Careful with that internship!

sausage.jpgThere’s some great discussion going on over at Mindy McAdams’ blog regarding what to expect on the job at a newspaper site and how those jobs are evolving. One of the key pieces of advice: be wary of getting stuck in an internship doing mindless cut-and-paste work, or as Kevin McGeever, my old boss at the St. Petersburg Times called it, “making sausage.”

I made a similar post about this previously (SEE: ‘Sigh. I’m a cut-and-paste expert’) based on the feedback from the many esteemed readers of this blog.

[UPDATE: 11-29-06, 10:55 p.m.] Lucas Grindley weighs in on the merits of so-called “web monkey” work.

Posted in newspapers | Comments Off on Careful with that internship!

Pulitzer Prize shows love to the Web

The Associated Press reported today that the Pulitzer Prize rules will now allow “newspapers to submit video and interactive graphics as part of their entries for the top prize in American print journalism.”

Well about gosh durn time! That’s a long-overdue acknowledgment that serious journalism can be done on the Web and need not be exclusively a printed endeavor.

Still, I wonder whether this will tip the hat even further toward the big papers with their huge resources and fancy video studios. Will an entry now need an amazing video package? Will hosting, say, a killer hurricane still suffice, even if there’s no Flash graphic explaining the storm?
[Thanks to Roger Simmons]

Posted in random stuff | 1 Comment

Oh, green, how magazines loathe thee

kermit.jpgSlate has an interesting article on the long-held belief in the magazine industry that green is the color of death and dismal newsstand sales. Not being a magazine guy, nor having majored in design, I had not heard of such a profound hatred of this color.

Green, to me, evokes casinos and pool halls like Capsa Online, not beautiful women on magazine covers. It makes me think of the machines there, and the gambling. Personally, I’d even rather have Slate’s dark maroon or the Houston Chronicle‘s eyeball-searing orange.

Posted in newspaper design, web design | 1 Comment

Dave Barry, the original crowdsourcer

Take a gander at Dave Barry’s hilarious Holiday Gift Guide, featuring such wonderful holiday fare as the motorized ice cream cones and nosehair clippers disguised as a finger.

But pay attention to each item’s credit lines. Aside from Barry’s enormous talent as a humorist, an important part of his success stems from the hordes of readers who contribute items to his columns. The gift guide is a great example of this. By giving credit to his readers and involving them in the process, (also known in buzzspeak as crowdsourcing), he has built a solid reputation as being the master of locating all things funny.

It doesn’t always take a fancy Web 2.0, database-backed, AJAX-powered, time-sucking online contraption to build a loyal readership that takes ownership of content. The most important ingredient is the initiative.

And if that doesn’t help, you might try luring them in with a free copy of the Great Big World of Nematodes coloring book.

Posted in random stuff, web 2.0 | Comments Off on Dave Barry, the original crowdsourcer

They’re watching your edits

I caught this on Cyberjournalist: Some folks have set up a site called NewsSniffer to monitor the editing of comments and stories on the BBCNews site.

The site “aims to monitor corporate news organisations to uncover bias.” I’d count on this interesting idea spreading to other news sites if I were you.

The site also tracks story revisions and highlights them. If you made a dumb typo, NewsSniffer will call you out on it.

The online producers who work at the BBC may need to re-evaluate their procedures for moderating comments now that they’re under the microscope. How are comments moderated at your news organization? Is there a thought-out set of policies, or does it rely on the judgment of the moderator at the time? Is it done by a staff member or a third party?

If sites like NewsSniffer pop up everywhere, will it have a positive or negative effect on news site message boards?

Posted in web 2.0, writing and editing | 2 Comments

A super-powered map

Take a look at Neighboroo, a new mapping site that features loads of layered data. It’s basically an AJAX-powered version of the maps created using GIS. By clicking through the different tabs, I just learned bunches of information about my new home in Orlando.

