The Journalism

Art meets journalism | Stage Mom

May 20th, 2012

Student artwork from Desert View Learning Center in Paradise Valley

Journalists from around the state gathered Saturday night at a funky little joint called The Duce to recognize the “best journalism in Arizona” during 2011. A decade ago, journalists gathered at the Heard Museum. Journalists get around, and so does the Arizona Press Club Awards Party.

Several journalists were recognized for coverage of the arts — some in the “metro” (larger circulation) category and others in the “non-metro” (smaller circulation) category.

DVLC student artwork

Congratulations to Dr. Donald J. Behnke of Green Valley News and Sun for taking first place in non-metro arts criticism. Also to Cindy Yuth of Najavo Times for earning first place in arts reporting. Navajo Times went home with several awards, and top billing on my revised “good stuff to read” list.

First place for metro arts criticism went to Margaret Regan with Tucson Weekly, while first place awards for metro arts reporting went to Ed Masley of The Arizona Republic and the staff of Phoenix New Times for “Chow Bella.” I’m already reading that last baby.

Several Raising Arizona Kids journalists were honored as well — but I leave sharing that happy news to founder, publisher and editor Karen Barr. I’ve already got next year’s ceremony on the brain, and visions of rotating back to an arts-related venue.

I’ve been to a couple of amazing Childsplay shindigs at Tempe Center for the Arts, where I also enjoyed last year’s AriZoni Awards ceremony. And it’s fun to imagine all those Arizona journalists making their way through the “noodle forest” at the Children’s Museum of Phoenix.

Thanks to all the volunteers who helped with this year’s awards, including Jill Jorden Spitz (contest chair) and Becky Pallack (awards reception chair). Both work for Arizona Daily Star and serve on the Arizona Press Club board of directors.

But most of all, thanks to everyone who reads and appreciates the work.

– Lynn

Note: Click here for a full list of Arizona Press Club award winners.

Coming up: Arts criticism meets youth theater, Lullabies on Broadway, Playwright profiles

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OnEurope Live!!: Photo Journalism!

May 20th, 2012
It appears “That Monty” and Rosé have been fraternising with “other blogs” – Do they not know who we are?!?!?

And Red Carpet sirs??

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OnEurope Live!!: Photo Journalism!

May 20th, 2012
It appears “That Monty” and Rosé have been fraternising with “other blogs” – Do they not know who we are?!?!?

And Red Carpet sirs??

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Knight Science Journalism Tracker » Blog Archive » Copy-cat ink …

May 17th, 2012

Seen one humongous Mesozoic reptile fossil, seen ‘em all, eh dinosaur fan? A few reporters and editors fell into a trap inadvertently laid by a Bristol University press release (see Grist below) with a headline that says “Ancient sea reptile with gammy jaw suggests dinosaurs got arthritis too.” You all out there who remember school science classes on the vanished age of reptiles, or who have covered these things or just paid attention, know that not all gigantic creatures of dinosaur days were dinosaurs. Major exceptions were the ichthyosaurs, mosasaurs,  pliosaurs and so forth that swam in the sea, and the flying pterosaurs including the iconic pterodactyls that roamed the sky.

The news is simple and an easy choice for news editors looking for a quick, science filler to round out the page or website. A grad student for her thesis looked into the mangy-looking Jurassic mandible on one of the university’s stored specimens. It looked like a degenerative condition much like arthritis. This creature’s head is about six feet long. The teeth look cruel. But it is not a dinosaur. It is a pliosaur, a marine reptile more than 25 feet long. It may have eaten an occasional small dinosaur that happened into its lagoon. The paper is, it says here, in the current issue of the journal Palaentology, although I cannot find it.

A few outlets repeated the press release by implying in their headlines that this is a dinosaur. Some declared it a dinosaur also in their stories’ texts. Some, thank goodness, got it right. Some even appear to have exerted effort on this story beyond what it took to put the press release on their computer screen or desk and merely rewrite what had been handed them. The odd thing is, the headlines and other assertions of arthritic dinosaurs may be to some extent justified. Seems to me this is not the first evidence of arthritis from dinosaur times, including in dinosaurs. But don’t point at a pliosaur for proof.

Stories that say or imply this was a dinosaur:

Stories that don’t mix their ancient extinct reptile clans:

  • LiveScience – Charles Choi: Ancient ‘Loch Ness monster’ suffered from arthritis in jaw ; Choi’s a serious pro. Naturally, he called up one of the authors and took ownership of this story away from the press release. This story runs at several outlets.
  • Business Standard/Press Trust of India: Pliosaurs had arthritis: The lede has this inserted by somebody who pays attention; “… not dinosaurs but ancient sea reptiles that lived 150 million years ago..” ;
  • ScienceNOW – Erin Loury: Jurassic Arthritis Was a Jawbreaker; A shorty, but not a whisper about dinosaurs. Of course if this outlet (AAAS Science Mag) screwed that one up there’d be painful conversation with the boss.

