault and would challenge Virginia and other universities to do better. Instead, the magazine's failure may have spread the idea that many women invent rape allegations. (Social scientists analyzing crime records report that the rate of false rape allegations is 2 to 8 percent.) At the University of Virginia, "It's going to be more difficult now to engage some people … because they have a preconceived notion that women lie about sexual assault," said Alex Pinkleton, a UVA student and rape survivor who was one of Erdely's sources.

Read more: http://www.rollingstone.com/culture/features/a-rape-on-campus-what-went-wrong-20150405#ixzz3WdmcLRpO
Follow us: @rollingstone on Twitter | RollingStone on Facebook

Is the Party Over for Social Media?
posted: 4/6/2015

   
Illustration by Tony O. Champagne
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The two most dynamic topics in news publishing today have to be social media and mobile publishing (comprising mobile Web and mobile-apps). They’re dynamic for different reasons and in different ways. Mobile usage is on a brilliant ascent, and at just the start of it, while social-media sites vary in popularity and engagement. As this very article came together, the tech media announced the final coffin nail for Google+.

And like MySpace before it, Facebook has become joke fodder, reduced to a pop-culture punchline among teens and newly-minted adults who see it as a cyber space overrun with over-sharing parental and grand-parental types. On the Web-series-turned-TV-show Broad City, when Ilana Glazer’s character tries to talk a young friend out of getting married too young, she implores of him, “Government-mandated monogamy is for old people—like Facebook invites or network TV.”

It’s true that Facebook is becoming increasingly popular with the 65-plus crowd.

But that’s only a small part of the story. In January 2015, Pew Research Center published its Social Media Update 2014 report, which crowned Facebook as “by far the most popular social media site.” Though the report acknowledges that the fan favorite is seeing its membership numbers slow since the previous year, “the level of user engagement with the platform has increased.” Facebook is maturing with its audience.

The Pew report also revealed that 52 percent of online adults are now active in two or more social-media sites—up from 42 percent the previous year.

What’s it all mean for how people will get their news in the future, or where publishers will have to follow their audiences next is uncertain.

“I’m not sure that Facebook is shedding younger users as much as younger users are shedding Facebook,” Stan Huskey said. Huskey is regional content director for Digital First Media, and editor of The Times Herald, Norristown, Pa.

But Facebook and Twitter continues to be vital to Huskey’s newspaper and its sister publications in the region.

“A couple of years ago, we used to publish to Facebook maybe twice a day. We post to Facebook about once an hour now, so we’ve definitely stepped that up. Twitter? Same thing,” Huskey said.

He sees Twitter’s greatest challenge as its pace. “A Twitter feed goes by pretty fast. How often are people seeing what we’re posting?...With Facebook, people sit down with their iPads at the end of the day, go through their Facebook feed, and they’ll see us. Hopefully, we’re publishing content that they’re interested in, and that drives a click back to our website.”

Huskey also noted that tools like TweetDeck, HootSuite, and Buffer—one he’s currently testing out—can streamline the workflow between a newspaper’s publishing system and the social-media platform. Populating the social sites are purely an editorial function (online editors see to that), but Huskey revealed that a collaborative, shared digital desk is in the works. “We’ll have it (staffed) from 6 a.m. to midnight, editors who will populate the social media and websites, while paying attention to the digital world.”

Though social media falls under the domain of editorial, Huskey said that advertising and circulation often take part in social media planning, too. “We bring them into conversations for a lot of things—contests being one of them and advertising. We’ll often come up with something that they can sell advertising around. We might create a contest on the editorial side and then promote that through social media.”

Naturally, big news brands are still banking on social media’s future. The New York Times alone runs as many as nine social communities, with presences on Tumblr, Facebook, Pinterest, Instagram, Google+, and YouTube.

 

Selling Social as a Core Competency

While publishing to social sites is often thought of as purely a function of editorial and all about content, there has to be a measurable return on the investment—whether it’s measured with click-thrus to the .com site, where advertisers are anxiously awaiting them; or renewed subscriptions because fans already saw a post on Facebook; or even new readers who live beyond a newspaper’s typically geographic reach, who subscribe after they see a link a friend posted. Those gains are all easily measured, but not always enough to justify the staffing, technology, and other resources required that make social-media work as effectively as it should.