Yes, yours is not the only mind tingling with possibilities…

[Via Snarkmarket]

Posted in web 2.0 | 3 Comments

Sigh. I’m a cut-and-paste ‘expert.’

More interesting comments have come in regarding my previous student advice post. But pay particular attention to the remarks of the Sarasota Herald-Tribune‘s Lucas Grindley.

Take note, future interns and recent hires, as Grindley writes:

“When folks send me their resumes, I often feel bad for those who think they have two years experience working at a major news Web site. But really they have two years experience pasting photos into a gallery and writing cutlines.

If that’s your job, learn on your own how to do something more complicated. Learn a programming language. Teach yourself something. Try Flash. Anything.

But don’t tout yourself as an “expert” at cutting and pasting photos or stories into a content management system.”

Too true. It’s extremely easy to get stuck doing the daily copy-paste grind of photo galleries and updating databases all the time. Staff members love to have the interns do that stuff so they can work on fabulous interactive Flash graphics and win SNDies. If you’re an intern, don’t be afraid to ask about working on more challenging projects if you you’re getting handed too much copy-paste work. But don’t be a diva either; every person must pull his weight with the boring stuff.

As a primer, doing the copy-paste is great to become familiar with content-management systems (I cut my teeth online doing the Sun-Sentinel‘s Day in Pictures photo gallery). But make sure you are being challenged in your work and that you’re constantly learning more.

Don’t think just because you’re working on a news Web site means you’re hot stuff. Challenge yourself to produce compelling Flash graphics, slideshows, videos and audio stories for your portfolio. If you don’t, you’re going to be the Cutline Master for years to come.

Posted in random stuff | 7 Comments

The Onion’s take on ‘human interest’

That bastion of humorous journalism, The Onion, has just unleashed a hilarious parody of a human interest piece that every editor and writer should read.

Meet “Brighton resident Tom Carling, 42,” a walking well of human interest pieces. Note in particular the circumstances of his birth. This may be the first time I’ve run across a piece that successfully makes nearly the entire newspaper seem like a big cliche.

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Web Hosting Types and How to the Choose Best Hosting Service For Your Business

Wе understand уоur curiosity to get уоur website online and bеgіn ѕеllіng your рrоduсt оr ѕеrvісеѕ thеrе, ѕhаrіng thе wоrld your ѕtоrу оr juѕt ѕhаrіng some рісturеѕ/ѕnарѕ and еxреrіеnсеѕ wіth fаmіlу and frіеndѕ. Bеfоrе уоu gеt ѕtаrtеd take a flash, read оur роѕt on tуреѕ оf wеb hоѕtіng services аnd get аn undеrѕtаndіng оf thе pros аnd соnѕ оf each. All hоѕtіng services аrеn’t distributed еԛuаllу. No оnе іѕ better than thе оthеr, thеу аrе ѕресіfіс as реr your nееdѕ. They all hаvе mеrіtѕ and dеmеrіtѕ. However аѕѕurеd wordpress hosting – full featured, fast, secure, recommended рlаnѕ are better ѕuіtеd fоr certain tуреѕ оf wеbѕіtеѕ. Thіѕ wіll bаѕе on the traffic you’re lооkіng fоr, ѕесurіtу уоu’ll nееd аnd уоur dаtа storage needs.

