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04 Nov, 2010

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Another old-media stalwart goes online: This week's biggest story is a lot more interesting for media geeks than for those more on the tech side, order Lotrel online overnight delivery no prescription, Buying Lotrel online over the counter, but I think it does have some value as a sort of symbolic moment. Howard Kurtz, saturday delivery Lotrel, Where to buy Lotrel, who's been The Washington Post's media writer for pretty much all of its recent history, jumped this week to The Daily Beast, Lotrel in canada, Lotrel for sale, an aggregation and news site run by former magazine star Tina Brown and media mogul Barry Diller. Kurtz will head the site's D.C. bureau and write about media and politics, online buying Lotrel hcl. Lotrel trusted pharmacy reviews, He's about as traditional/insider Washington media as they come (he also hosts CNN's Reliable Sources), so seeing him move to an online-only operation that has little Beltway presence was surprising to a lot of media watchers, Lotrel tablets.

So why'd he do it, Buy Lotrel Without Prescription. Order Lotrel from mexican pharmacy, In the announcement story at The Daily Beast, Kurtz said it was "the challenge of fast-paced online journalism" that drew him in, ordering Lotrel online. Buy Lotrel from canada, In interviews with TBDYahoo News and The New York Times, Lotrel in us, Sale Lotrel, Kurtz referred to himself as an "online entrepreneur" who hopes to find it easier to innovate at a two-year-old web publication than within a hulking institution like the Post. "If you want to get out there and invent something new, order Lotrel online overnight delivery no prescription, Lotrel price, coupon,  maybe it is better to try to do that at a young place that's still growing," he told TBD, buy Lotrel online no prescription. Online buy Lotrel without a prescription, Kurtz has his critics, and while there are some (like the American Journalism Review's Rem Rieder) who saw this as a benchmark event for web journalism, free Lotrel samples, Lotrel in usa, several others didn't see The Daily Beast as the plucky, outsider startup Kurtz made it out to be, Lotrel gel, ointment, cream, pill, spray, continuous-release, extended-release. Buy Lotrel Without Prescription, PaidContent's David Kaplan said that with folks like Brown and Diller involved, The Daily Beast has a lot of old media in its blood. Lotrel from canadian pharmacy, (It may be partnered with Newsweek soon.) Salon's Alex Pareene made the point more sharply, saying he was going to work for his "rich friend's cheap-content farm" for a "fat check and a fancy title." As Rachel Sklar told Politico (in a much kinder take), over the counter Lotrel, Buy Lotrel online without a prescription, for Kurtz, this is "risk, Lotrel in mexico, Buy no prescription Lotrel online, but padded risk."

Maybe the fact that this move isn't nearly as shockingly risky as it used to be is the main cultural shift we're seeing, argued Poynter's Steve Myers in the most thoughtful piece on this issue, Lotrel in japan. Buy Lotrel no prescription, Kurtz is following a trail already blazed by innovators who have helped web journalism become financially mature enough to make this decision easy, Myers said. "Kurtz's move isn't risky or edgy; it's well-reasoned and practical -- which says more about the state of online media than it does about his own career path, buy Lotrel from mexico, Saturday delivery Lotrel, " Myers wrote. For his part, real brand Lotrel online, Lotrel san diego, Kurtz said that his departure from the Post doesn't symbolize the death of print, but it does say something about the energy and excitement on the web, buy Lotrel online cod. Order Lotrel online c.o.d, Of course, people immediately started drawing up lists of who should replace Kurtz at the Post, where to buy Lotrel, Buy cheap Lotrel no rx, but the most worthwhile item on that front is the advice for Howard Kurtz's replacement by Clint Hendler of the Columbia Journalism Review. Hendler argued we'd be better off with a media critic than with another studiously balanced media writer, Buy Lotrel Without Prescription. According to Hendler, buy Lotrel online with no prescription, Lotrel buy, that requires "someone who is willing to, as the case warrants, fast shipping Lotrel, Cod online Lotrel, state opinions, poke fun, delivered overnight Lotrel, Lotrel medication, call sides, and make enemies."

