Media

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Here Be Media

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 24/03/2024 - 7:36pm in

A talk to the Economic Society of Australia: Monsters in the Machine, Technology, Growth & Human Flourishing

An Author Talk with Goldfields Libraries

An appearance on the Breaking the Spell podcast

Cartoon: Flea marketplace of ideas

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 23/03/2024 - 8:50am in

Tags 

Comics, fascism, Media

Follow me on MastodonBlueskyFacebookInstagram, or at my website.

As News Deserts Expand, Student Journalists Step Up

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 22/03/2024 - 7:00pm in

On the drizzly first Tuesday in March, voters crammed into a historic white clapboard meeting house on a hill in Stockbridge, Vermont. It was Town Meeting Day, when Vermonters across the state gather to debate and vote on local government. And the election for the next member of Stockbridge’s three-person select board, the main governing body of this town of just over 700 people, had drawn record turnout.

As voters waited to cast handwritten ballots in a long queue that snaked around wooden benches, University of Vermont sophomore Sarah Andrews approached locals, notebook in hand. Andrews and two classmates were not just there for course work: They were there as part of UVM’s Community News Service, reporting for the White River Valley Herald, the weekly newspaper that covers 16 towns in this rural region.

Small newspapers like the Herald have long been the main way of recording and distributing information about community happenings. But local news outlets are disappearing. The 2023 State of Local News report found that about half of all counties across the country have only one local news outlet, and more than 200 counties have none.

UVM student reporters covered an unusually busy Town Meeting Day in the small town of Stockbridge.UVM student reporters covered an unusually busy Town Meeting Day in the small town of Stockbridge. Credit: Elizabeth Hewitt

As local news deserts grow, universities are stepping in. With initiatives ranging from student-staffed statehouse bureaus to newspapers run by journalism schools, these academic-media partnerships are bolstering local news.

“It’s a short-term win and it’s a long-term win,” says Penny Muse Abernathy, a visiting professor at Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism, and co-author of the local news report. 

University-media partnerships provide reliable local news coverage in communities where it is needed. In the process, students get hands-on experience with community decision-making in a way that shapes their careers and worldviews going forward.

Credit: Elizabeth Hewitt

Sarah Andrews and two of her classmates covered Town Meeting Day for the White River Valley Herald, the weekly newspaper that covers 16 communities in Vermont’s rural Upper Valley region.

 

“Too often over the last 20 years, we’ve tended to focus on teaching students what we assume are professional digital skills for the digital age, when in fact journalism at its core teaches not only the journalist but the citizen how to employ critical thinking and make wise decisions,” says Abernathy.

Closures of smaller news outlets over the last several decades have left many regions without reliable media coverage. Since 2005, the number of newspapers in the US has dropped by a third, and the number of journalists has declined by 60 percent. The erosion of local news makes it harder for community members to be aware of the issues in their regions.

“Most of the decisions that affect our immediate everyday life occur at the local level,” says Abernathy.

 Through university-led journalism programs, students — under the tutelage and editorial supervision of faculty members — are stepping in to fill in some of those gaps. The model isn’t new: The University of Missouri has been practicing a “teaching hospital” approach that involves students in community news coverage since 1908. Now, in the current media landscape, higher education institutions are looking at how they can both offer students enriching experiences and contribute to communities, according to Richard Watts, who heads the University of Vermont’s Center for Community News.

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“Students like to do things that are real,” he says. “There’s a sense of agency about writing real stories that real people read and make a real difference.”

There are about 120 such programs at colleges and universities across the country, according to Watts. The Center for Community News found in 2023 that over the last year, more than 2,000 student journalists across the US had produced more than 10,000 news stories that were published in community outlets. The stories were estimated to reach more than 14 million people.

Often offered to students in the forms of classes, the programs require a high level of commitment from faculty members — editing stories for publication is more intensive than typical grading. Across different regions, the scope and focus of programs varies, says Watts.

Louisiana State University’s Manship School of Mass Communication has taken advantage of its location a few miles away from the State Capitol to bolster coverage of the legislature.

 News coverage of state policy-making is among the casualties of the erosion of local news. Across the country, the number of reporters covering statehouses full-time declined by 34 percent between 2014 and 2022.

