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13
Feb 13

Your average, wonderful Wednesday

Resumes and group work today. Group work and resumes. And also the newspaper. A normal Wednesday in many respects. Remarkable for its normal attributes, normal because those attributes are remarkable.

Also, there were Rice Krispie treats in the cafeteria. Fine day, then.

Apropos of yesterday’s Cosby Show videos — clearly there is a 1980s renaissance going on in our home just now — I stumbled on this on Facebook today, Bill Cosby schools us about those crazy sweaters:

“We’re talking about the knit woolen things that look like the sheep were different colors or fell in some paint, right?” Cosby says over the phone. “Isn’t that what you’re talking about?”

Exactly. Besides referring to the sweaters sported by Cosby’s character, Dr. Heathcliff Huxtable, to invoke the phrase “Cosby sweater” is to call something garish, tacky, and outdated—in an affectionate way. And in the cyclical world of fashion design, such passé looks have recently inspired a swath of contemporary looks featuring bold, geometric patterns and incorporating a mishmash of colors and textures.

Cosby himself doesn’t even remember when he first heard the term “Cosby sweater,” and is hard-pressed to explain why the style is such a phenomenon among young people today.

“I have no idea, and I’m not going make up anything,” says Cosby, “but I think youthful people have a long time to live, so they can waste some time on something like that.”

Here’s a different sort of word cloud. We’ve all grown used to the ones made from the transcript of speeches. USA Today asked readers to submit one word to describe the state of the union.

Here is the result.

A Poynter list: 5 reasons mobile will disrupt journalism like the Internet did a decade ago. Here are a few of the bullets, click over for the rest:

1. A responsive design isn’t a mobile strategy

2. Mobile will not only surpass the desktop, but begin to erode it

3. The desktop decline will pressure news revenues

I’d argue that the separate points are all correct, but that the comparison of the mobile evolution to the Internet evolution is not as neat and tidy as you might imagine.

Here’s another one of those stories that lets you think that “kids these days” are pretty good after all. Fine storytelling, too:

Quite a bit of Tom Rinaldi influence there. Here’s an old Rinaldi piece which hits on similar themes:

Slow piano, reflective pace and tender story; just add tears.

Just add images. PR Daily created a helpful social media photo sizing cheat sheet. Use it in good health.

Leave the Rice Krispie treats to me.


11
Feb 13

It is on the Internet, it must be true

Jennifer Oravet is a fine reporter at WSFA in Montgomery. She saw something interesting on the Internet today, made a few phone calls. Seems The Onion had a breakout story on Alabama:

Oravet posted about it on her Facebook account. We talked about this in class today:

Oravet

Oravet apparently didn’t know, when this adventure began last week, that The Onion is a satirical site. She said she did afterward, in the comments below the post, “it cites an actual PR firm, and slanders the names of employees and lodges serious accusations about the state of Alabama. The bottom line, it’s a talker story.”

It was a talker, made more so because of your reaction. But, first, there was no slander. The Onion is written so, if anything, you could say libel. Second, the person quoted in The Onion story is fictitious. Go ahead and Google him. Third, if Dylan Feldstone was a real entity, we’re most likely talking about a misquote rather than libel (or slander). Since the fictional Feldstone is not libeling himself … Well, Alabama defines libel thusly:

“Libel tending to provoke breach of peace.

Any person who publishes a libel of another which may tend to provoke a breach of the peace shall be punished, on conviction, by fine and imprisonment in the county jail, or hard labor for the county; the fine not to exceed in any case $500.00 and the imprisonment or hard labor not to exceed six months.”

Code of Alabama Section 13A-11-160

Let’s look at the law in New York, assuming that the fictional Feldstone works at the real Hill and Knowlton’s headquarters. Defamation claims in the Empire State include:

1. a false statement;
2. published to a third party without privilege or authorization;
3. with fault amounting to at least negligence;
4. that caused special harm or defamation per se.

See Dillon v. City of New York, 261 A.D.2d 34, 38

So, again, there’s no libel as the “without privilege or authorization” test is negated by Feldstone being a fictional character. There is such a thing as group libel, so you could try to make an argument about the firm or the state. But, then, there’s that pesky issue of satire.

Satire, caricature and parody are forms of art that rely on blurring the line between truth and outrageousness. Below are suggestions — some taken from opinions in New Times v. Isaacks, decided in September by the Texas Supreme Court, and the 1988 U.S. Supreme Court decision in Hustler Magazine v. Falwell — of things to include to help make it unlikely that a reasonable person would believe the story to be actually true. The context of the entire story is important, so no single suggestion is guaranteed to protect from liability. It is also not necessary to include all of the suggestions below.

But to move away from the basic aspects of media law and back to the immediate issue, the way WSFA treated the thing from start to finish, and the contextual clues you could glean from that, suggest they didn’t catch the joke for quite some time.