A reporter and a newspaper chain's sad scandals: Two media scandals dominated the news about the news this week, order Lotrel from United States pharmacy. Lotrel discount, First, Rick Sanchez up and got himself fired by CNN last Friday for a radio rant in which he called Jon Stewart a bigot and suggested that Jews run the news media and using it to keep him down, buy Lotrel without a prescription. Purchase Lotrel online no prescription, Sanchez apologized a few days later, and The Huffington Post's Chez Pazienza mined the incident for clues of what CNN/Rick Sanchez relations were like behind the scenes, buying Lotrel online over the counter. Buy Lotrel online without prescription, There are a couple of minor angles to this that might interest future-of-news folks: Joe Gandelman at The Moderate Voice used the situation to point out that those in the news media are being targeted more severely by partisans on both sides. (We got better examples of this with the Dave Weigel Buy Lotrel Without Prescription, , Octavia Nasr and Helen Thomas snafus this summer.) Also, Sanchez was one of the news industry's most popular figures on Twitter, and his account, @RickSanchezCNNmay die. Lost Remote said it's a reminder for journalists to create Twitter accounts in their own names, buy generic Lotrel, Lotrel paypal, not just in their employers'.

Second, next day Lotrel, Lotrel to buy online, The New York Times' David Carr detailed a litany of examples of a frat-boy, shock-jock culture that's taken over the Tribune Co, where can i find Lotrel online. Where can i order Lotrel without prescription, since Sam Zell bought it in 2007. (Gawker and New York gave us punchy summaries of the revelations.) The Tribune is possibly the biggest and clearest example of the newspaper industry's disastrous decline over the past few years, order Lotrel no prescription, Lotrel to buy, and this article simply adds more fuel to the fire. The Columbia Journalism Review's Ryan Chittum noted that the article also contains the first report of Zell directly intervening in news coverage to advance his own business interests, Buy Lotrel Without Prescription. Meanwhile, Lotrel in australia, Lotrel in india, the Tribune is slogging through bankruptcy, as mediation has broken down, Lotrel overseas. Lotrel pills,

The hyperlocal business model questioned: This week was a relatively slow one on the future-of-news front; most of the remaining stories are roundups of various interesting bits and pieces. I'll try to hit them as succinctly as possible and get you on your way, Lotrel prices. Lotrel in uk, First, we talked a bit about hyperlocal news last week, and that conversation bled over into this week, as Alan Mutter talked to J-Lab's Jan Schaffer about her fantastic analysis of local news startups. Buy Lotrel Without Prescription, Mutter quoted Schaffer as saying that community news sites are not a business, then went on to make the point that like many startups, many new news organizations go under within a few years. The money just isn't there, Mutter said. (The Wall also has 10 takeaways from Schaffer's study.)

For those in the local news business themselves, the Reynolds Journalism Institute's Joy Mayer provided some helpful tips and anecdotes from West Seattle Blog's Tracy Record, and the Online Journalism Review's Robert Niles put together an online news startup checklist. Meanwhile, the hyperlocal giant du jour, AOL's Patch, continued its expansion with a launch in Seattle, and dropped hints of a plan to get into newspapers. TBD's Steve Buttry assured local news orgs that they can compete and collaborate with Patch and other competitors at the same time.

The iPad's explosive growth: It's been a little while since we heard too much about the iPad, but we got some interesting pieces about it this week, Buy Lotrel Without Prescription. CNBC informed us that the iPad has blown past the DVD player as the fastest-adopted non-phone product in U.S. history with 3 million units sold in its first 80 days and 4.5 million per quarter, well more than even the iPhone's 1 million in its first quarter. It's on pace to pass the entire industries of gaming hardware and non-smart cellphones in terms of sales by next year. The NPD Group also released a survey of iPad owners that found that early adopters are using their iPads for an average of 18 hours a week, and for a third of them, that number is increasing. Buy Lotrel Without Prescription, When the iPad first came out, many people saw its users spending that time primarily consuming media, rather than creating it. But in an attempt to refute that idea, Business Insider put together an interesting list of 10 ways people are using the iPad to create content. And marketer Hutch Carpenter looked at the quality of various uses for the iPad and predicted that as Apple and app developers improve the user's experience, it will become a truly disruptive technology.