Claire Sullivan portrait in front of a building.Claire Sullivan has been an LSU Manship School Statehouse reporter for both the 2023 and the 2024 sessions. Credit: Ria Salway

As press coverage of the Louisiana legislature diminished, LSU launched a statehouse bureau in 2016. Through a high-level journalism class, student reporters cover committee meetings and floor proceedings. Grant funding allows the program to keep students on as interns to cover the weeks of the legislative session after the semester ends. Christopher Drew, a former New York Times investigative reporter and editor who heads the bureau program, edits the stories. Then they’re made available for any news outlet to publish for free. 

 Ninety-five outlets have run LSU student statehouse stories, ranging from some of the state’s largest newspapers to small weekly and bi-weekly papers, many of which Drew says wouldn’t have another option to get stories about news from the statehouse.“Our students never have any problem getting taken seriously by lawmakers because we often are the hometown reporter for the lawmakers,” says Drew. “A lot of them come from places [where] the only thing that constituents could read about what they do comes from what the LSU students do.”

The idea is spreading; 20 states have some form of university-led statehouse bureau, and Drew is involved in conversations with schools interested in launching programs in additional states. LSU also offers an investigative journalism course, focused on civil rights era cold cases, which similarly distributes stories to outlets. Drew is working on a new project that would create a network of universities and colleges around Louisiana, partnering journalism programs with small local news outlets.

LSU senior Claire Sullivan is taking the statehouse course for the second time this spring. She sees the community news model as mutually beneficial for students like herself who want experience and local news outlets that want coverage.

“It’s the best kind of motivator,” says Sullivan. “You want to do your best job for the local outlets.”

Devon Sanders, an LSU Manship School Statehouse reporter, interviewed State Representative Katrina Jackson in 2018.Devon Sanders, an LSU Manship School Statehouse reporter, interviewed State Representative Katrina Jackson in 2018. Credit: Katherine Seghers / LSU

The Oglethorpe Echo has been covering the issues of Oglethorpe County in northeastern Georgia since 1874. The weekly was poised to shut down in 2021, when the long-time publisher was ready to retire. Instead, a community member hatched a plan for the local paper to be taken over by the University of Georgia’s Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication.

Over the last two and a half years, students have reported the stories that fill the Echo’s pages. During fall and spring semesters, the newspaper is staffed by students in a senior capstone class. Over summer and winter breaks, students are hired as interns, so there’s no break in news coverage. The paper was converted to a nonprofit, and Andy Johnston, a longtime sports journalist who had been an adjunct professor, came on as the paper’s editor. 

Student journalists have dug into issues related to limited rural broadband access, and use of a particular form of fertilizer on local farms. In its first full year of operating under the university, the paper won nine awards from the Georgia Press Association.

Courtesy of Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication

The Oglethorpe Echo nearly shut down in 2021. Instead, the University of Georgia’s Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication took over the paper. Now, student stories fill its pages.

One difference between university-led media and traditional local outlets is that student reporters turn over frequently, so they don’t have the long-term knowledge and relationships that a professional reporter would. But editors — both employed by universities and with community news outlets — help provide that expertise. In Vermont, when the White River Valley Herald picks up stories written by UVM students, editor Tim Calabro says he occasionally adds in local context that students don’t know. 

When the University of Georgia took over the Echo, Johnston says there was an adjustment period of building trust with the community. The university is located about 25 miles west of Oglethorpe County, so students don’t live locally. But the feedback he gets is generally positive. Readers appreciate having a local news source, and they particularly like slice-of-life stories that feature their friends and family members.

“We’re writing to tell the stories of the community, tell the stories of the county,” he says.

Current Echo students Michael Johnson (left) and Izzy Wagner read through a copy of The Oglethorpe Echo.Current Echo students Michael Johnson (left) and Izzy Wagner read through a copy of The Oglethorpe Echo. Courtesy of Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication

Back in Vermont, on Town Meeting Day, a total of 139 people voted in the election for Stockbridge’s new select board member. Two days later, Andrews’ story about the election ran in the White River Valley Herald. 

For the Herald’s editor, Tim Calabro, UVM students’ stories helped his limited staff cover news around the region on the biggest single day for local government of the year. But Calabro says there are broader benefits of the program beyond filling the paper with news. 

“Of all the dangers that newspapers, news organizations of any stripe are facing, the biggest worry is that people just won’t care about what’s going on in their communities,” Calabro says.

Not every student who goes through a university-led news program will go on to a career in journalism, he says. But even for those without ambitions in journalism, he sees this kind of program as valuable for engaging young people in communities: “Being a human being in society,” as Calabro puts it, “it’s good to care about society.”

