Posts tagged media
Posts tagged media
28 notes &
Young journos take note. This post is full of good advice. Read it, learn it, live it.
I’ve been thinking a lot about young journalists lately. Maybe it’s simply because I’ve been invited to speak to some journalism classes in the past few months and have been impressed by how many bright, intelligent and ambitious young people still want to be part of an industry that few seem…
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What it really comes down to, I think, is that he was in a hurry and didn’t want to take the time to grind out a career the way most journalists do. Forget the daily grind of compromises and small sacrifices in the service of something more important. No, for Kai Nagata, it was now or never. ‘I thought if I paid my dues and worked my way up through the ranks, I could maybe reach a position of enough influence and credibility that I could say what I truly feel,’ he writes. ‘I’ve realized there’s no time to wait.’ Indeed.
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It’s a vicious cycle, and it creates things like the Kate and Will show. Wall-to-wall, breaking-news coverage of a stage-managed, spoon-fed celebrity visit, justified by the couple’s symbolic relationship to a former colony, codified in a document most Canadians have never read (and one province has never signed). On a weekend where there was real news happening in Bangkok, Misrata, Athens, Washington, and around the world, what we saw instead was a breathless gaggle of normally credible journalists, gushing in live hit after live hit about how the prince is young and his wife is pretty. And the public broadcaster led the charge.
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Poynter did a post on how different U.S. media websites reported today’s verdict in the Casey Anthony trial. MSNBC, above, went the biggest with coverage (even more so than local Florida outlets).
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That’s the question 23-year-old Danielle Ryan asked in a recent blog post of hers, quoting an article in the Irish Times:
It is a sad day when journalism schools need to teach basic English grammar and spelling.
“When we talk about declining literary standards … what I mean is that in the context of everybody having a B in honours English, which is a high standard, there is a surprisingly high proportion who can’t spell or who don’t properly understand words…”
This would seem to reveal that students are given A and B results in English papers, even with numerous spelling and grammatical mistakes. This in turn would reveal that they have been let away with handing up crappy pieces of “English” for six years prior to taking their final exams.
She also slams the “excuses” she believes she’ll get from media publications as to why such mistakes, and more, exist in copy online (and presumably in print):
No doubt if I was to engage in a discussion with the editor of a horribly edited website or newspaper she/he would try to pawn me off with stories of how these days they “don’t have time”, everything is so “immediate” and we are living in the “24 hour news cycle” where “Twitter rules” and journalists “simply don’t have time”, they just need to “keep up”.
And then she hits her message home with this:
If you have time to spell something incorrectly, you have time to spell it correctly.
Agree? Disagree?
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Interesting use of a Storify post if I ever saw one.
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A behind-the-scenes look at being on-the-scene for the Rod Blagojevich verdict from the City Room blog of public radio station WBEZ in Chicago. And to think, before this I only knew WBEZ for giving us This American Life.
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This article is written by Bethany Horne, who just finished her bachelor of journalism at the University of King’s College in Halifax.
She writes (emphasis mine):
I had to do an internship, to earn the right to graduate, so I didn’t fret over the ethical implications at the time.I do, now. Because my friends who had to do a short internship to graduate are now doing summer-long or longer ones, with no job in sight. The first foot in the door was kicked out, I guess.
It’s a sign of the times that a lot of journalists are not hired on after they complete their internships. I can’t say I think this is a bad thing, because I don’t.
Back in the days where everyone who seemingly had an internship had a job offered to them after said internship doesn’t strike me as right either. You should earn your job — not have it handed it to you.
Many people I know who interned somewhere invariably find work after said internship somewhere else. Who’s to say that internship that didn’t result in a job at the company where they interned didn’t play a part in them getting a job elsewhere?
Horne continues (again, my emphasis):
Unpaid internships may make the fortress accessible, sometimes, sure. But they only make it accessible to some people, the kind of people who are already over-represented inside. Those who can afford to work for free. So the young people who don’t come from the city, and who don’t come from money, are shit-out-of-luck. And what of anybody who has to support a family, either here or back home wherever home may be? We know of the taxi driver doctors, but how easy is it for a first generation immigrant to get into our media? They won’t do it through a lowly internship, that’s for sure.
I debated the whole paid-internship vs. unpaid internship thing in a blog post I wrote last year with Liem Vu (who’s interning at the Star this summer), so I won’t delve into it all again here, but I’ll reiterate: I’m not against unpaid internships.
Should papers owned by media giants pay their interns? Undoubtedly. But by writing off all unpaid internships, you could miss a great opportunity with a small startup or website.
For my first summer in Toronto in 2006, I interned with andpop.com. I was paid a small honourarium (maybe $500 for the entire summer) and my TTC costs were covered, but the tradeoff was well worth it. I got to interview celebrities and I got to write about the entertainment business, which was my dream writing gig. I was able to work the internship around my part-time job in the city and the summer university classes I took.
I’m not rich, but I’m glad I took that unpaid internship. It made me more confident in what I do and gave me a taste of what it might be like working for an entertainment publication full-time.
And there still are plenty of places that pay their interns — I currently intern for one of them.
Not all internships are bad, even the unpaid ones. Friends of mine who have taken unpaid internships at bigger papers didn’t regret it — and they didn’t come from privilege.
Experience is experience and the hungrier you are to get in the business, the more you are willing to do whatever it takes to do so — even if that means working at McDonald’s to pay the bills while you work at your unpaid internship during the day.
I’m curious to hear your thoughts: Should unpaid internships be written off completely?
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As a photographer, you feel helpless. Around you are medics, security personnel, people doing good work. It can be agonisingly painful to think that all you’re doing is taking pictures.
A breathtaking article from the Guardian. Make sure to also check out the photogallery — wow.
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Coverage of the Anthony Weiner scandal was last week’s most-covered story, filling 17% of the newshole according to the Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism. It ranks as fourth all-time since PEW starting tracking news in January 2007 (the scandal surrounding former Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich is No. 1).
Two thoughts:
1) I wonder how much would Bill Clinton’s sex scandal have eaten up if PEW was tracking things then?
2) Is it odd that I expected Weiner-gate to take up more of the newshole?