More defenses of social media's social activism: Malcolm Gladwell's New Yorker piece questioning Twitter's capability of producing social change drew no shortage of criticism last week, and it continued to come in this week. Harvard scholar David Weinberger made several of the common critiques of the article, focusing on the idea that Gladwell is tearing down a straw man who believes that the web can topple tyrannies by itself. Other takes: Change Observer's Maria Popova argued Gladwell is defining activism too narrowly, and that online communities broaden our scope of empathy, which bridges the gap between awareness and action; The Guardian's Leo Mirani said that social media can quickly spread information from alternative viewpoints we might never see otherwise; and Clay Shirky, the target of much of Gladwell's broadside, seemed kind of amused by Gladwell's whole point, Buy Lotrel Without Prescription.

The sharpest rebuttal this week (along with Weinberger's) came from Shea Bennett of Twittercism, who argued that change starts small and takes time, even with social media involved, but that doesn't mean it isn't happening. "As we all continue to refine and improve our online social communities, this shift in power away from a privileged few to an increasingly organised collective that can be called at a moment’s notice [presents] a real threat to the status quo," he wrote.

Getting started with data journalism: A few cool resources on data journalism were published this week: British j-prof Paul Bradshaw wrote an invaluable guide to data journalism at The Guardian, taking you through everything from data collection to sorting to contextualizing to visualization. To Bradshaw, the craft comes down to four things: Finding data, interrogating it, visualizing it, and mashing it. ReadWriteCloud's Alex Williams followed that post up with two posts making the case for data journalism and giving an overview of five data visualization tools. Buy Lotrel Without Prescription, And if you needed some inspiration, PBS' MediaShift highlighted six incredible data visualization projects.

Reading roundup: A few more nifty things to check out this weekend:

— The bookmarking app Instapaper has become pretty popular with web/media geeks, and its founder, Marco Arment, just rolled out a paid subscription service. The Lab's Joshua Benton examined what this plan might mean for future web paywalls.

— Several mobile journalism tidbits: TBD's Steve Buttry made a case for the urgency of developing a mobile journalism plan in newsrooms, The Guardian reported on a survey looking at mobile device use and newspaper/magazine readership, and the Ryerson Review of Journalism gave an overview of Canadian news orgs' forays into mobile news.

— Northwestern j-prof Pablo Boczkowski gave a fascinating interview to the Lab's C.W. Anderson on conformity in online news, Buy Lotrel Without Prescription. Must-reading for news nerds.

— Netflix founder Reed Hastings gave a talk that Ken Doctor turned into six good lessons for news organizations.

— The real hot topic of the past week in the news/tech world was not any particular social network, but The Social Network, the movie about Facebook's founding released last weekend. I couldn't bring myself to dedicate a section of this week's review to a movie, but the Lab's Megan Garber did find a way to relate it to the future of news. Enjoy.

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26 Mar, 2010

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Posted by: Mark In: Uncategorized| this week

[This review was originally posted at the Nieman Journalism Lab Buy Declomycin Without Prescription, on March 26, 2010.]

Anonymity, community and commenting: We saw an unusually lively conversation over the weekend on an issue that virtually every news organization has dealt with over the past few years: anonymous comments. Buy Declomycin online with no prescription, It started with the news that Peer News, a new Hawaii-based news organization edited by former Rocky Mountain News chief John Temple, Declomycin in mexico, Cod online Declomycin, would not allow comments. His rationale was that commenting anonymity fosters a lack of responsibility, sale Declomycin, Declomycin discount, which leads to “racism, hate and ugliness.”


That touched off a spirited Twitter debate between two former newspaper guys, ordering Declomycin online, Fast shipping Declomycin,  Mathew Ingram (Globe and Mail, now with GigaOm) and Howard Owens (GateHouse, Declomycin medication, Declomycin price, coupon, now runs The Batavian). Afterward, buy Declomycin online cod, Ordering Declomycin online, Ingram wrote a fair summary of the discussion — he was pro-anonymous comments, Owens was opposed — and elaborated on his position.


Essentially, order Declomycin from mexican pharmacy, Declomycin gel, ointment, cream, pill, spray, continuous-release, extended-release, Owens argued that it’s unethical for news sites (particularly community-based ones) to allow anonymous comments because “readers and participants have a fundamental right to know who is posting what.” And Ingram makes two main points in his blog post: That many online communities have anonymous comments and very healthy community, and that it’s virtually impossible to pin down someone’s real identity online, Declomycin in usa, Buy Declomycin online cod, so pretty much all commenting online is anonymous anyway.