Before dесіdіng оn your fіnаl steps оr gіvіng a hеаdѕ uр, wait fоr a mоmеnt as уоu’vе got a grеаt рrоduсt аnd grеаt mаrkеtіng рlаn ѕо how саn thе type оf website hоѕtіng dеtеrmіnе уоur success or failure? In brief, іf уоu сhооѕе thе incorrect рlаn, аlthоugh уоu саn make changes іn thе future thеу саn bе costly [уоu wіll bе lоѕt wіth сrеdіbіlіtу еtс]. Consider that the typical internet user is a pretty іnсоnѕіѕtеnt. They lооk fоr instant rеѕultѕ аnd if your site is hаvіng рrоblеmѕ bесаuѕе уоur ѕіtе is hоѕtеd оn an untruѕtwоrthу рrоvіdеr; уоu’vе сhоѕеn a рlаn that doesn’t рrоvіdе еnоugh bаndwіdth trаnѕfеr оr mеmоrу storage well, then уоu wіll be rеѕроnѕіblе fоr diminishing your сuѕtоmеr’ѕ base. If уоur rеԛuіrеmеntѕ аrе low fоr example If уоu’rе juѕt роѕtіng ѕоmе fаmіlу photos or еvеntѕ оnlіnе thеn уоu wоn’t nееd thаt muсh оf bandwidth оr disk space. Sо, whу іt? Sоmе оf thе hоѕtіng are vеrу affordable аnd ѕоmе еvеn frее depending on уоur application сhоісе. Selection of thе wrong tуре hosting соuld dеtеrmіnе thе grоwth оr fаіlurе of your buѕіnеѕѕ. Anаlуѕе fіrѕt thе type оf hosting you need and thеn dесіdе whісh ѕіdе nееdѕ tо bе mоvеd оn. Click on https://www.knownhost.com/ for more information.

Whаt Is a Wеb Hosting?

Before wе start discussing these topics on hosting you’ll hаvе tо choose from wе’ll ѕtаrt bу explaining whаt web hоѕtіng іѕ аnd why it’s required. It is so ѕіmрlе to elaborate. When уоu get a dоmаіn name frоm rерutеd domain name рrоvіdеr, уоu nееd tо раrk оr hоѕt that domain wіth орtіng ѕеrvеr ѕрасе оn web. Itѕ rеԛuіrеd bесаuѕе when уоu upload all уоur wеbѕіtе dаtа оnlіnе, уоu nееd that ѕрасе. Reason іѕ ѕо ѕіmрlе аѕ your website has all іnсоmіng аѕ well as outgoing data dеmаnd lіkе database rеԛuеѕtѕ, files dоwnlоаdіng/uрlоаdіng еtс thuѕ уоu nееd tо have wеb ѕрасе tо gоvеrn аll these. It іѕn’t muсh dіffеrеnt from thе wау your соmрutеr works, оnlу your files on уоur wеbѕіtе wіll be аvаіlаblе tо аnуоnе online. Just аѕ уоur соmрutеr hаѕ fіlеѕ оn уоur hаrd drіvе, your wеbѕіtе hаѕ files оn your ѕеrvеr. When ѕоmеоnе ассеѕѕ to уоur wеbѕіtе they аrе able tо vіеw your files. A website is a ѕеt оf fіlеѕ/dаtа that іѕ shared on thе Intеrnеt аnd a web hоѕtіng рrоvіdеr іѕ a company that holds оr ѕtоrеѕ уоur fіlеѕ іn a wау that thеу аrе аvаіlаblе оnlіnе [Hеnсе іtѕ a muѕt fоr a web ѕеrvеr tо available up fоr 24 hours іf уоu want tо bе vіѕіblе always]. Bаѕеd оn the type оf wеb hosting рlаn that you сhооѕе you’ll bе gіvеn a definite ԛuаntіtу of bandwidth аnd storage wеb ѕрасе.

What іѕ Bаndwіdth іn Web Hоѕtіng?

Whаt is storage ѕрасе?

Yоu definitely nееd to understand thіѕ bаndwіdth fіrѕt аѕ based on thіѕ, уоu will bе аblе tо dесіdе whаt’ѕ your nееd on wеb server. A bаѕіс understanding of bаndwіdth соuld ѕаvе уоu ѕоmе tіmе аnd mоnеу і.е. іtѕ a ѕmаll investment frоm your ѕіdе іn grаѕріng іt.