It’s an apt criticism to say that the newspaper industry dragged its feet a little before buying into the digital proposition, but it was way ahead of the game when it came to social media, because it was so easy and so affordable to drive people to their websites this way. News publishers are the experts in distributing content across social spaces. And people want to get their curated and aggregated news from them.

It turns out, a newspaper’s social media acumen isn’t only beneficial to building the newspaper’s brand; it’s a sales opportunity, too. Last year, The Anniston (Ala.) Star hired a social media and online marketing sales representative to take what the paper knows about social media strategy, and share it with advertisers and local businesses that may become advertisers.

David Bragg, the paper’s director of advertising, said that the local community was “hungry” for social media training and expertise, and many needed a partner to help them maintain their social media properties. The newspaper’s team could help with this, so it became a sales opportunity.

One of the first clients to leverage the newspaper’s social savvy was a local auto dealership. After the publisher presented to the client, the company not only signed up for social media consultation and administration, but also bought Internet ads and nearly $8,000 in new print advertising.

“Mom-and-Pop businesses loved it, and it took off from there,” Bragg said. “Our goal was to do $40,000 in revenue from July to the end of last year, and we far exceeded that. When we prepared the budget for January to the end of this year, we were shooting for $120,000, but we are on track to do far better than that.”

Today, the newspaper is helping mid-sized local businesses strategize and deploy social media campaigns as part of a comprehensive marketing program that often includes a print-ad commitment. A second staffer joined the team to help manage the growing social media admin duties.

“We have been adding new clients ever since we started this program,” Bragg said.

The key to growing business in this way is not only offering an array of marketing and ad services that cover the cross-media/cross-platform spectrum, but educating clients about how all of these marketing initiatives work in tandem to build their own brands.

 

News on the Go

Tablets and e-readers started out big but have since gone “mini.” Mobile displays, once valued for their compact configurations, are morphing into “phablets,” with the introduction of smartphones like the iPhone 6+ and Samsung Galaxy Note. And now the bite-sized smartwatch is being thrown into the mix.

Tech giants like Apple, Sony, Motorola, Microsoft, LG, and Kronoz have all introduced smartwatches. And even fashion brands like Tag Heuer and Guess are selling them now.

These variations on a screen-size theme aren’t just happening because developers are whimsical; rather, it’s reflective of the many ways and preferences that people have for accessing, viewing, interacting with, and sharing all kinds of content—from long-form copy- heavy journalism to snappy six-second Vines and everything in between.  

Alice Dubois, director of editorial products at BuzzFeed, spoke on a panel presentation titled “We’re 50% Mobile. Now What?” at the ONA14 Chicago conference last September. She reminded the audience that social media drives a lot of mobile usage. “About 75 percent of usage on Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest is on mobile…mobile equals social, and social equals mobile. They’ve just converged.”

Alex Hardiman, executive director, mobile products, The New York Times, shared that panel discussion with Dubois and CNN’s senior mobile editor Etan Horowitz, and spoke about the growth of the paper’s mobile readership. “On smartphone, most of the growth actually came through browser, which makes sense. But on tablet, a lot of it came through our iPad app, and followed by our Android app, which also makes sense given the fact that we see increasingly long and deep sessions taking place on tablet and via app. And browser has been hugely important in terms of side-door traffic on smartphone.”

Though publishers may wish for a crystal ball that reveals how all of this will shake out in the future—what devices will reign, where and how and how long people will want to use them to access information—the future may still look a lot like the present, when newspapers simply have to be everywhere, ubiquitously available on any platform or medium.

Hardiman explained, “The question we posed to ourselves was: If it’s a mobile-only world in two to three years, where do we need to be best positioned to grow our audiences and revenues on phone and on tablet?”

 In the end, it was the wrong question to ask, she surmised. “We found that there were deeply entrenched and growing cross-platform behaviors among our readers…What does the world look like where cross-platform is the new normal, with mobile taking the lead?” Hardiman noted that the twice-daily “Page-One meetings” now features mobile prominently.

“We do know that if a digital or print subscriber accesses us on more than one platform, they retain (for) twice as long. (It’s) a fun and interesting cross-platform future,” she said.

Cofounder and chairman emeritus of comScore, Inc., Gian Fulgoni, summarized “The State of Mobile,” in his same-titled presentation from September 2014. As of June 14, 2014, he cited 172 million smartphone owners in the U.S. alone, and 93 million in the U.S. who own tablets now. While those ranks ascended, their adoption hasn’t obliterated desktop access to the Internet, as some had predicted. In fact, since 2010 desktop usage (measured in minutes) has also increased by a noteworthy 15 percent.