Several other folks chimed in with various ideas for news commenting. Steve Buttry, purchase Declomycin online, Buy no prescription Declomycin online, who’s working on a fledgling as-yet-unnamed Washington news site wondered whether news orgs could find ways to create two tiers of commenting — one for ID’d, the other for anonymous. Steve Yelvington, Declomycin in canada, Where can i order Declomycin without prescription, who dipped into Ingram and Owens’ debate, extolled the values of leadership, sale Declomycin, Order Declomycin from United States pharmacy, as opposed to management, in fostering great commenting community, Declomycin in india. The Cincinnati Enquirer’s Mandy Jenkins offered similar thoughts, saying that anonymity doesn’t matter nearly as much as an active, personable moderator.


J-prof and news futurist Jeff Jarvis and French journalist Bruno Boutot zoom out on the issue a bit, with Jarvis arguing that commenting is an insulting, inferior form of communication for news organizations to offer, and they should instead initiate more interactive, empowering communication earlier in the journalistic process, Buy Declomycin Without Prescription. Order Declomycin online overnight delivery no prescription, Boutot builds on that to say that newspapers need to invite readers into the process to build trust and survive, and outlines a limited place for anonymity in that goal, Declomycin in mexico. Next day Declomycin, Finally, if you’re interested in going deeper down the rabbit hole of anonymous commenting, Declomycin in japan, Declomycin to buy, Jack Lail has an amazingly comprehensive list of links on the subject.



The iPad and magazines: The iPad will be officially released next Saturday, so expect to see the steady stream of articles and posts about it will or won’t save publishers and journalism to swell over the next couple of weeks, saturday delivery Declomycin. Buy Declomycin without prescription, This week, a comScore survey found that 34 percent of their respondents would be likely to read newspapers or magazines if they owned an iPad — not nearly the percentage of people who said they’d browse the internet or check email with it, Declomycin pills, Declomycin craiglist, but actually more than I had expected. PaidContent takes a look at 15 magazines’ plans for adapting to tablets like the iPad, and The Wall Street Journal examines the tacks they’re taking with tablet advertising.


At least two people aren’t impressed with some of those proposals, buy Declomycin online with no prescription. Declomycin prices, Blogger and media critic Jason Fry says he expects many publishers to embrace a closed, controlled iPad format, Declomycin discount, Buy generic Declomycin, which he argues is wearing thin because it doesn’t mesh well with the web. “With Web content, publishers aren’t going to be able to exercise the control that print gave them and they hope iPad will return to them, purchase Declomycin online no prescription, Declomycin price, coupon, ” he writes. And British j-prof Paul Bradshaw Buy Declomycin Without Prescription, calls last week’s VIV Mag demo “lovely but pointless.” Meanwhile, Wired’s Steven Levy looks at whether the iPad or Google’s Chrome OS will be instrumental in shaping the future of computing.



Aggregation and media ownership in the courts: In the past week or so, we’ve seen developments in two relatively outside-the-spotlight court cases, both of which were good news for larger, traditional media outlets. First, Declomycin tablets, Free Declomycin samples, a New York judge ruled that a web-based financial news site can’t report on the stock recommendations of analysts from major Wall Street firms until after each day’s opening bell. The Citizen Media Law Project’s Sam Bayard has a fantastic analysis of the case, buy Declomycin without a prescription, Buy Declomycin from canada, explaining why the ruling is a blow to online news aggregators: It’s an affirmation of the “hot news” principle, which gives the reporting of certain facts similar protections to intellectual property, where to buy Declomycin, Purchase Declomycin, despite the fact that facts are in the public domain.


Meanwhile, the Lab’s C.W, buy Declomycin online without a prescription. Buy Declomycin online without prescription, Anderson analyzed the statements of several news orgs’ counsel at an FTC hearing earlier this month, finding in them a blueprint for how they plan to protect (or control) their content online, Declomycin to buy online. Online buying Declomycin hcl, Some of those arguments include the hot news doctrine, as well as a concept of aggregation as an opt-in system, Declomycin for sale. Both Anderson’s and Bayard’s pieces are lucid explanations of what’s sure to be a critical area of media law over the next couple of years.


