Tag Archive for 'journalism'

Rachel Maddow on The Daily Show

Rachel Maddow is just about the smartest person working in the cable news business today. One of my favorite features of her show are her verbal jousts with Pat Buchanan – a man who’s politics I detest but I can’t deny his smarts and Rachel is very much up to the task of holding up the left side of any arguement.

I’d like to wish there were more on-air personalities with her brains but I’d also like to wish I could live off of the proceeds from the ads running on this site.

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Journalism goes pay for play?

The PAN Communications blog has a disturbing item this morning. The Boston Globe is offering its staff a new contract with compensation tied to the financial health of the paper. While at first blush that might not seem so bad an idea, I’ll let PAN describe the possible consequences:

What happens when formerly objective reporters feel obligated to cover only the companies that advertise with the Globe?  Will smaller, innovative but less deep-pocketed companies now be completely ignored?  How does PR compete for a reporter’s attention when the issues on the table are to get your client coverage vs. the reporter’s need to generate his or her salary?

Full story here. PAN’s comments here. Keep an eye on this one.

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Someone who ‘gets it’

Reporters say that these developments are forcing them to change how they do their jobs; some are asking themselves if they can justify how they are filtering information. “We’ve got to be more transparent about the news-gathering process,” said Craig Crawford, a columnist for Congressional Quarterly and author of “Attack the Messenger: How Politicians Turn You Against the Media.” “We’ve pretended to be like priests turning water to wine, like it’s a secret process. Those days are gone.”

I’ve always liked watching Crawford when he’s on MSNBC. So in his honor, a new category … “clue-full.”

Full story at the Times

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Germ theory, plague houses and your career

Cholera
Image via Wikipedia

We are in a position akin to that of early physicians who could see that people were getting sick but couldn’t do anything about it, because they didn’t understand the underlying causes. They knew of a few tricks that seemed to work. For example, nailing up plague houses tended to limit the spread of plague. But even the smart doctors tended to fall under the sway of pet theories that were wrong, such as the idea that diseases were caused by imbalanced humors or bad air. Once that happened, they ignored evidence that contradicted their theory. They became so invested in that theory that they treated any new ideas as threats. But from time to time you’d see someone like John Snow, who would point out, “Look, everyone who draws water from Well X is getting cholera.” Then he went and removed the pump handle from Well X and people stopped getting cholera. They still didn’t understand germ theory, but they were getting closer.

Neal Stephenson, author of The Baroque Cycle, interviewed in the current issue of Reason. I know it’s a reach but he could easily be talking about marketing and public relations agencies in the age of participatory journalism and transparency. Stumbling around, cutting open dogs and hoping to get all the stuff back in.

Link via boing boing

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