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This Week in Media

Home > This Week in Media
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Keith Woods
Poynter faculty and contributors share their observations about the media week that's ending and the one that's beginning.
This Week in Media: Podcasting, Plagiarism (Again) and More
ABOUT THIS COLUMN

On Thursdays, we ask Poynter faculty and staff for their impressions of the week's news. By Friday morning, their musings can be found here.

To add your own thoughts to the week in review, click the "Add/View Feedback" link at the bottom of a post.

To receive "This Week in Media" by e-mail, click here.
Our impressions of this week (April 24-28, 2006) in news coverage:
  • Keith Woods on the optimistic spirit raised by NAB, RTNDA and ASNE
  • Scott Libin reports from RTNDA@NAB, focusing on the podcasting trend
  • Chip Scanlan examines the latest ethical standards in book publishing
  • David Shedden on moments that made history and highlights of current media issues that will leave an impact



Keith Woods
The Fourth Estate Strikes Back
By Keith Woods
Dean of the Faculty

The industry conventions this week -- The Radio-Television News Directors Association and the National Association of Broadcasters in Las Vegas and the American Society of Newspaper Editors in Seattle -- offered journalists something that's been hard to find, even on the industry's home turf: optimism.

Rocked as the media has been of late by self-inflicted scandal, a fickle and hyper-critical audience, destabilizing technological shifts and the dire, near-daily predictions of mainstream journalism's demise, it's been invigorating to spend a week watching the industry rise from its knees.

When NAB's new president, David Rehr, took the podium on Monday morning, his bold rallying cry, urging broadcasters to "go on the offensive" seemed to catch the crowd by surprise. They applauded his five-point plan but it was his chutzpa that energized the audience. Two days later, outgoing ASNE president Rick Rodriguez, who made "Watchdog Journalism" the buzz phrase of his presidency, called for newspapers to "step forward to lead as never before."

Where recent conventions have been overrun with panels that picked at the sores of the year's misdeeds or explored ways of fending off the Internet juggernaut and wooing an audience back to appointment viewing and the morning paper, this year's offerings included sessions like ASNE's "Embracing the Web: Doing better journalism in the 21st century," and RTNDA's "Citizen Journalism: Embracing the New Power of Your Audience."

Book-ending the week were profiles in vital, courageous journalism emerging from coverage of New Orleans and the Mississippi Gulf Coast when Hurricane Katrina struck. RTNDA's convention opened with the stories of reporters, news directors, network and chain leaders, and a helicopter pilot who all recognized that everything from competition to the bottom line had to go out the window when public need met journalistic purpose. The National Association of Minority Media Executives recognized print and broadcast journalists for their courage in covering the carnage of war and nature. ASNE’s last panel would be about Katrina.

We've spent a great deal of time and energy in recent months and years bemoaning our shrinking circulation numbers and ratings shares, worrying about how the blogosphere is dissing the so-called legacy media and joining sometimes giddily in the indiscriminate bashing and degrading of journalism when things have gone wrong. So it was heartening this week to be somewhere where people spoke for a change about staring down the economic and technological challenges, embracing new modes of delivering news, and fighting to protect journalism's democratic birthright.



mug scott
Podcasting Perspective from RTNDA@NAB

By Scott Libin
Leadership & Management Faculty

If you think kids are doing the darnedest things with iPods these days, you should see what some of their college professors are doing. 

I moderated an educators' breakfast session on podcasting at this week's RTNDA@NAB convention. I began packing an iPod myself just within the last couple of months, prompted by the opportunity to lead this week's session. That made me not only the least knowledgeable person on the podium, but probably in the room. 

The panel was a rich mix of academics and professionals, offering insight on podcasting's potential, its limitations -- at least so far -- and the differences in the way newsrooms and classrooms are using the new medium. 

Here are a few highlights:

Professor Sasha Norkin of Boston University pointed out that, despite the iPod-inspired name, podcasting consumption occurs these days mostly at desktop and laptop computers, rather than with MP3 players. The ratio, Norkin said, stands about 80-20, computer to iPod. 

Marcus Riley, managing editor of nbc5.com at WMAQ-TV in Chicago, said his station was one of the first in the country to podcast on a regular basis, beginning a year ago. Riley said nbc5.com's podcast content is all original and designed to supplement WMAQ's on-air product, rather than to repurpose that product. (Conversely, some stations represented in the room, including KCRW-FM in Santa Monica, California, podcast only broadcast material.)

Riley said he first heard about podcasting in a report on National Public Radio

That's encouraging, said Jay Brodsky, director of digital media at NPR Online, because NPR didn't begin podcasting for another six months after airing that report. Brodsky said in the six months since then, listeners have downloaded 25-million podcasts. 

Larry Gillick, assistant professor at American University in Washington, D.C., is responsible for at least a few of those 25 million. He told the room how much he enjoyed the public radio programs "On the Media" and "The Business," and how he heard each of them only a couple of times a year when he happened to be in his car at the time they were on the air. 

"As much as I enjoy the programs," Gillick said, "I am not going to schedule my life around them."  However, since the two shows became available as podcasts, he says he hasn't missed a week. 

Gillick and Al Stavitsky, professor and associate dean at the University of Oregon, use podcasting to complement their classroom lectures and as an outlet for their students' work. Stavitsky said he has had strong student response to his weekly "Alpod" -- a podcast he produces himself and assigns as homework for his classes. 

