Sunday, October 18, 2009
Week 10 - Researching Feature Article
While talking with Steve he mentioned Janis Krums, who became possibly one of the most famous citizen journalists after he took the first photograph of a crash in the Hudson River in Florida, and then uploaded it to Twitter. Information and the famous picture can be viewed here:
http://www.businessinsider.com/2009/1/us-airways-crash-rescue-picture-citizen-jouralism-twitter-at-work
Moments after the picture was uploaded to the popular social networking site, major news organisations picked up the story and later used Janis Krums as an eye witness. This all happened in January of this year, and I think it may be one of the first times Twitter has been seen as useful in reporting news. I thought this was extremely interesting, and a bit of a breakthrough for citizen journalists so I emailed Janis Krums, not really expecting him to reply but thinking that it couldn't hurt. I was very happy and surprised when he did reply and offered to answer any questions that I had. I have sent these questions and I am awaiting a reply. I feel that having him as an interviwee would be great, as he will have some great annecdotes, and I can also use his picture of the plane crash as an image to go with my feature article, along with his twitter page.
I have also interviewed Stuart Roach, recently retired sports editor for the Newcastle Herald, who gave me some interesting insight on what it is like for an older professional journalist to compete with the growing technology and rise of citizen journalism.
So far my article is still in the beginning stages, and I have a lot more people to interview, but so far I am very happy with how it is going.
Friday, September 25, 2009
Moral minefields: legal and ethical dilemma
“...media companies face exorbitant costs, endless delays, and spurious claims of exemption...”
One of the most significant sections of Freedom of Information legislation to the workings of the Australian media, and the role of Freedom of information in those workings, is section 29- Charges. Part one of section 29 states that “under the regulations, an agency or Minister decides that an applicant is liable to pay a charge in respect of a request for access to a document”. Therefore the amount payable for the access to a document is decided directly by the agency or minister from whom access to a document is requested. This part of the legislation is problematic to the workings of the Australian media, as it becomes very easy for the minister or agency in question to make the expense of such a request so substantial that many requests of this nature are withdrawn and the applicants are hesitant to put in further applications in the future.
In the Australian Press Council’s 2003 annual address, delivered by John Hartigan, Chairman and Chief Executive of News Ltd, Hartigan quoted the cost of one Freedom of information request made by Mckinnon, which was initially $605,284.72. This fee was later negotiated down to $284, bringing into question whether the high cost was only quoted to deter further Freedom of Information applications. (Hartigan, J., Press Freedom Under Attack, (2003), http://www.presscouncil.org.au/pcsite/apcnews/feb04/address.html, accessed 14.09.08)
With all these ways for the government to make using FOI laws increasingly difficult, it remains to be seen whether they will be used in the future as sources for investigative journalism, especially considering the breaking news nature of today's media world, with the increasing use of new technology.
In terms of the importance in the media following laws when it comes to revealing the names of victims and perpretrators of crimes, here is a YouTube video showing the reporter making a crucial mistake of this nature.
Friday, September 18, 2009
In the Public Interest: Public v Private
The Stott Report
Today Thomas Stott gave a presentation on privacy in journalism, focusing on celebrities and their rights to privacy in the media. Stott began the presentation by stating how controversial the topic of privacy is in society, especially due to often conflicting and blurry definitions. He concludes that public interest is news and information which the public is interest in, using the definition of well known author Rhonda Breit as evidence. According to Breit “there is public interest in revealing private information because it aids the formation of public opinion.” Stott goes on to state that public interest is heightened when people in the public eye are behaving badly and that traditional news values have shifted, with a strong emphasis on entertainment and private information about celebrities. According to Breit “public interest is often used to justify intrusions into the personal lives of people, particularly public figures.” Stott goes on to give examples of this change in news values, by using the example of “guru” of celebrity news, Harvey Levin, being asked to speak to students at the elite Graduate School of Journalism at Berkeley University in the USA, rather than a more “serious” journalist. Levin was allegedly offended when asked if his site would be reporting on more “serious” news in the future, stating that “the world of celebrity has become news and people genuinely have an interest in them.” This brings the presentation to Stott’s main issue, of whether the public have the right to know about celebrities and their private lives just because they are in the public eye. According to Breit “If a person has attained a great deal of fame via the mass media, then that individual’s privacy boundary is thin.” Using a case study on the celebrity blogger Perez Hilton winning a lawsuit against public figure Samantha Ronson, with the result being that the issues surrounding the report was of the affecting the public, Stott agrees with Breit; when celebrities put themselves in the public eye, what they do becomes the public interest when it affects the public.
Friday, September 11, 2009
Truth & objectivity: post modern casualties or victims of PR piracy?
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
Online: a ‘new’ journalism, content and the rule of the search engine
Friday, August 28, 2009
Globalisation vs. Localisation
Friday, August 21, 2009
Who Will Pay for Journalism?
“Popular newspapers, the mass newspapers, are dying and will die. They have no future whatsoever."
This statement demenstrates the effects new technology is having on the media industry and journalists as a result.
This question of payment for journalism was also brought up at the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC) convention that suggested that a solution would be to stop journalism altogether:
"Here, I believe, is the ultimate ethical question: If the American public does not want to pay for journalism -- in other words, doesn't find value in what we as journalists do -- should we simply stop doing it?"
While I believe that the new technologies including free online news and time-shift technology is affecting revinue to the more traditional media forms, I don't think that the public has ever really paid for journalism in the first place, as advertisers have always picked up the majority of the costs while the public pay a small cover price, so maybe it is time to actually start asking them to pay for it. There is argument that the public will not pay for what they can get for free, even if what they pay for will be more professional, but the state of the current economy has to be taken into account, and perhaps when (if?) this improves then the public will be more willing to pay for news.