The post As News Deserts Expand, Student Journalists Step Up appeared first on Reasons to be Cheerful.

The failure of Western on-the-ground war reporting

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 20/03/2024 - 4:51am in

Tags 

Media, Politics

On the ground reporting by Western media of the Russia-Ukraine conflict has been weak. Most have a pro-Ukrainian bias and prefer to operate from hotels in Kiev or further west. Interviews from the trenches seem partly staged and rely on interpreters, though VICE News Tonight has good Russian-speakers who in the past have done some Continue reading »

America is dumbing itself down. Banning TikTok won’t halt the slide

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 19/03/2024 - 4:50am in

The US has created the conditions for the decline of its own society. TikTok being banned in the USA is not the issue. The fact is, this is a ban on any current or future successful technology owned by a potential adversary and, let’s not make any mistake about it, China, where the ownership of Continue reading »

Visit to Australia by Chinese Foreign Minister HE Wang Yi

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 18/03/2024 - 1:35pm in

Tags 

Media, Politics

The Chinese Foreign Minister, Mr Wang Yi, is in Australia this week to participate in the China-Australia Foreign and Strategic Dialogue with his Australian counterpart, Foreign Minister Penny Wong. This is a good development and very much to be supported. While observing the reporting of this upcoming dialogue from the distance of my office in Continue reading »

Video: hundreds turn out in heavy rain to support Abbott

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 18/03/2024 - 3:51am in

And C4 News coverage exposes Starmer’s Labour just as racist as Tories

Hundreds gathered despite heavy rain on Friday night in noisy support for Hackney North and Stoke Newington MP Diane Abbott, who remains suspended by the Labour party despite foul racism both by a top Tory donor and by Labour staff and MPs:

And Channel 4 News coverage of the demo, unusually when Keir Starmer generally receives the softest handling from the so-called ‘mainstream’ media, highlighted the Labour right’s racism toward Ms Abbott – Britain’s first Black woman MP and the UK’s most abused – as much as that of the Tories, including comments by Martine Forde KC, the barrister appointed by Starmer to investigate the right’s disgusting behaviour revealed in a leaked Labour report and ignored ever since:

Solidarity with Diane Abbott – but she is better outside Starmer’s racist party than within it.

If you wish to republish this post for non-commercial use, you are welcome to do so – see here for more.

Getting ‘Closure for Carrie’ – the Family of Caroline Flack is Seeking New Answers from Scotland Yard after Byline Times probe

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 16/03/2024 - 6:27am in

Tags 

Media, Newspapers

Read Dan Evan's and Tom Latchems's exclusive three-part investigation into the Caroline Flack Story in the April edition of Byline Times. Available as a digital edition online now, or in stores and newsagents from 20 March.

Read Dan Evan's and Tom Latchems's exclusive three-part investigation into the Caroline Flack Story in the April edition of Byline Times. Available as a digital edition online now, or in stores and newsagents from 20 March.

The family of Caroline Flack is hailing a breakthrough in an ongoing four-year battle for answers from the Metropolitan Police over the assault charge that led to the presenter’s suicide, it can be revealed.

New information, uncovered by a Byline Times investigation, means the arresting officer in the case must now explain their role in overturning a decision by the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) to issue Caroline with a caution because of her risk of self-harming.

It follows the intervention of police in December 2019 to reject an initial “public interest” decision to accept Caroline’s admission of causing injury to her partner Lewis Burton without going to court in favour of a public trial the prospect of which, a coroner later found, led to her death.

Coroner Mary Hassell said in August 2020: “I find the reason for her taking her life was she now knew she was being prosecuted for certainty and she knew she would face the media, press, publicity – it would all come down upon her.”

Caroline’s mother Christine is now expecting a statement from Met. Detective Constable Jack Bilsborough detailing the “rationale” behind the challenge, which was raised unilaterally by a more senior officer, Detective Inspector Lauren Bateman, without notes being kept as to why.

A new three-part probe published in the April edition of Byline Times tells how DC Bilsborough left the police before the inquest and other investigations by the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) and could not, until now, be compelled to speak.

However, after this newspaper learned the officer returned to service in October 2023, Mrs Flack has now lodged a new complaint with the IOPC in order to obtain his evidence.

She said: “We need, as a family, to understand. Were it not for Byline Times, I would never have even known Jack Bilsborough had re-joined the police.”

