Great tidbit in a blog post today. LZ Granderson, a writer for ESPN the Magazine, offers this response to a question:
Q: Moreso now than possibly ever, when news happens, columnists and bloggers and TV talking heads want to weigh in immediately, even if all the facts have yet to trickle out, or before the court case is finished. From the Mitchell Report to Duke Lacrosse to Sean Taylor, any ideas on how everyone can handle these situations in the future? Do we even need a solution?
When I was a cub reporter I did this news brief about this head-on car accident that left one person dead. I wasn’t careful in my reporting and falsely blamed the victim for the cause of the accident. The next day I found out I made the mistake and I just wanted to vomit. My boss, John Barnes, made my drive almost an hour south to apologize face-to-face to the victim’s family. They were hurt and tearful but still very kind to me. On the way back I pulled over and cried for about 10 minutes. From that day on, I knew the most important thing in this business it to be right. Not first. Not loudest. But right. That’s not to say I don’t make mistakes, but obviously that experience had a profound affect on my reporting and writing habits. So to answer your question, as an industry I believe we have to get back to putting the priority on accuracy above all else.
Apart from mixing up "effect" and "affect," he's spot-on.
Check out the whole interview, including Granderson's take on being an openly gay sportswriter and why "The Wire" isn't a hit.
Thursday, January 10, 2008
Accuracy
Posted by
Katy Culver
at
12:03 PM
0
comments
MySpace Suicide Update
Washington Post has an excellent piece today on the MySpace suicide case we discussed at length earlier. At first glance, I must admit, I thought, "Geez, Post, you're pretty late to this story." But the piece benefits from the distance. It has a better grasp of the response than others I've read. Definitely worth a look.
Posted by
Katy Culver
at
11:13 AM
1 comments
Labels: myspace, suicide, washington post
Getting it Wrong in Politics
Lots of chatter right now about political reporting and the prediction debacle in New Hampshire. I tasted a different flavor in this Politico piece, so I recommend it.
Posted by
Katy Culver
at
9:29 AM
0
comments
Monday, December 31, 2007
Non-profit Journalism and Investigative
We spoke earlier about non-profit journalism and how to make a difference with investigative work. Here's a new piece by one of my young grads, who left a newspaper job for a post with the Center for Responsive Politics, a non-partisan group that tracks the effects of money on politics. The piece took exhaustive reporting and data analysis to show how investments by members of Congress are tied to holdings in Sudan, even despite the politicians' concerns about genocide there. The piece received an immediate response, with members divesting within hours of the reporter's calls.
My old student reports: "I've been working on it for the last five months and it might be the piece that I'm most proud of at CRP--it took months of data-assisted reporting based on our work and the Sudan Divestment Task Force's work, it's about an issue that I'm passionate about and, maybe for the first time ever, I got to see a direct impact. It's a pretty cool feeling! :)"
Makes me proud by extension. A little inspiration for your New Year. Have a good one (and a safe celebration).
Posted by
Katy Culver
at
1:38 PM
0
comments
Labels: center for responsive politics, investigative, non-profit journalism
Thursday, December 27, 2007
Pakistan in Turmoil
Received this note from a 202er this morning:
Obviously you'll have gotten this link too or have read about this by now, but for formality's sake:
What's the deal with Pakistan? With all the crap surrounding Iraq, Iran and Afghanistan it seems like Pakistan has kind of flown under the radar for our nation's media (and possibly rightly so considering what we have invested in the other countries). I don't know much about Pakistan and how it fits into Middle East equation, but I remember reading about it for the 202 quiz questions when Bhutto arrived and the martial law imposed by Musharraf. It sounds like Pakistan is very unstable and might have revolutionary leanings given the controversy and dynamic there coupled with the death of this popular opposition leader. I unfortunately and unbearably don't have cable at home at my parents', so do you know of any good books or articles to get me up to speed on Pakistan? This country just keeps sounding more and more interesting and I can't see it not playing a big role the Middle East vs. United States Armageddon that's brewing.
Hope your break is going well,
~Al
Here are some story links that might help with background. You're welcome to use comments to add your own.
TIME magazine had a pretty good piece before Thanksgiving when the touchy deal between Bhutto and Musharraf went to hell
Bhutto herself had an op-ed in the Washington Post in that same time, gives a bit of background and shows her political strengths
The Post's roundup of Pakistan stories is comprehensive. I especially liked the image galleries when the lawyers erupted in protest.
Of all the pieces I read in the last three months or so, Newsweek's cover stands out the most. The lead is downright chilling, given today's events.