Shortly after assigning his first "Alpod," Stavitsky says a student who found the production values lacking provided him with an original music mix for the open of each week's podcast, with a music bed to run under the professor's verbal content. 

Stavitsky buries bonus information in each week's "Alpod," such as questions he will include on the class's next test. 



mug Chip
In Whose Words?

By Chip Scanlan
Senior Writing Faculty 

Yet another ethical implosion from the world of book publishing surfaced this week: the case of Kaavya Viswanathan, a 19-year-old Harvard undergraduate who snared a $500,000 two-book contract, as well as a DreamWorks movie deal.

Unfortunately for the author, a reporter for Harvard's student daily, The Harvard Crimson, exposed a case of serial plagiarism. The young literary hotshot -- who was gloried in puff-piece profiles by mainstream media -- is now at the center of a dispute between rival publishers and reams of negative publicity. Sadly, she seems to suffer the same self-delusion of James Frey, the fabricating memoirist whose "Million Little Pieces" shattered on the "Oprah" show. Her only crime, she says, is "inadvertent" and "unconscious borrowing."

The only positive news to come out of this story so far: an impressive piece of enterprise reporting by Crimson reporter David Zhou, who provided side-by-side comparisons, revealing Viswanathan's blatant word theft from author Megan McCafferty.



mug shedden
Then and Now, Media Moments with an Impact

By David Shedden
Library Director

Monday, April 24:

Babe Ruth was back in the news Monday. Here is an excerpt from a story in AM New York:

Are Yankees courting their own curse?

The house that Babe Ruth built by hitting balls out of the park now has a date with the wrecking ball, and demolition plans have set off a backlash that has little to do with the loss of parkland or increased traffic, and everything to do with nostalgia.

Having cleared all but a few financial and legal hurdles, the Yankees are planning to build a new stadium across the street from their 83-year-old home. The structure should be finished for the 2009 season, and the most tangible symbol of four generations of Yankees fans will be eradicated soon afterward.

"If there are baseball gods the Yankees will be punished for this," said Jim Bouton, a Yankees pitcher from 1962 to 1968. "The curse of Babe Ruth is going to come visiting on them, saying, 'You've paved over my hallowed ground for a few bucks.' "

Tuesday, April 25:

26 years ago today:

On April 25, 1980, all of the major television networks broadcast an address by President Carter about an abortive attempt to free the American hostages in Iran. The mission was called off after problems developed with the rescue helicopters. Eight U.S. servicemen were killed and several injured during the withdrawal. (1980 CNN Video)

The Washington Post said the following:

Series of Mishaps Defeated Rescue in Iran

Ruined aircraft and the charred bodies of eight servicemen smoldered in a remote Persian desert yesterday, sad symbols of a new American humiliation in Iran.

A bold operation to rescue the 53 hostages in Tehran had ended in disaster 12 hours after it was launched with the highest hopes of success. The survivors of the clandestine American military force escaped from the desert at dawn, leaving dead comrades and equipment behind. They had been defeated, not by the Iranians, but by the mechanical failure of their own aircraft.

Wednesday, April 26:

The Reuters news service reported on the 20th anniversary of the world's worst nuclear accident:
Flowers and tears mark Chernobyl anniversary

CHERNOBYL, Ukraine (Reuters) -- Mourners laid red carnations -- symbols of grief -- in the shadow of the ruined Chernobyl power station on Wednesday as they marked the 20th anniversary of the world's worst nuclear accident.

Hundreds filed past a memorial wall engraved with the names of the local fire crew. They were among the first to perish when Chernobyl's reactor No. 4 blew up on April 26, 1986, spewing radioactive dust across Europe.

One old woman in a headscarf made the sign of the cross as she stooped to lay a single carnation at the foot of the wall.

Ukraine's President Victor Yushchenko said it was time to start healing the scars left by the disaster.

Thursday, April 27:

The next chapter in the Knight Ridder / McClatchy deal was announced. Here is a story excerpt from the San Jose Mercury News:
Buyer Steps Up for Mercury News

MediaNews' agreement Wednesday to acquire the Mercury News, Contra Costa Times and two other Knight Ridder newspapers in a $1 billion deal would transform the Bay Area media landscape.

Whether that is ultimately good or bad for journalistic competition in the region is being debated by everyone from readers and reporters to advertisers and competitors.

Denver-based MediaNews is acquiring the papers, including the Monterey County Herald and St. Paul Pioneer Press in Minnesota, from McClatchy. The Sacramento company decided to sell 12 Knight Ridder newspapers after agreeing March 13 to purchase Knight Ridder for $4.5 billion.

The details of the MediaNews deal are fairly complex: MediaNews will purchase the Mercury News and Contra Costa Times, and Hearst, which owns the San Francisco Chronicle, will acquire the Monterey County Herald and the St. Paul Pioneer Press. For tax reasons, Hearst has agreed to trade the St. Paul Pioneer Press and Monterey Herald to MediaNews in return for an investment in MediaNews' assets outside the Bay Area.

Friday, April 28:

Each weekday, Poynter highlights the front page of a newspaper somewhere in the world. You can view the current ones at Page One Today / April.
Posted by Keith Woods 2:25 PM Apr 28, 2006
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