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Journalism

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Ben Franklin's Pennsylvania Gazette (political and controversial) ... with violence and entertainment (irresponsible) Celebrity 'journalism', gossip ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Journalism


1
Journalism
  • Graham Choo
  • Wong RenhaoHans Yamin
  • Roshni Rawla

2
Journalism (Late 18th Century)
  • U.S. Constitutions First Amendment Freedom of
    speech
  • Personal journalism
  • Ben Franklins Pennsylvania Gazette (political
    and controversial)
  • Pamphleteers published their writings at great
    personal risk of death e.g. Thomas Paine

3
Journalism
  • For most of American history, newspapers
    dominated the production and dissemination of
    what people widely thought of as news
  • Yellow journalism by William Hearst to provoke
    public opinion in helping to spark the
    Spanish-American War, 1898
  • Muckrakers exposed a variety of outrages e.g.
    cruel conditions in workplaces

4
The Corporate Era (20th Century)
  • Economics of newspaper publishing favored big
    business ? local monopolies
  • Radio and television lured readers and
    advertisers away from the newspapers ?
    consolidation of newspaper industry ? Big Media

5
The Corporate Era
  • Positive aspect
  • More resources to improve on quality and
    investigative reporting e.g. The New York Times
    where there is voting control by families or
    small groups

6
The Corporate Era
  • Negative aspect (Profit centered)
  • To lure viewers with violence and entertainment
    (irresponsible) Celebrity journalism, gossip
  • Centered on violence being a major issue, even
    when crime rates were plummeting ? kept other
    serious issues off the air
  • No depth in news coverage ? a shallow citizenry
    can be turned into a dangerous mob more easily
    than an informed one

7
The Corporate Era
  • Cable technology bring more channel capacity and
    choice to the people
  • But is still a central point of control for the
    owner of the cables e.g. they decide which
    package of channels to offer
  • Could threaten information choice in the future

8
From Outside In
  • How changing media technology has been in favor
    of journalism
  • ARPANET ? Internet, which allowed people to
    connect with one another, acquiring information
    for journalists through public message boards for
    example
  • Personal computer with word processor programs to
    aid journalists

9
Ransom-Note Media
  • Desktop publishing had the clearest potential for
    journalism
  • Entry level moved down to small groups and even
    individuals ? personal journalism
  • Problem of wide usage of too many fonts
    (mimicking a ransom note)

10
Out Loud and Outrageous
  • Modern talk radio provide entertainment and
    commentary, and the participation of the audience
  • Predated and anticipated the weblog phenomenon,
    where people in the audience make the news

11
The Web Era Emergent
  • Hypertext technology ? to publish documents as
    web pages ? to write, not just read from the web
  • Now we have a medium that has worldwide
    distribution and can be anything one-to-one,
    one-to-many, many-to-many
  • Information technology would lead among many
    other things, to mass customization,
    disintermediation (elimination of middlemen), and
    media convergence
  • Markets are conversations journalism is also a
    conversation

12
Writing the Web
  • Technology
  • Everyday people given the tools they need to join
    this emerging conversation
  • Cultural
  • Putting the tools of creation into millions of
    hands could lead to an unprecedented community
  • Blog format where most recent material is at the
    top

13
Open Sourcing the News
  • Linux created to bypass the limits of software
    code
  • More about freedom than cost
  • Where project leaders contribute bits and pieces
    of what becomes a whole package
  • Safer to use because people can find and fill the
    security holes

14
Open Sourcing the News
  • Open source journalism where bloggers and
    operators of independent news sites scan for and
    sort news for people
  • Where we can correct our mistakes and add new
    facts and context
  • We can do journalism together

15
Terror Turns Journalisms Corner
  • September 11, 2001 terror attacks, was the key
    building blocks of emergent, grassroots
    journalism and collaboration with Big Media
  • New York city bloggers posted personal views of
    what theyd seen, with photographs, providing
    more information and context to what the major
    media was providing
  • Tamim Ansary, an Agfhan-American writer shot to
    recognition when his email intended for friends,
    got circulated and broadcasted by the Big Media
    to mass audiences

16
How Technology is Changing the Media
17
How Technology is Changing the Media
  • Newspapers
  • Attempting the goal of neutrality
  • An impersonal point of view and rhetoric
  • Standard style of reporting
  • Voiceless
  • Dead language

18
How Technology is Changing the Media
  • Blogs and the Internet in general
  • So much more life
  • People are looking for a human soul and voice
    behind the news
  • Hence the flourishing of weblogs

19
How Technology is Changing the Media
  • Traditional Journalism
  • Expensive
  • Requires people to know what they are talking
    about
  • Requires them to go out and try to get the truth

20
How Technology is Changing the Media
  • New-world Journalism
  • Publication is the middle, not the end of the
    story
  • People discuss it
  • Plug holes (citizen) journalists have no way of
    doing
  • Opinions, corrections, etc.
  • Audiences select what to discuss/correct

21
How Technology is Changing the Media
  • Moving from the culture that news belongs to news
    organizations
  • To a culture that news belongs to us at
    ground-level
  • We the Media

22
How Technology is Changing the Media
  • Koreas OhmyNews
  • 40 000 citizen journalists
  • Small team of professional journalists
  • No print edition weekly print edition
  • Citizen journalists send stories in, professional
    team edits
  • Calling for global reports to go international