Grist for the Mill: U. Bristol Press Release ;

- Charlie Petit

 

 

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PR Journalism, Infographics, & More | Solo PR Pro | Successful …

May 17th, 2012

During the May 16 #solopr Twitter chat, independent PR pros discussed taking vacations, thoughts on PR journalism, creating infographics, & more.

In addition to the downloadable transcript in PDF, the following highlights some of the most popular tweets from the chat:

[View the story "#SoloPR Chat Highlights - 5/16/2012" on Storify]Be sure to check out the transcript in PDF for the full discussion. Note that the transcript is in reverse chronological order.

If you weren’t able to join us this week, weigh in on the chat questions below!

The #solopr chat – held each Wednesday from 1-2 p.m. Eastern – is a weekly ritual for some of the most savvy Solo PR Pros on Twitter. Anyone with a Twitter account is welcome to participate – see Join Us for the #solopr Chat on Twitter to find out how!

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Celebrating excellence in Somali journalism – Matt Baugh

May 14th, 2012

A week ago I posted a blog about world press day and the plight of journalism in Somalia – one of the dangerous countries in the world to be a journalist.

I want to pick up this theme – but also highlight one of the many and vital successes. This is of course, Jamal Osman, recently named journalist of the year at the One World media awards in London this week.

The awards recognise outstanding journalism on the developing world. Jamal was awarded the title for his portfolio of exceptional work on Somalia, including coverage of Somali athletes training for the London Olympics later this summer – a truly inspiring story of athletes, like Abdinasir Ibrahim, a 5,000 metre runner who competed at Beijing and hopes to compete in London, striving to achieve great things for themselves and their country.

Jamal’s work has also covered more distressing issues – including last year’s drought and the appalling conditions facing many refugees. His bravery brought the unfolding tragedy in southern Somalia to an audience of millions.

So as we honour those journalists killed in the line of duty in Somalia and strive for greater freedom of expression and protection of journalists in Somalia, it’s only right that we salute the outstanding work of Jamal Osman – One World Journalist of the Year.

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Meandering Mississippi: An early journalism iBook is all wet | The …

May 14th, 2012

Note: This review also ran on Download The Universe, the excellent science ebook online review that I’m working on along with folks like Carl Zimmer, David Dobbs, PLoS’s own Steve Silberman, Tom Levenson, Annalee Newitz, and many many others. If you’re not a regular DtU reader, here’s what you’re missing: In the past week alone, the site has featured David’s write-up of the Byliner original Farthest North, “a strange, richly told story” about America’s first Arctic hero, and Carl’s review of Leonardo da Vinci: Anatomy, which he christened as “the first great science ebook.”

Meandering Mississippi, by Mary Delach Leonard & Robert Koenig. Published by The St. Louis Beacon. iPad (requires iBooks 2). $.99 iTunes

A little after 10 pm on May 2, 2011, the Army Corps of Engineers detonated explosives along a two-mile stretch of the Bird’s Point levee, just below the confluence of the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers. The goal was to save the city of Cairo, Illinois, which was facing such severe flooding that all but 100 of Cairo’s 2,831 residents had already been evacuated. It was a dramatic event; pictures of the explosions, like the one below, have a vaguely apocalyptic feel.

Birds Point levee

Since the initial explosions took place at night, reporters sequestered a half-mile away weren’t able to see how fast the water from the swollen river was flowing. In all, officials estimated up to three trillion gallons of water — that’s 3,000,000,000,000 gallons — poured onto the Bird’s Point-New Madrid floodway, comprised of approximately 130,000 acres of farmland and 90 homes.

This is precisely the type of story that The St. Louis Beacon, an online-only news organization launched in 2008 by St. Louis Post-Dispatch ex-pats, describes as its raison d’etre, and a handful of Beacon reporters spents months covering the flood’s aftershocks. In February, the Beacon became one of the first news organizations to use Apple’s new publishing software, iBooks Author, to package its reporting into an ebook.

The greatest virtue of iBooks Author is that it makes putting together a book incredibly easy–but, as Meandering Mississippi illustrates, that’s not always a good thing. The book assembles eight Beacon pieces that were originally published over a two-month period, from May 6 to July 7, 2011. As far as I can tell, they were simply dumped into the iBooks template without any editing, condensing, or updated reporting. I’m one of those old-school romantics that believes that daily journalism really is, as the old saying goes, the first rough draft of history. In order to do its job, each day’s story needs to give the reader enough background to ensure that he won’t feel lost. That context, so important in news reports, becomes deadly when a bunch of pieces are strung together in a row.