What this means for news publishers is that they still have to continue to invest in their desktop and mobile Web properties as they develop new apps for specific mobile devices.

According to Fulgoni, those apps are proving important. He noted in his presentation that during from June 2013 to June 2014, time spent on the mobile Web had increased by 17 percent, but mobile app use grew as much as 52 percent. The most popular mobile apps continue to be those that allow people to socially network and communicate, to play games, or to listen to digital audio.

Though mobile apps are on the upswing, only one-third of smartphone users are found to download a new app (or new apps) in an average month, Fulgoni pointed out. This is also a significant comScore stat for publishers who need not only to create useful, can’t-live-without-them apps, but also to find an effective way to market them alongside all their digital and print publications.

“The leading media properties now see 30 percent or more of their monthly audiences coming exclusively from mobile platforms,” Fulgoni noted.

Delivering ads by way of mobile devices isn’t quite as compelling. Fulgoni reported that this is now “surging,” but mobile still only represents 16 percent of all digital ad dollars spent.

“We’re doing an awful lot in the mobile realm,” said DFM’s Huskey. “Mobile, as a whole, is extremely impressive. We probably get 35 percent of our traffic from mobile. Some properties are getting up to 40 to 50 percent of their traffic from mobile. So mobile as a whole is extremely impressive, and it’s our future.”

The “whole” of mobile includes not only content viewed via the mobile Web, but also through mobile apps. Most of the traffic that Huskey cited comes by way of mobile Web, but the group of newspapers is also beginning to see some great promise with niche mobile apps, like GameTimePA, a high school sports app with a companion website that Huskey described as “extremely successful and growing really, really well.”

Selling advertising on mobile apps isn’t strange or new, he said. “It’s the new circulation. It comes down to how many downloads you have, and how many times people are visiting it. You base your ad rates off of that.”

GameTimePA is a free mobile app, and still rather fledgling, but niche mobile apps of this kind are compelling from a content and revenue perspective, he noted. “We have to continue to evolve, and we can’t just take stories from newspapers’ dot-com sites, throw it up on an app, and expect that people are going to like it.”

With mobile publishing is garnering a lot of attention—and rightfully so—the fear is that it will further diminish the newspaper’s core print offering, but Huskey disagreed. “I don’t think they’re detracting from print at all. It’s growing our brand. We have a much larger audience than we ever have.”

There are two mindsets about social media and mobile publishing for newspapers: Lean back and see how things shake out—where social audiences will relocate or spread to next, whether mobile Web proves more popular than mobile apps; or newspapers can dive right in, be everywhere, and create a plan, a purpose, and a reasonable ROI expectation. The cover charge into both of these communities is low, but once inside, will the party be in full-swing or will it already be last call?

- See more at: http://www.editorandpublisher.com/Features/Article/Is-the-Party-Over-for-Social-Media-#sthash.GxubKcHC.dpuf

Monday, March 23, 2015

Big Story Exercises

Excite
Excite (Photo credit: Wikipedia)


 Give me a list of things at USF that:

 Worry 
 Excite
 Offend
 Inspire
 Confuse you

In a single sentence: What do you think of parking on campus?
In a single sentence: Why do you think that?

In a single sentence: What do you think of the ratio between the sexes on campus? In a single sentence: Why do you think that?

In a single sentence: What do you think of the quality of the professors at USF? In a single sentence: Why do you think that? 

In a single sentence: Is our new president doing a good job? In a single sentence: Why do you think that?

 In a single sentence: Do you think that professors should warn students that they are about to talk about subjects that may disturb the students and allow the students to leave class without penalty?
In a single sentence: Why do you think that?

Meerkat: Horatio Could Have Said, "Check This Out Hamlet. It's Your Dad."

Monday, February 23, 2015

Young Will Kane is Coming to Visit Our Class

English: Photograph of the Chronicle Building ...
English: Photograph of the Chronicle Building in San Francisco after the 1906 earthquake and fire. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
He quit the Chronicle to work for something called Ratter, where recent stories concern "the heroin shits" and "Justin Bieber's dick."

