Monthly Archives: April 2005

OhmyNews asks for global reporters

[Keyword: ]. Shame on me for linking to my own story on another website, but it’s good to hear that OhmyNews are now asking for global contributors to its international site, which since its launch last year seems to have been mainly written by ex-pat Koreans and European contacts of Korean writers.

It’s well worth signing up for this pioneering brand in online journalism, even if you’ll only get $20 for a top story, although it is worrying that that top rate hasn’t changed in the past year (during which time the company went into profit).

BBC gets interactive for the election

[Keyword: ]. The BBC has launched a raft of interactive tools as part of its election coverage, hosted by an animated Peter Snow. These include a darts game based on the swingometer, a desktop alert service, email alerts, an interactive swingometer (with a video of Peter Snow providing instructions), a quiz, a seat calculator, and a poll tracker.

Or, you could just forget the journalism and enjoy flinging mud at the candidates at Radio 1’s online game.

Online games journalism the place to be

[Keyword: ]. There’s an article on Gamecube bemoaning the lack of quality games journalism in print at the moment and heralding its online counterpart in comparison. Key quote:

“Videogames journalism is perhaps the most sterile, bland and boring area of writing today. Online journalism is its one saviour, where journalists can write about aspects of gaming culture that print magazines don’t yet touch.”

Sites for subs

[Keyword: ]. The April/May issue of the NUJ’s Journalist magazine contains a particularly useful column from Humphrey Evans on websites for subs (or, as he points out “in the USA it’s called copy editing. HTat’s the phrase to enter in the search engine”). These include:

  • www.theslot.com – includes a link to an accompanying blog, which includes informed comment on lazy writing.
  • www.copydesk.org – click on ‘Resources’ in the top corner for useful articles.
  • www.poynter.org – which I was familiar with but had never noticed had a dedicated search engine which “claims to trawl 221 journalism sites”
  • www.copyeditor.com – the description in Evans’s column makes it sound pretty esoteric, and as the link wouldn’t load, I’ll let you find out…
  • www.sfep.org.uk (Society for Editors and Proofreaders – sadly seems to restrict most of its content to members)
  • www.londonfreelance.org/uksubs – an email network for subs.

Great resource on online journalism

[Keyword: ]. Have just discovered this excellent resource for online journalism from Mindy McAdams of the University of Florida: it includes plenty of examples of OJ forms, plus resources and a helpful page on media types that stimulates some analytical thinking about what media you’re using.

It also looks like she’s publishing a book very soon on ‘Flash Journalism’ (see the supporting website). Good to see someone else plugging this area…

Distributed Journalism

[Keyword: ]. Some interesting thoughts from Dan Gillmor about what he calls ‘Distributed Journalism’, “where lots of people can work in parallel on small parts of the bigger question and collectively — and relatively quickly — bring to bear lots of individual knowledge and/or energy to the matter. Some open-source software projects work this way. The important thing is the parallel activity by large numbers of people, in service of something that would be difficult if not impossible for any one or small group of them to do alone, at least in a timely way.”

Guardian election blog (and it looks pretty good)

[Keyword: ]. Well worth bookmarking for the next month, the Guardian’s foray into the blogging world looks very good. Not least for its incorporation of a folksonomic zeitgeist (explained here) which draws on tags to show what the current talking points are.

At the time of writing these were sadly quite useless: Tony Blair, labour, Michael Howard and tories are the most used, followed by pope, conservatives, politics, and it’s only after those that you see some more useful terms: howardflight, postalvoting, asylumandimmigration… Click on the term to see reports tagged with the phrase.