January 24th, 2017
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August 4th, 2016
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Simply being journalists and bringing personal, lived experiences to each story is enough for black journalists to have an impact,

Sarah Glover, president of the National Association of Black Journalists

Black media has a plan to stay relevant as mainstream journalists encroach - Columbia Journalism Review

(Source: cjr.org)

April 29th, 2016
onaissues
Digital publishing is built on ad sales based on impressions, and impressions are a terrible currency for selling advertising on the internet.
April 26th, 2016
onaissues

 U.S. JSK Journalism Fellows named for 2016-17 | JSK

A stellar group! We’re thrilled to see that Stacy-Marie Ishmael, faculty from the ONA-Poynter Leadership Academy for Women in Digital Media, and Heather Bryant, frequent member of the ONA conference social team, have been named 2016-17 U.S. John S. Knight Journalism Fellows. 

(Source: jsk.stanford.edu)

March 18th, 2016
onaissues
[T]here is a way to cover Trump on TV: to provide context, something the source conceded is often lacking. “Don’t just cover it like pay-per-view, with people hoping to see blood. Cover it as a political phenomena … you have to give explanatory context,” the source said.
January 28th, 2016
onaissues

Reporter reveals ‘12 kinds of emails’ professor got after blocking media – Poynter

I remember watching coverage of the protests at the University of Missouri in November and seeing a YouTube video of an assistant professor grabbing at a journalist’s camera and calling for backup to block him from recording.

“Who wants to help me get this reporter out of here? I need some muscle over here!” Melissa Click said in the video, which went viral.

After watching the tense exchange, I thought to myself, “I bet she’s going to get some hate mail.” Turns out, I was partially right.

Steve Kolowich, a reporter at The Chronicle of Higher Education, filed a public records request for Click’s emails that day and the next and found that she received 12 kinds of messages. They ranged from support — both genuine and fake — to threats. Some wanted to educate her on the First Amendment. Others wanted her fired. This week, she was charged with third-degree assault.

(Source: poynter.org)

January 12th, 2016
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January 7th, 2016
onaissues
For all its reported struggles with growth, Twitter still has the rare privilege of being a destination—a platform that people check frequently and repeatedly, from which they find other things. People are linking to images on Twitter? Let’s incorporate images! People are watching YouTube videos from Facebook? Let’s host videos of our own. People are reading articles from the feed? Let’s… put articles in the feed! Platforms are markets; they research themselves. It’s a great setup for the platforms! And one that Twitter has embraced enthusiastically, gradually assembling a service out of features conceived and tested by users and (mostly now defunct) third parties. (Down to its logo. Down to its verbs!)
 
So the capability to post longer text posts that expand inside the feed seems especially notable because posts can be counted in characters, and Twitter is known for its character count. But a feed in which you can already tap “play” or open a grid of photos into a slideshow or open a link into an internal browser is a feed in which tapping a text preview to see more text will feel natural. It won’t take long, I imagine, for links to start to feel almost out of place—for Twitter to feel a bit more like Instagram, where users frequently write blog-length captions, and where the links and the web effectively don’t exist.

Better as a Tweet - The Awl

In his latest on the Content Wars, John Herrman explores how 10,000-character tweets might change the way readers and journalists relate to the platform.

(Source: The Awl)

January 5th, 2016
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