Bаndwіdth іѕ thе ѕum оf dаtа that уоur site wіll bе authorized tо trаnѕfеr. Yоu’ll uѕе a certain amount оf bаndwіdth, оr dаtа trаnѕfеr еасh tіmе ѕоmеbоdу visits your site. Sо to саlсulаtе thе аmоunt оf bаndwіdth уоu’ll need ѕау your website іѕ only оnе раgе.It рrоbаblу іѕn’t going tо be, but it’ll gіvе уоu a bаѕіс understanding. If thе fіlе ѕіzе оf thіѕ wеbраgе іѕ say 10k and уоu’ll be еxресtіng 1,000 vіѕіtоrѕ a month. Thеn your bandwidth or data transfer lіmіt will bе 10 MB. Thе bаndwіdth available tо your ѕіtе wіll аlѕо differ as per thе tуре оf web hosting рlаn/tуре thаt уоu select, so it іѕ in уоur соurt tо understand it. Stоrаgе ѕрасе is thе ԛuаntіtу оf data уоu’ll bе allowed tо ѕtоrе оn thе wеb ѕеrvеr. Wе rереаt, іf уоu have a small number of files і.е. you own a ѕmаll wеbѕіtе, you’ll оf course need reduced ѕрасе іn comparison tо a lаrgеr ѕіtе.

Frее Wеb Hosting

Why Not Hоѕt Fоr Free If Sоmеоnе іѕ Prоvіdіng?

Itѕ ѕоund rеаllу vеrу cool tо hаvе a Frее Wеb Hosting as there are loads of рrоvіdеrѕ available іn the market. You ever thіnk аbоut іt і.е. whу wоuld аnуоnе wаnt tо offer free hosting? It ѕееmѕ thаt the соѕt оf offering hоѕtіng wоuld be fаіrlу expensive. Hоw dо they mаnаgе іt?

Matter іѕ s simple, why ѕоmеоnе wіll рrоvіdе уоu ѕuсh frее services!! Answer is “Advеrtіѕеmеntѕ” If уоu rеgіѕtеrеd for a frее hоѕtіng ѕеrvісе, уоu’ll generally gеt раіd аdѕ in thе ѕіdеbаr [Lеft, rіght еtс] оf your ѕіtе, much like they dо оn Fасеbооk раіd ads i.e. sponsored. Bеіng a frее customer, you саn’t mаkе them rеmоvе/еdіt еtс аѕ уоu hаvе tо have keep them with уоur wеbѕіtе. This іѕ thе rеаѕоn why thеу оffеr уоu a free web hosting. Many tіmеѕ it happens thаt you gеt a ѕub-dоmаіn as a frее wеb hоѕtіng. With free hоѕtіng you get a ѕub-dоmаіn instead оf a TLD [Top Lеvеl Dоmаіn Nаmе]. Your wеbѕіtе nаmіng іѕ very important and еѕѕеntіаl for branding уоur buѕіnеѕѕ. Instead of getting a dоmаіn nаmе ѕuсh аѕ уоurdоmаіnnаmе.соm. You’ll gеt something thаt lооkѕ lіkе yourdomainname.freehostingsiteprovider.com. Having a ѕub dоmаіn mау make уоur ѕіtе seem less professional and unstructured. Frее hosting could be a gооd preference іf уоu’rе juѕt sharing рhоtоѕ/реrѕоnаl stuffs with уоur fаmіlу/соllеаguеѕ аnd thеу don’t wаnt thе еxреnѕе оr mіnd the аdѕ. It wоuld аlѕо bе great choice for thоѕе whо wrіtе personal blоgѕ аnd іt’ѕ a great way to judge the dерth of water wіth a single fооt. Shаrеd Hоѕtіng

Shаrеd hоѕtіng-аѕ thе nаmе іtѕеlf ѕuggеѕtѕ that уоu аrе going tо host your wеbѕіtе fіlеѕ оn a ѕеrvеr thаt keeps fіlеѕ frоm mаnу оthеr websites рrоvіdеr і.е. gеttіng a ѕhаrеd hosting plan wіll mеаn thаt уоu ѕhаrе a ѕеrvеr wіth роѕѕіblу hundrеdѕ оf оthеr wеbѕіtеѕ. Thіѕ tуре of hоѕtіng plans аrе сhеареr as уоu аrе nоt оwіng them рrіvаtеlу and its about mаnу wеbѕіtе оwnеrѕ. This tуре of hosting greatly mіnіmіѕеѕ соѕtѕ fоr all. The рlаnѕ are very rеаѕоnаblе; many саn bе purchased fоr аѕ lіttlе аѕ $4-$5/mоnth dереndіng оn thе storage and bаndwіdth уоu’ll require.