Hope that helps!
Posted by
Katy Culver
at
10:31 AM
0
comments
Labels: new york times, newsweek, pakistan, TIME, washington post
Thursday, December 20, 2007
Accuracy in Advertising
A local example of how inaccuracy can bite you. Those ads cost a pretty penny to make and to run, yet their effectiveness has been significantly diminished by the simplest of errors. Media coverage of the mistake has outstripped the attention the spots may have earned on their own.
Makes a 10-point deduction for fact errors in J202 look like chump change. You've asked me repeatedly if we had a "10 Commandments of Media Ethics," what would be the first one. I'm nothing if not consistent: in news and strat comm, above all things, get it right.
Posted by
Katy Culver
at
9:30 AM
0
comments
Labels: accuracy, advertising, media ethics, Wisconsin State Journal
Monday, December 17, 2007
MySpace Suicide update
The New York Times has an interpretive take on the MySpace suicide case we discussed last month. And they chose to name the mother who contributed to the bullying.
Posted by
Katy Culver
at
8:51 AM
0
comments
Labels: media ethics, myspace, new york times
Friday, December 14, 2007
Top Magazine Covers
TIME magazine is out with its Top 10 Magazine Covers of 2007 (along with 49 other lists in pop culture, news, etc.). Personally, I think they got #1 and #2 backwards. The Ahmadinejad cover on the New Yorker stopped me in my tracks when it arrived in my mailbox. I've been unable to recycle it since.
What's the best thing you read in 2007? Best design you saw? Best marketing?
Posted by
Katy Culver
at
5:07 PM
1 comments
AP Update
I spoke with some of you about changes coming to the Associated Press and the idea of centralized editing. Here's a follow-up story.
Posted by
Katy Culver
at
11:37 AM
0
comments
Labels: AP, new york times
Interactive and Advertising
OK, I'm putting this post up at my own risk, knowing that by the time you follow the link, the digital ad will likely have changed ... but here it goes.
Apple did a digital media buy on the front page of the NYT online today. It features a sidebar ad that interacts with a banner across the top below the masthead.
We all know I'm a cardinal among the Mac faithful, but I'd like to know what you think of this ad creatively and strategically. Does it make sense visually? Would you ever play it to get the interaction to work? Does it motivate you to buy? Do you think you're part of their target? Does digital make sense here? Does a buy with the Times make sense?
And I'll pull my soapbox out one final time this semester. If you're in strat comm and not thinking about digital, you are missing the biggest boat in the ocean right now.
Posted by
Katy Culver
at
11:02 AM
0
comments
Labels: advertising, apple, digital, new york times
FCC and Cross-Ownership
Welcome back from your labors in the final project. Let's get chatting again.
Congress is highlighting an issue you should all know about by now, an FCC rule controlling ownership of newspapers and broadcast stations in the same markets. Check out a decent summary of the issues and opinions in the Washington Post.
So what say ye? Should the government restrict this kind of ownership? Can newspaper companies survive without it? Would it benefit broadcast? Does it matter at all in a digital age? Do you know (or care) who owns the local papers and TV stations? How does ownership affect content?
Posted by
Katy Culver
at
10:51 AM
0
comments
Labels: consolidation, ownership, washington post
Thursday, December 13, 2007
Twitter?
OK, Do you Twitter?
I'm intrigued by the service but not convinced. It's like having my IM status messages available to the world (but Twitter's bug that won't allow AIM update submissions right now is thoroughly ticking me off). Does this mean I have to sound more coherent?
I can see it being uber-handy if I were still a breaking news reporter, but I'm not.
How can this tool be useful to me or will it become yet one more Facebook-esque time-suck that gives me the illusion that my busy-ness is somehow worthwhile?
Posted by
Katy Culver
at
11:18 AM
4
comments
Tuesday, November 20, 2007
MySpace Suicide -- And Us
OK, 202ers. Go back and read the previous post on MySpace and the comments to it.
One of the commenters has posted personal numbers and harsh commentary on the Drews. The commenter is anonymous (s/he shows a first name but no profile ... s/he could be in our class but also could be a member of the public following our blog).
Does this change your thoughts about the case overall? What do I do as moderator ... take it down or let it live? We talked in lecture and discussion about journalism, blogs and the space in between. What is it we're doing here? We're commenting on journalism but are our comments journalism? And what responsibilities do we have?