Just as frustrating is the fact that errors that were present in the original Beacon stories are reproduced in Meandering Mississippi. Take this Beacon piece, where the floodway is described as ”having been established early 1930s.” “In the” is also missing from the ebook. In other places, new errors actual seem to have been introduced: That same story describes how the Corps regarded the activiation of the floodway “a success”; in Meandering Mississippi, that becomes “asuccess.” Even the editor’s letter that serves as a kind of introduction to this project feels half-baked. It misspells the compound-adjective “long-term”  and is signed “Margie” — no last name, no title, nothing. These are all minor points, to be sure, but they add to the overall impression that this was a slapdash effort. If the Beacon isn’t going to take its work seriously, why should we?

But maybe I’m focusing too much on, you know, the words. After all, in Nieman Journalism Lab piece about Meandering Mississippi, Brent Jones, the Beacon editor that created the iBook, said, “The text carries the basics and the meat of the story, but having all these extra elements” — which Nieman described as “ slideshows, audio, interactive graphics, and video interviews” –  ”to add to the book really make it stand out.” Would that that were true.  The one video clip that is included is eight, unedited minutes of a Corps press conference on the night of the detonation. At least that’s what I gathered after watching the whole thing: The clip’s headline is simply “Decision Made,” and there’s no caption or other information to go along with it. (I did find some impressive video of the actual detonation — but that was on the Post-Dispatch‘s site.)

There’s also a single audio recording, which is made up of several not-very-informative minutes of talking by the mayor of one of the affected towns; when I looked on the Beacon‘s site, it turns out that was originally a video clip.

The still photographs are, if anything, even more disappointing. As the picture at the beginning of this review shows, there was some striking imagery that was produced on the night the levee was breached. I found that shot, by an AP photographer named David Carson, on The Washington Post‘s site; in contrast, Meandering Mississippi includes a series of small shots that look like they could be anything from a fireworks display to the detonation of a bunch of surface-to-air missiles.

Birdspointblastsequence_512.100
Even more confounding is a series of seven images that are spread out over eight of Meandering Mississippi‘s 54 pages. Only the first one, reprinted below, has a caption; it explains that the images are taken from “a 1944 report to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers by Harold Fisk. The different colored bands represent the courses taken by the Mississippi over time.”

Fisk01

Got that? I didn’t think so. My efforts to figure out what I was actually looking at eventually brought me to a 2010 blog post by Radiolab‘s Robert Krulwich describing these very maps. It was only then that I learned that the white channel traces the path of the river during Fisk’s time. (Krulwich’s piece is well worth reading. He also pastes together all of Fisk’s charts end to end; the result is spectacular. It’s the type of thing I imagine would look great on an iPad.)

The story of the flooding across the Midwest last spring is one that is still evolving: As it turns out, the Corps rebuilding efforts are going better than expected, and the dire warnings of toxic crops and long-term devestation turned out to be overwrought. Hopefully one day, a great book about this saga will be written.  Unfortunately, this is not it.

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TEDxBG – Dimiter Kenarov – On Long-Form Journalism

May 8th, 2012

Journalist Dimiter Kenarov shares the story of long-form journalism from its earliest roots, his personal involvement and his vision of it as the future of popular literature. You can find Dimiter’s articles in Virginia Quarterly Review, The Atlantic, Esquire and other publications. In thespirit of ideas worth spreading, TEDx is a program of local, self-organized events that bring people together to share a TED-like experience. At a TEDx event, TEDTalks video and live speakers combine to spark deep discussion and connection in a small group. These local, self-organized events are branded TEDx, where x = independently organized TED event. The TED Conference provides general guidance for the TEDx program, but individual TEDx events are self-organized.* (*Subject to certain rules and regulations.)

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John Pilger: Real Journalism

May 5th, 2012

John Pilger : Real journalism Researched, Produced and Directed by Abir Alsayed A part of Asdekaa Al Arab series www.facebook.com

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Anderson Cooper Demonstrates Actual Journalism Skills. | Chicks …

May 5th, 2012




You pair this with the Hannity clip from earlier and it gets pretty interesting, really. Fox News is becoming the big boy in Cable News and CNN is languishing in third. I don’t anticipate, sadly, a rebirth of real journalism. After all, they’re all just looking for ratings.

I’m not saying this the first steps of CNN becoming a more moderate or even sporadically conservative network, but it sure would be a smart business move for them. MSNBC has cornered the market on crazy, so CNN has got to find some space for itself. It would be a wise move if they worked to find their way to the center and actually threw both sides a bone with a show or two each week night.

Again, I’m not saying CNN is gonna go conservative, or even objective, but I’m not NOT saying it either. This could be interesting.

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