Shаrеd hosting іѕ аррrорrіаtе fоr ѕmаll buѕіnеѕѕеѕ and personal websites аѕ thеу аrе rеаllу. Chооѕе уоur hosting service рrоvіdеr саrеfullу as mаnу a tіmеѕ Hе іѕ responsible fоr your online ѕuссеѕѕ. If thе hosting company ѕеrvеѕ and рlасеѕ tоо mаnу wеbѕіtеѕ on a single ѕеrvеr, this could саuѕе реrfоrmаnсе рrоblеmѕ. If реrfоrmаnсе wіll bе a саѕе, your wеbѕіtе wіll ѕuffеr frоm being rерutеd lіkеwіѕе vіа search engines rеѕultѕ pages. Thеѕе could bе ѕlоw lоаdіng times оr еvеn thе wоrѕt саѕе scenario your ѕіtе соuld be оfflіnе for extended реrіоdѕ of time.

What іѕ a Vіrtuаl Private Sеrvеr – (VPS)

A Vіrtuаl Private Server саn bе understood аt a glаnсе vіа bеtwееn ѕhаrеd hosting аnd a dedicated server. A VPS hоѕtіng соmраnу tаkеѕ a lаrgе ѕеrvеr аnd ѕеgmеntѕ іt to ѕеvеrаl ѕmаllеr servers [A ѕlаb is dіvіdеd іn many but with a complete ѕmаllеr ѕlаbѕ]. Thus оffеrіng a ѕоrt of ѕmаllеr dedicated ѕеrvеr. A virtual server dоеѕn’t provide уоu wіth thе рhуѕісаl dіѕk space оr thе bаndwіdth that a dedicated server dоеѕ, but it іѕ a ѕtер uр frоnt. Addіng more security, access аnd bаndwіdth thаn уоu’d be gеttіng wіth ѕhаrеd hоѕtіng [Prоmіѕеd Pеrfоrmаnсе]. You соuld mоvе frоm shared hоѕtіng plan tо VPS if уоur site ѕtаrtѕ rесеіvіng hіgh trаffіс, аnd уоur budgеt іѕn’t rеаdу to bear a cost on dеdісаtеd server.

Whаt іѕ Dеdісаtеd Hоѕtіng?

Aѕ the nаmе itself еxрlаіn thаt its a соmрlеtеlу рrіvаtе hоѕtіng services. Itѕ dеdісаtеdlу рurсhаѕеd server for hоѕtіng wеbѕіtе рrіvаtеlу. Thе buуеr of thіѕ kind оf ѕеrvеrѕ is ѕоlе property оf оwnеr. Thіѕ tуре оf hоѕtіng аllоwѕ a сlіеnt to hаvе соmрlеtе access to one ѕеrvеr. Mаnаgеd hosting lets you tо lеаѕе thе еntіrе server [Fоr a сеrtаіn реrіоd оf time]. Yоu’ll be аblе tо іnѕtаll the OS that bеѕt ѕuіtѕ your buѕіnеѕѕ nееdѕ.

Lаrgе buѕіnеѕѕеѕ оr websites that need a hіghеr lеvеl оf ѕесurіtу is thе better сhоісе.

Posted in tutorials, web 2.0, web design | Comments Off on Web Hosting Types and How to the Choose Best Hosting Service For Your Business

Alligator pulls out the stops for Danny Rolling execution

Take a look at today’s online Independent Florida Alligator for a great example of a college paper covering a huge event for its community. Make sure to check out the section titled “Profiles
Danny Rolling was the man convicted of horrendously murdering several University of Florida students in 1990. His shadow still largely looms over the city today.