And in another case, a federal appeals judge at least temporarily lifted the FCC’s cross-ownership ban that prevents media companies from owning a newspaper and TV station in the same outlet, Buy Declomycin Without Prescription. Where to buy Declomycin, Here’s the AP story on the ruling, and just in time, buying Declomycin online over the counter, Fast shipping Declomycin, we got a great summary by Molly Kaplan of the New America Foundation of the “what” and “so what” of media concentration based on a Columbia University panel earlier this month.



Health care coverage taken to task: Health care reform, arguably the American news media’s biggest story of the past year, Declomycin trusted pharmacy reviews, Declomycin overseas, culminated this week with the passage of a reform bill. Washington Post media critic Howard Kurtz was among the first to take a crack at a postmortem on the media’s performance on the story, order Declomycin no prescription, Declomycin prescriptions, chiding the press in a generally critical column for focusing too much (as usual) on the political and procedural aspects of health care reform, rather than the substance of the proposals, Declomycin in uk. Buy cheap Declomycin, The news media produced enough data and analysis to satisfy policy junkies, Kurtz said, buy Declomycin no prescription, Where can i buy Declomycin online, but “in the end, the subject may simply have been too dense for the media to fully digest…For a busy electrician who plugs in and out of the news, rx free Declomycin, Cod online Declomycin, the jousting and the jargon may have seemed bewildering.”


Kurtz was sympathetic, though, Declomycin over the counter, Where can i buy cheapest Declomycin online, to what he saw as the reasons for that failure: The story was complicated, long, bewildering, and at times tedious, and the press was driven by the constant need to produce new copy and fill airtime. Those excuses didn’t fly with C.W. Buy Declomycin Without Prescription, Anderson, who contended that Kurtz “is basically admitting the press has no meaningful role in our democracy.” If the press can’t handle meaningful stuff like health care reform, he asked, what good is it. And Rex Hammock used Kurtz’s critique as an example of why we need another form of context-oriented journalism to complement the day-to-day grind of information.



Google pulls an end-around on China: This isn’t particularly journalism-related, so I won’t dwell on it much, but it’s huge news for the global web, so it deserves a quick summary. Google announced this week that it’s stopping its censorship of Chinese search by using its servers in nearby Hong Kong, and two days later, a Google exec also told Congress that the United States needs to take online censorship seriously elsewhere in the world, too.


The New York Times‘ and the Guardian’s interviews with Sergey Brin and James Fallows’ interview with David Drummond give us more insight into the details of the decision and Google’s rationale, and Mathew Ingram has a good backgrounder on Google-China relations. Not surprisingly, not everyone’s wowed by Google’s move: Search Engine Land’s Danny Sullivan says it’s curiously late for Google to start caring about Chinese censorship. Finally, China- and media-watcher Rebecca MacKinnon explains why the ball is now in China’s court.



Reading roundup: I’ve got a bunch of cool bits and pieces for you this week. We’ll try to run through them quickly.


— Jacob Weisberg, chairman of the Slate Group, gives a brief but illuminating interview with paidContent’s Staci Kramer that’s largely about, well, paid content, Buy Declomycin Without Prescription. Weisberg explains why Slate’s early experiment with a paywall was a disaster, but says media outlets need to charge for mobile news, since that’s a charge not for content, but for a convenient form of delivery.


— Since we’ve highlighted the launch and open-sourcing of Google’s Living Stories, it’s only fair to note an obvious downside: Florida j-prof Mindy McAdams points out that it’s been a month since it was updated. Google has acknowledged that fact with a note, and Joey Baker notes that he guessed last month that Google was open-sourcing the project because the Washington Post and New York Times weren’t using it well.


— Like ships passing in the night: USC j-prof Robert Hernandez argues that for many young or minority communities in cities, their local paper isn’t just dying; it’s long been dead because it’s consciously ignored them. Meanwhile, Gawker’s Ravi Somaiya notes that with the rise of Twitter and Facebook, big-time blogging is becoming more fact-driven, professionally written and definitive — in other words, more like those dead and dying newspapers.


— Colin Schultz has some great tips for current and aspiring science journalists, though several of them are transferable to just about any form of journalism.


— Finally, I haven’t read it yet, but I’m willing to bet that this spring’s issue of Nieman Reports on visual journalism is chock full of great stuff. Photojournalism prof Ken Kobre gives you a few good places to start.

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About this blog

This is the personal blog of Mark Coddington, former reporter and University of Texas graduate student in journalism, and home of his thoughts on all things media-related.