A spokesperson for the Met. added: “Any officer in the Met, regardless of whether they left the Met and later re-joined, who is subject to a complaint, would be expected to provide

an account. The officer mentioned wants to make it clear he would offer every ­ assistance as required.”

Our investigation also reveals the truth behind the worst of the news output that led almost two million people to call for a ‘Caroline’s Law’; legislation - never in the end debated at Westminster - to make it a criminal offence to publish unduly oppressive media coverage that pushed people to suicide.

Sources inside The Sun tell how the tabloid bought and published a picture of Caroline’s blood-stained bed - likely to be key evidence in the then-upcoming trial - without explaining it was her own self-inflicted injuries that had caused the scene.

And members of her former management team reveal that despite having three journalists named as authors on the piece, the paper claimed it had been too short-staffed to seek a right to reply comment from the presenter before running a story Christine says played a big part in her suicide.Christine also tells Byline Times of the emotional impact on the Flack family of having to still doggedly battle for the truth four years after her death – and how what happened to Caroline at Holborn Police Station on Friday 13 December 2019 led to changes for the police nationwide.

Read Dan Evan's and Tom Latchems's exclusive three-part investigation into the Caroline Flack Story in the April edition of Byline Times. Available as a digital edition online now, or in stores and newsagents from 20 March.

Read Dan Evan's and Tom Latchems's exclusive three-part investigation into the Caroline Flack Story in the April edition of Byline Times. Available as a digital edition online now, or in stores and newsagents from 20 March.

Thai establishment to disband popular party – Asian Media Report

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 16/03/2024 - 4:55am in

Tags 

Asia, Media, Politics

In Asian media this week: ‘Inexorable, predictable’ proceedings against Move Forward. Plus: South Korea’s new envoy at heart of political row; Xi revives Mao’s party-control dictum; Fukushima meltdown fuel still a mystery; China’s tai chi diplomatic culture; Singapore writer in long Taylor Swift gloat. In a slow-motion replay of the main contest in Thai politics Continue reading »

The BBC’s Road to Appeasement 

Published by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 16/03/2024 - 2:02am in

Read Adam Bienkov and Patrick Howse's full and exclusive investigation into the BBC in the April edition of Byline Times. Available as a digital edition online now, or in stores and newsagents from 20 March.

Read Adam Bienkov and Patrick Howse's full and exclusive investigation into the BBC in the April edition of Byline Times. Available as a digital edition online now, or in stores and newsagents from 20 March.

The BBC operated within a “culture of fear” in which senior journalists became afraid of reporting negative stories about the Government due to external pressure from Downing Street and internal pressure from senior editors and executives, Byline Times can reveal.

The culture, which was overseen by editors perceived as having overly “cosy” relationships with Government, followed a two decade campaign to undermine and neuter Britain’s national broadcaster.

The full story is available to read in the new retail edition of Byline Times, available in shops from next Wednesday. It reveals how:

Insiders say BBC bosses became “terrified” of upsetting Downing Street during Boris Johnson’s tenure

Reporters were actively discouraged from reporting embarrassing stories about Government ministers 

The former Head of BBC Westminster, Katy Searle, was seen internally as being “too close” to Downing Street.

There was widespread disquiet about the “access culture” fostered at BBC Westminster, in which maintaining good relations with Downing Street was prioritised 

Internal pressure for “balance” in news coverage was heavily slanted in the Conservatives’ favour, with Labour judged to “not be in the game” under Jeremy Corbyn

The former Labour leader was “misled” into taking part in an election campaign interview with the BBC’s Andrew Neil, when no similar agreement had been made with Downing Street

Former BBC Daily Politics Editor Robbie Gibb, who went on to work as Director of Communications for Theresa May, would “relentlessly drive the Brexit agenda“ internally at the corporation

The Covid crisis was seen by BBC bosses as a chance for the corporation to "prove its worth" to Downing Street

⬛ As a result, some reporters feared the corporation had allowed itself to become a "state broadcaster" during the pandemic

The full story includes testimony from current and former senior BBC journalists and editors.

It reveals how Government threats to scrap the license fee were successfully used by Johnson's Government to encourage more favourable coverage from the broadcaster, with BBC bosses beginning to internalise Government criticisms of the corporation

You can read the full revelations in the new retail edition of Byline Times, available to read in shops from next Wednesday, or online by subscription.

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