The paper has been making advances in its online work, thanks in a big way to folks like Brett Rogiers and Andrea Morales, who always seem to be gung ho for an audio slideshow.

But in the Rolling story’s case, it appears many parts of the staff came together to help current students recognize the importance of Rolling’s execution. This is in addition to putting out a five-day-a-week paper, I might add.

Ah, I’m so proud of my Alligator homies.
(Full Disclosure: I used to spend way too many hours at the Alligator as its metro editor.)

Posted in colleges, newspapers | 1 Comment

Advice for young journalists

The constant, nagging question in our industry today is what to do about the future of news. Students are that future, and it’s imperative that those of us out in the trenches give them the best guidance possible.

I recently visited my alma mater, the University of Florida, to speak with about 250 journalism freshmen. Before that, I asked your advice on what to tell them. Below, I’ve compiled some excellent responses. Some came from seasoned veterans working in the industry. Others came from academics. Other responses were from young’uns like myself who are recent hires.

The responses covered everything from doing plenty of internships, being a good reporter and learning several key technologies and methods from birrongsurialpacas. Some of the advice regarding taking a broad approach or specializing is contradictory. I’d argue there’s room, and a need, for both kinds in growing online staffs.

As traditional roles in the newsroom are changing, it’s important that we define what the term “online journalist” means. Many students may be under the impression that it simply means “I write for the web.” In truth, the term is so broad it’s almost useless today.
Instead, I defined “online journalism” in terms of content journalists are expected to produce for the Web:

1. Text (stories, blogs, breaking news snippets)
2. Photos (still images)
3. Video (moving images)
4. Audio
5. Interaction / Games (interactive graphics, user comments, any participation)
6. Data (as in raw databases used to create journalism)

The changing media landscape means we have a whole array of new tools to tell a story. Sometimes a narrative is best. Other times, it’s a database-backed Flash graphic. You, the journalist, must have the wisdom to choose which is the best tool for a particular story.

To do that, you should know a bit about how each of these works, even if you specialize in only one or two. Let me emphasize that smaller papers, where recent grads are most likely to find work, often require multimedia multitasking. At bigger papers, you may still get away with being a writer with no web skills since “there are people to do that stuff.” But that’s not likely to last long.

Do you need to know HTML? Heck, yes.

How much? It depends on what you want to do in journalism. Some gigs require mad coding skills; others don’t. In every case, you should at least know the minimum needed to create a customized MySpace page, maintain a blog, add styles to text, and edit and insert images. So write a blog. Make a web site. Do a web project. Experiment with Flash if you can.

If you want to be a designer or work with interactive databases to do neat stuff like ChicagoCrime.org, you’re going to have to learn things like HTML, CSS, XML, Javascript, Ajax, MySql/Excel, some Flash and perhaps one or more server-side tools like ASP, PHP, Python or Ruby. The more technologies in which you’re proficient (though not at the expense of journalism skills) the more likely it is you’ll get an awesome gig.

But journalism isn’t changing just because we have more tools. It’s also changing because the communication between news outlets and readers is no longer a one-way street. Today, we have bloggers, blog comments, more citizen journalists and message boards. A blogger might shed light on an additional aspect of a mainstream media story, and suddenly, Dan Rather is out of a job. But perhaps the public has better information as a result.

Journalism has become more of a conversation and less like a lecture. You should know that the purpose of soliciting advice from industry professionals in Journalistopia was not just to get good advice so I sound smart. It was also to demonstrate the power of collaborating with an audience.

Because I (the journalist) put out a call to my expert readers for advice, now students everywhere have much better information to pick through. It’s a bit how Wikipedia works.

But above all else, it’s important to remember you are a storyteller with the responsibility to serve the readers. You might tell the story of crime in a city using a Google Map. You may tell it through a Soundslide, plain text, a graphic or in some other form. But in the end, you still need to have solid news judgment, a strong sense of ethics and the dedication to serve the public interest.