According to an article at Nieman Lab,  founder A.J Daulerio,

doesn’t see Ratter as a typical local news site. Ratter will not be the place for reports on local council proceedings, recipes of the week, or prep football highlights. The directive he gives his local editors is simple: “The specific goal I told them was to alienate the local readership as much as possible,” Daulerio said. “Their version of L.A., or San Francisco, and hopefully New York, is supposed to be one that is inclusive with a national audience, and completely ignore the people that live there.”

Young Will Kane, who inspired early classes with his tales of MSM and

who worked at the San Francisco Chronicle for over four years, said he was excited at the idea of starting something in local news from scratch. “I love the Chronicle, I love newspapers, I love traditional metro reporting,” he said. “But I don’t see how that is going to last in its current form much longer.”


Tuesday, February 17, 2015

More Disputes Around Value of Twitter

Twitter
Twitter (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

"Oh, no. This tweet is worthless, according to@DKThomp
But RT anyway?" suggests Columbia Journalism School's Linda Bernstein, while sharing Derek Thompson's Atlantic screed that asks, "What Good Is Twitter?" (5,100+ shares). "I analyzed my most popular tweets. They had the average click-through rate of a digital display ad in East Asia," Thomspon explainsWall Street Journal's Elana Zak reacts, "@DKThomp
 confirms what has long been suspected: People are prone to sharing links they may never actually read." At the New York Times, however, tech reporter Vindu Goel argues, "Twitter is more a news aggregator, @dkthomp. For most people, headlines are enough, so no need to click to article."

Monday, February 16, 2015

Saturday, February 14, 2015

Friday, February 13, 2015

Summly Explained

The kid explains his original concept Summly Launch from Summly on Vimeo.


 Two examples from the original website.


A critic reviews Yahoo's version



Reporter Attends Lively Meeting and Recognizes What's Newsworthy

English: "Biggest Little City in the Worl...
English: "Biggest Little City in the World" arch on Virginia Street in Downtown Reno, Nevada. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
A cop, a prostitute, a stolen gun. What happens in Reno fails to stay there.

Tuesday, February 10, 2015

I Think I'm Inspired


Lazy Reporters + Sensational Sells = Widespread Ignorance (Check My Math. You'll See I'm Right)

St. Petersburg (Florida) by SPOT Satellite
St. Petersburg (Florida) by SPOT Satellite (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
A scathing new report. Really. Very very scathing.


In the report, Craig Silverman, adjunct faculty at the Poynter Institute in St. Petersburg, Florida, writes:
Too often news organizations play a major role in propagating hoaxes, false claims, questionable rumors, and dubious viral content, thereby polluting the digital information stream. Indeed some so-called viral content doesn’t become truly viral until news websites choose to highlight it. In jumping on unverified information and publishing it alongside hedging language, such as “reportedly” or “claiming,” news organizations provide falsities significant exposure while also imbuing the content with credibility. This is at odds with journalism’s essence as “a discipline of verification” and its role as a trusted provider of information to society

Is a Planning for a Career in Journalism a Fever Dream That - If Realized - Would Turn into a Nightmare?

English: University of Montana Journalism logo
English: University of Montana Journalism logo (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
This guy says yes. This guy and this guy say no.


An excerpt from Felix Salmon:

I’m sure that many people have told you this already, but take it from me as well: journalism is a dumb career move. If there’s something else you also love, something else you’re good at, something else which makes the world a better place — then maybe you should think about doing that instead. Even successful journalists rarely do much of the kind of high-minded stuff you probably aspire to. And enormous numbers of incredibly talented journalists find it almost impossible to make a decent living at this game.

An excerpt from Ezra Klein:

Don't go to journalism school. You're better off just interning, or writing a blog, or reading think-tank papers. When I hire, I see j-school experience as neutral — it doesn't separate one resume from another in the least. And a lot of journalism schools teach bad habits, and make you pay for the privilege of learning them. Michael Lewis's takedown of journalism schools, which was published in the New Republic, is worth reading. Letting someone pay you a bit of money to become a journalist, or even pay you nothing at all, is better than paying a j-school a lot of money to become a journalist.

An excerpt from Matthew Yglesias:

What about the issue Salmon raised? Is journalism a profession that denies people "a good chance at a well-paid middle-class lifestyle down the road?" A look at the numbers suggests that Salmon is wrong. Journalism today is very much a middle class occupation. And in many ways that's the problem — the middle class is struggling economically these days, and journalists are no exception.