23
How Technology is Changing the Media
  • Koreas OhmyNews
  • An alternative to retrograde, conservative
    natural newspapers
  • A gift economy
  • Korea is a small, homogeneous, same-language
    country
  • US? Singapore?
  • Korean broadband

24
How Technology is Changing the Media
  • To what extent has blogs reached a peak?
  • Info garbage ratio
  • Blogging as a tool
  • used in different ways
  • Addressing Niche Communities
  • Mugglenet.com

25
How Technology is Changing the Media
  • Astroturfing
  • Will always be there
  • Sometimes will be caught, mostly not
  • Humans are fooled
  • Perception of sincerity
  • Achilles Heel of blogging

26
Citizen Journalism
27
The Past
  • Industrial age model Manufacturing news.
  • Still works to some degree, but less effective.
  • Newsmakers need to understand the swirling
    eddies of news are not tiny pools on the
    shoreline.

28
Citizen Journalism
  • Outsiders of all kinds can probe more deeply
    into newsmakers businesses and affairs.
  • They can disseminate what they learn more widely
    and quickly.
  • The current technology makes it even easier to
    gain support from like-minded people.
  • In this current age, information can be easily
    accessed and made almost instantly available to
    anyone who has a connection.

29
Citizen Journalism
  • SARS epidemic despite Guangdong governors
    effort to hide the outbreak by forbidding
    announcements on TV as well as radio, news still
    got leaked out via word-of-mouth and SMS.

30
Citizen Journalism
  • The emergence of moblogging
  • Almost everyone owns video-enabled phones and it
    is really easy to make news
  • The mass is now the paparazzi
  • CNN report case a 15-year-old snapped a picture
    of a would-be abductor, leading to the arrest of
    the suspect.
  • We have since become a society of voyeurs and
    exhibitionists.
  • Powerful? Its actually pretty scary.

31
Citizen Journalism
  • 9/11 case Individuals with video cameras
    captured parts of the story, and their works
    ended up on network TV as well.
  • The big networks stopped showing most graphic
    videos fairly quickly, but those pictures are
    still on the Net for anyone who wants to see
    them.
  • What if everyone in that very plane actually had
    camera phones and was trying to send images and
    audios from the epicenter of the terrorists
    airborne arsenal? Hm

32
Citizen Journalism
  • Truth Squad people expose bogus news and show
    the true scenes
  • Contents can actually be crucial.
  • e.g. video account of a crime scene which can be
    used as evidence.
  • The accumulation of data is also a powerful
    research tool for anyone who wants to drill
    deeper into an issue

33
Citizen Journalism
  • McSpotlight McDonalds sued two activists in
    London, claiming that they had been libeled by
    their pamphlets
  • These activists counter-sued McDonalds and
    created the McSpotlight website, which provides a
    deconstruction of McDonalds marketing materials.
  • Although McDonalds officially won the trial,
    they ended up suffering huge damages, and the
    McSpotlight website was not pulled down even
    after the trial was over.
  • Instead, the website developed further to look
    into other MNCs behaviors.

34
TROLLS, SPIN, AND BOUNDARIES OF TRUST
35
WAYS TO MISLEAD
36
CUT AND PASTE PROBLEM
  • Cutting removes relevant information
  • May lead to distortion of original meaning
  • Considered harmful and malicious
  • Cause misunderstandings

37
FAKE IMAGES PROBLEM
  • Leads to manipulation of public
  • Naming images are its proof of authenticity
  • Use of image altering tools like Photoshop and
    Cropping
  • Increased use of doctored video
  • Use of electronically inserted backdrops leading
    to trickery

38
FAKE IMAGES PROBLEM
39
ANONYMITY
  • Used to protect oneself from people around
  • Example Person with AIDS, unpopular person,
    corporate and government whistle blowers
  • Has hazards and credibility issues
  • Example Give trashy reviews, unable to
    counteract to enemies reviews
  • Adoption of pseudonym as an alternative
  • Implement use of digital signature

40
TROLL
  • A troll is deliberately crafted to provoke
    others with intention of wasting their time and
    energy.
  • Time thief
  • Isnt necessarily insulting

41
SPIN
  • Putting events or other facts, especially those
    of political or legal significance, into contexts
    favoring oneself or ones client or cause, at
    least in comparison to opponents.
  • Insidious routes to public
  • Google bombing

42
CITIZEN JOURNALISM
  • Fast checking
  • Open source projects
  • WordPirates

43
CONCLUSION
44
Conclusion
  • The Corporate Era
  • The advent and increasing popularity of radio and
    television
  • Positive and negative aspects
  • Cable technology leads to increased choices

  • Web Era Emergent
  • Hypertext technology
  • Changes in information technology

45
Conclusion
  • How technology is changing media
  • Newspapers
  • Blogs
  • Traditional journalism
  • New world journalism

46
Conclusion
  • Citizen journalism
  • Rise of citizen journalism
  • Emergence of moblogging
  • Truth squad

47
Conclusion
  • Ways to mislead
  • cut paste problem
  • fake images problem
  • anonymity

48
QUESTIONS?
49
THANK YOU!
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