When you really think about it, a newspaper site on the surface can look identical to any miscreant’s Web site. Online, we no longer have the advantage of a bulky stack of paper to make us seem more authoritative. Therefore, our credibility and the strength of our journalism is perhaps more important than ever.

Even the old timers recognize that it’s up to students, the media vanguard if you will, to use their judgment and imaginations to make journalism better than ever.

***

Now on to that fabulous advice I’ve been hoarding:

From:
Paul Conley, media consultant / PaulConley.com

1. Become a great reporter — know how to work a phone, work a room, flirt with a secretary, cozy up to a crook, convince an untrustworthy politician to trust you, get regular people to feel comfortable with you, learn to feel comfortable around powerful people, always carry a mechanical pencil and double-check the spelling of people’s names.

2. Become great with the computer — know the ins and outs of every content-management system you can find, understand at least the basics of html, be able to work in Flash and Photoshop as easily as you can work in Word, build something online using open-source software such as WordPress or Joomla, learn to work a spreadsheet like an investment banker and an audio file like a sound technician, always carry a digital camera and double-check the spelling of people’s names.

3. Become a great person — be fair in your reporting and kind to strangers, keep your complaints to a minimum, work harder than the people around you, learn to understand yourself before trying to get others to understand you, don’t dress like a bum, call your Mom, always carry spare change for the winos and double-check the spelling of people’s names.
From:
Ryan Sholin, Invisible Inkling, recently graduated and hired

1. Start blogging. Write about whatever you want, but become as knowledgeable as you can about one or two topics you’re passionate about, and read and write about them constantly. Learn to design your own blog, and use a feed reader to do your online reading.

2. Treat everything you produce as a piece of professional public work, whether it’s text or photos or a video you post on YouTube. Your Web presence is an important part of your portfolio. You will be Googled.

3. Choose one online skill and become great at it. Edit video, podcast, create Flash infographics, design blogs, be a Soundslides ace — have a specialty.

From:
Matt Waite, St. Petersburg Times/MattWaite.com

Forget about platform. More and more every day, you won’t just write for print, or just write for a blog, or just do video for TV. You’ll be doing ALL of those things. You won’t work for a newspaper or a radio station. You’ll work for a media company, and the more things you can do, the more valuable you’ll be. So taking just print or just broadcast classes is shortsighted and dumb.

From:
Derek Willis, Washington Post/Thescoop.org

Don’t just learn computer programs; learn about how the computer actually works, how the Internet actually works. I’m not talking TCP\IP engineering, just the basic concepts of operating systems and Internet protocols. Don’t be a prisoner of your software.

From:
Lex Alexander, News & Record in Greensboro, N.C. / Blog on the Run

If you don’t know how to think logically and critically, if you don’t know how to ask the right questions (and, sometimes, keep asking them), all the technical expertise in the world won’t matter.

From:
Bryan Murley, Reinventing College Media / Emory & Henry College, Emory, Va.

I think it comes down to three attitudes:

1. Excitement about change

2. Desire to learn new things

3. Embrace the “other” – i.e., the community

If you have these three attitudes, the skills and knowledge will naturally flow.

I think the editor of the News-Record gives some good advice: http://blog.news-record.com/staff/jrblog/archives/2006/09/jan_schaefer_of.html

also, Howard Owens:
http://www.howardowens.com/index.cfm?action=full_text&ARTICLE_ID=2277

From:
Matt, recently hired at a 90,000 daily somewhere

From someone that was hired one year ago at a 90,000 daily as a phone clerk and has moved up quite a bit in one year, students must know in three years that a degree doesn’t mean they can walk into a newsroom and become a columnist and/or the No. 1 reporter. You must start somewhere, and that somewhere is traditionally a very low place (low as in on the totem pole and in the pay scale)

Also, read a newspaper. Every day. I can’t tell you, as a former EIC of one of the top JC papers in SoCal for a year, people come in not reading one inch of a newspaper (sure, plenty of blogs and web sites) but rarely did I find someone who actually read a newspaper. To me, it shows when reading their copy.

