When people ask how they can report the news within Twitter’s character limits, show them this. That is all.
Category Archives: online journalism
How to hoax the international sports media with nothing more than a red circle

Who is this man? It’s not Manuel Neuer. And yes, that caption is worth a separate post all of its own.
After just seven minutes of the match with Arsenal, Bayern Munich’s Manuel Neuer was already a hero: he had just saved a penalty from Mesut Ozil.
But Reddit user Vikistormborn was curious about what the commentator described as their “long” history, and started searching for details on Ozil’s childhood. And after finding this image on a Telegraph story, he or she decided to have a little fun…
“I simply circled the other biggest looking guy in the picture and tweeted that it was Neuer,” he writes. Continue reading
FAQ: Big data and journalism
The latest in the series of Frequently Asked Questions comes from a UK student, who has questions about big data.
How can data journalists make sense of such quantities of data and filter out what’s meaningful?
In the same way they always have. Journalists’ role has always been to make choices about which information to prioritise, what extra information they need, and what information to include in the story they communicate. Continue reading
FAQ: Hyperlocal sustainability
The latest in the series of Frequently Asked Questions comes from a UK student, who has questions about hyperlocal blogging.
In the long term, how sustainable is a hyperlocal site economically?
It depends on the business model, the wider market, and the individuals involved in the business. Continue reading
Training: scraping in the Netherlands
I’m delivering a course in scraping in Utrecht in the Netherlands on April 2. The booking page with more details about location etc is here – a broad breakdown below:
- Scraping for journalism: ideas and examples
- Scraping basics: finding structure in HTML and URLs; what’s possible with programming
- Simple scraping jobs: how to write a basic scraper in 5 minutes
- Scraping tools: Outwit Hub and Import.io
- How to scrape dozens of public webpages
- Scraping databases with empty searches
- How to understand scrapers on Scraperwiki: Scraping PDFs, lists of URLs, and databases with specific searches
FAQ: What does blogging add to journalism?
Its been a while since I posted a post answering Frequently Asked Questions. This one comes from a student in Holland, whose thesis revolves around the idea that ‘Blogging adds little to journalism‘
What’s the difference between blogging and traditional journalism?
I’ve answered this and similar questions in a previous FAQ on journalism vs blogging.
What are the pros and cons of blogging compared to other forms of journalism?
That post and other older FAQs probably give some further answers, but a short answer is: blogging provides an extra space to invite people into your journalism and provide opportunities for them to contribute additional information, suggested avenues of inquiry, etc.
It helps build the relationship between journalist and source in a way that standard formats don’t always provide. Continue reading
A review of Help Me Investigate in 2013 – and learning from it in 2014
Over on the Help Me Investigate Blog there’s a review of the project’s activities over the past year across its four sites: Health, Olympics, Education and Welfare.
Four site editors landed jobs in the media during the year, which was particularly nice to see, but also meant we lost a certain amount of continuity. Learning from that, this year I’ll be focusing the project’s efforts particularly on welfare issues such as child poverty, housing, food poverty, and the one year anniversary of the bedroom tax.
If you want to get involved, please contact carol@helpmeinvestigate.com or tweet us for a follow on Twitter @carolmiers and @paulbradshaw.
Lyra McKee: why more journalists are going direct to readers
Lyra McKee* is an investigative journalist in Northern Ireland. In this post, originally published on The Muckraker, she explains why she feels journalists are turning away from traditional outlets in favour of building their own brands while exploring crowdfunding and micropublishing.
When I talk to older journalists (older being over the age of 30), they ask me the same question: who do you write for?
It’s an awkward question. If it was 2009, I’d tell them I’d been published in (or had pieces broadcast on) the Belfast Telegraph, Private Eye, BBC, Sky News – a dozen or so news outlets that took my work back then.
In 2013 the answer is: none.
I’m part of a generation of “digital native” journalists who sell their work directly to readers, bypassing traditional news outlets like newspapers and broadcasters. Increasingly, reporters are using services like Beacon, Kickstarter and Woopie to raise funds directly from their readers and publish their work.
Why are they doing this? Continue reading
Famous Twitter users: who gets the most click-throughs – and why?
In the third and final post of this series Patrick Scott had a look at the click-through rate (CTR) of some famous individual Twitter users and found that those who do best tend to be political.
In the first post of this series we saw that regional newspapers that tend to do well on Twitter follow a larger proportion of people relative to the number of people following them.
Conversely, in the second post of the series we saw that this ratio of followers to followed is less significant for magazines. The successful magazine accounts tended to be more personable than personal and gave their followers a clear engagement pathway to go down.
In this post we will see that, like the regional newspapers, famous individuals with a higher CTR tend to have a better followers to followed ratio, although there are a couple of notable exceptions to this. Continue reading
The regional press on Twitter: interview with Johnston Press’s Mark Woodward
In a previous post, we saw that some regional newspapers do a lot better than others in terms of their Twitter click-through rate. Johnston Press titles, The Northampton Chronicle and Echo, The Scotsman and The Lancashire Evening Post tended to perform the best out of the 10 newspapers that we looked at in this regard.
The Online Journalism Blog talked to Mark Woodward, head of websites at Johnston Press, about the findings and about how Johnston Press sees Twitter as a whole.
Image: Johnston Press
How Johnston Press adapted to Twitter
The need to adapt to the evolving digital landscape is very important for regional newspapers as they attempt to reduce the well documented decline in readership.
A large part of this adaptation is concerned with the growth of social media and the ways that this can be used to drive traffic to a news site.
Out of all the papers analysed in the original post, the Johnston Press titles seemed to be doing this best.