Posted by
Katy Culver
at
4:49 PM
11
comments
Labels: media ethics, myspace, suicide
Sunday, November 18, 2007
MySpace Suicide
A paper is taking heat for this story about a teen's suicide after she was targeted in a scheme to set up a fake MySpace character. The character was used to gather information that was then used against her socially. She killed herself about a year ago.
The story is tragic, but the paper is being criticized not for running it, but for not naming the adults involved in the fake account.
Read the piece and tell me what you think. Then read the comments posted at the bottom and tell me if that alters your view. Then go to some blogs (here's one), which have outed the offending adults, and follow the comment threads. What do those add to the equation?
I have pretty strong feelings on this one ...
Posted by
Katy Culver
at
9:08 AM
6
comments
Labels: media ethics, myspace, suicide
Prof and Plagiarism?
A storm brewing at Mizzou, one of the country's most prominent J-Schools. A retired professor, John Merrill, wrote a column for the newspaper, which is run by the school. He used two quotes from another story without attributing them.
The paper publicly reprimanded him by taking his column away.
It's brought an interesting set of responses from ethicists and bloggers.
So is this plagiarism or something else? If it's something else, what is it? And how should it be handled? What are the "thou shalt nots" of media ethics? What are the grayer areas?
Posted by
Katy Culver
at
8:41 AM
0
comments
Labels: media ethics, merrill, missouri, plagiarism
Tuesday, November 6, 2007
Mom Song
have gotten a bunch of requests for the youtube video i mentioned yesterday during the viral marketing discussion.
here it is: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RxT5NwQUtVM
how many times have you heard these lines from your mom???
tnx,
kc
Posted by
Katy Culver
at
9:50 AM
0
comments
Labels: youtube
Fat and the Farm Bill
Here's a suggested post from a 202er. I would STRONGLY encourage you to familiarize yourselves with this issue. It's going to be getting a lot of media attention. Took a long time to start bubbling, but now it will boil.
Katy,
I'm not sure if anyone's still reading the blog now that the quizzes are over, but on the chance that they are, it might be good to mention the Farm Bill 2007 that's currently going through the senate. The legislation is extremely important, and, unfortunately, it hasn't gotten much attention (at least that I've seen) besides a few op-eds (and an upcoming documentary called King Corn). Ultimately, the Farm Bill is the reason corn syrup is in everything we eat, and part of the reason Africa loses two dollars to trade deficit for every dollar in aid it receives. Billions and billions of dollars of subsidies go to massive agri-business corporations (I think 75 percent of the subsidies go to 3 companies), and it affects everything: nutrition, local farming,
the environment (that shipping costs money) and global poverty. It doesn't seem like a very interesting topic, but it has a huge impact, and people should know about it (especially since this is a very agricultural state). Here are a couple of those op-eds:
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/15/opinion/15kleckner.html?_r=1&oref=slogin
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/10/22/AR2007102201656.html
plus a NYT magazine feature a while back:
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/22/magazine/22wwlnlede.t.html
Posted by
Katy Culver
at
9:44 AM
2
comments
Labels: farm bill, new york times, washington post
Print Circulation
Here's a great note from a 202er to supplement Monday's lecture:
Hi Katy,
In case you haven’t read this yet, I saw this article this morning. Relates to what you lectured on yesterday on the Journal Sentinel losing customers regardless of their strong Web site.
<http://www.jsonline.com/watch/?watch=20&date=11/5/2007&id=31384>http://www.jsonline.com/watch/?watch=20&date=11/5/2007&id=31384
Thanks,
Posted by
Katy Culver
at
9:27 AM
1 comments
Friday, November 2, 2007
In the News
What are you reading about this week? Last quiz = last chance. Offer it up. I may go full throttle and ask six current events questions. What might those look like?
Posted by
Katy Culver
at
5:23 PM
14
comments
Labels: current events, quiz
OJ & KC
OK, a 202-er writes to try to suck Katy Culver into the OJ Simpson story, to wit:
____________
I stumbled upon this story today:
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,307757,00.html
Does this make this case more interesting now? Was he framed?....if the FBI new about it, isn't it suspicious that they let it happen? Will this get big? I know you hate O.J. in the news...but i'm having trouble deciding whether this is a big, important issue...because it seems highly suspicious, yet i've heard nothing else and it's not very 'breaking.' It seems this was highly preventable...not that i personally wouldn't love to see O.J. rot in prison.
_____________
Y'all know my feelings on overblown tales of woe involving Orenthal James Simpson. So is this news now? And if so, how so?
Posted by
Katy Culver
at
5:17 PM
1 comments
Labels: celebrity, fox news, oj simpson