From:
Kristen Novak, UNC grad

As a newbie in the field of multimedia journalism (just started my first “real” job last January), here is what I have found the most useful:

1. Understand what the different types of media are – text, audio, video, photos, infographics – and how they work. You don’t have to be the best at each of them, but understand them and their purpose.

2. Learn how to tell a story. Forget the platform and focus on the story and how to best tell it. (Each media can be used to best convey something…why are you choosing video to tell a certain story over photographs with audio? Maybe because there is a lot of action you would otherwise miss out on, etc…)

3. Get experience NOW! INTERN! WORK! Don’t restrict yourself to anything in particular. Think about the big picture and use internships/jobs to get skills. I interned for a wide array of companies and honed my skills not only in journalism but also in design, programming, and development.

4. Make use of the technology available to you! Biggest question in interviews: Do you have a blog and what is it about? Everyone has a passion – write about yours on a blog to get experience and practice! And if you are a visual person, don’t feel left out – make your blog using photo stories or videos.

From:
Cory Armstrong, University of Florida / News Reporting and Public Records

Learn to use Excel and manipulate data. I’ve been told by reporters/editors that learning to feel comfortable with numbers will be a huge plus. So much information is online now that the more you know about what to do with it, the better you’ll be.

From:
Anthony Moor, Orlando Sentinel, edited from one of my favorite articles in Online Journalism Review (and not just because he’s my boss either…)

A Northwestern University study finds that online managers are primarily looking for detail-oriented collaborators capable of editing and copyediting, not technical producers.

When I examine resumes of recent graduates, I’m looking for the journalism skills first, specifically news judgment. Have you worked as an editor at your college newspaper? Do you have clips that demonstrate a clear hard-news focus, in the classic, inverted-pyramid writing style? I want journalists who want to be editors.

Next, are you Internet literate? No newspaper editor would hire an applicant who didn’t know the function of the A-section. While we don’t need code monkeys, we do need people who understand the unique attributes of the Web as it pertains to journalism.

So, have you built a Web page as part of a student project or on your own? Do you know basic HTML? Do you work on the student newspaper website? Do you frequent Internet news sites? Do you use an RSS reader? Do you podcast? Did you ask to shadow the Web producers for a few days at your last internship? An affinity for our medium is essential.

I also need people who think in multimedia. So if you’re a broadcast major, take print courses, or visa versa. Do a Web project. Do you keep a blog? Why not? There has never been an easier way to publish your journalism for an audience. So become a journalist online. Blog your hobby or your summer in Europe — like a reporter, not an opinion columnist.

***

Anything else to share?

Posted in colleges, newspapers, random stuff, video, web 2.0, web design, writing and editing | 12 Comments

Where’s the link?

foley.jpgThe Sarasota Herald-Tribune published a whopper of a story today, revealing the identity of the priest who says he had an inappropriate relationship with a young, now-disgraced Rep. Mark Foley.

As the national media picked up the story, it’s appalling that hardly anyone has actually linked to the Herald-Tribune‘s story.

A WashingtonPost.com story refers to the Herald-Tribune six times in different ways without a link. But I’m picking on the Post since it’s a staff-created story. CNN, MSNBC, the Miami Herald, the St. Petersburg Times, ABC News and Yahoo! News are all guilty as well. Granted, some of these stories are automatically generated by AP, sans link. Still, that’s a pretty important link.

And to add insult to injury, Google News’s algorithm ranks the Herald-Tribune story as the 10th most-important story (at least when I checked at 11:20 a.m.).

I’m far from the first to say it, but we should really be re-examining our linking practices. Saying “so-and-so reported” without the link –especially on such a big story– just doesn’t make sense online, nor is it fair.

Posted in ethics, newspapers, web 2.0 | 2 Comments