By the time they went to air, of course, they got it. WSFA ran a package on the non-story on Thursday night. You can read the gist from text even though the video has been removed from the station’s site. Again, some of the language they used in the story suggests they were still new to The Onion, as is discussed below.

Media Bistro soon chimed in and then Jim Romenesko covered the story, with an Onionesque headline himself: TV reporter discovers Onion stories are fake:

Actually, Jennifer, all Onion articles are fictitious. (Just one c.)

Did she know that when she put in the call to Hill & Knowlton? I called WSFA to find out and was told that Oravet is taking the day off. A newsroom colleague – she wouldn’t give me her name – insisted that the reporter/anchor knew the Hill & Knowlton/Alabama story was fake from the start.

“It doesn’t sound like it based on her Facebook post,” I said.

“Did you see her report?” the colleague asked.

I said I had, and figured she had been set straight about The Onion before going on air. Wrong, I was told — Oravet always knew it was a satirical paper.

WSFA Facebook commenters have their doubts, too. One writes:

“I don’t know what’s better, her original post, or her backpedaling to ‘cover up; her mistake. I’ve done dummy things like that (most recent when I applauded Beyonce at the inauguration… lip sync anyone?) but come on, admit you’re stupid sometimes just like the rest of us.”

That last part, that’s important.

All of this comes down to media literacy, of course. Things like WSFA saying The Onion “even” made a video and Oravet writing “the alleged study” suggests they weren’t initially familiar with the comedy site or their decades of publication. But you can’t expect everyone to know everything.

But still. One of my students asked the key question today “How many times do people have to be burned by The Onion?” Every so often you read another story where someone was caught unawares by The Onion. It happens. They have great writers. Reading the stories linked on the left rail, beside the video and the main text, should be a clue. All of that must have gone unnoticed this time.

Here WSFA is trying to walk it back. But as you read the comments on the Facebook posts dealing with this topic (the original one, screen capped above was finally removed) the whole unfortunate incident has dinger their credibility. Shame, really, that’s a good station.


7
Feb 13

We have a mystery song

Stayed cloudy and gray and dim all day. Never topped 55 degrees, according to the local weather station. Though it never really felt like that warm. I had a few minutes that I could have pedaled around on my bicycle, but I did not. Too cold. Presently my baseline is 52 degrees.

So I stayed inside and did other things. And I counted the minutes until dinnertime, when we could enjoy the rest of last night’s delicious gumbo. Homemade and good stuff. You should be so lucky!

Every so often you see stories about social media fatigue. On the other hand, here is a piece discussing Innovative uses for social media:

(W)e predict that in 2013 social media intelligence will become much more commonplace as businesses, government agencies and not-for-profit organisations seek to leverage this new, unparalleled wealth of information.

There’s a list. It should include things like tracking illness, moving money, wide scale gaming, collaborative art and more.

To aggregate or not to aggregate. The debate continues:

aggregation or curation is a fact of life in the digital age — just as record companies have had to learn to live with rampant downloading and sharing of music, publishers of all kinds are trying to get used to the idea that their content is no longer under their control.

… which is fine as a philosophical point. The reality is you can’t put it back in the box.

Here’s a new show to watch:

The Weather Channel’s latest reality show, and coastal Alabama’s latest taste of reality-show exposure, “Reef Wranglers” makes its premiere at 8 p.m. Central time on Tuesday, Feb. 12. It’s a limited four-episode series focusing on the adventures of the crew at Reefmaker, a business based at Walter Marine in Orange Beach.

Should be worth it for the underwater scenes. Ignore the stereotypes, if the producers allow you.

I got a new Glomerata today. Actually I have a few new ones to add to the site, so I’ll do that in the next few weeks. But this one is especially special, one of the earliest editions. Inside was this:

twostep

There are two pages of sheet music to this diddy. This book is so old that it is entirely possible that no one alive has ever heard this tune. Can’t wait to know what it sounds like.

Come play it for me?


6
Feb 13

The critical use of the word ‘Just’

We discussed critiquing news stories in class today. How to do it, what to critique, what not to get overly zealous about. How to treat this as a constructive exercise and not as a personal reproach, and so on. The idea is that the more you watch things critically — because I make you critique them — the more you’ll see things that work and things that don’t work.

A critical eye is very important in the craft.

So we talked about television packages. I showed this story’s video package, which was still timely early in the week. It was a nice example of localizing the story when it came to the Midland standoff.

The reporter found a local police officer who has gone through the FBI negotiation training and interviewed him about what might have been taking place. It was a helpful story to a degree. There are some vagaries, which is both based on the nature of this officer not knowing every detail about what is happening hours outside of his jurisdiction and a need to speak generally for tactical reasons too. But it is nice localized story. It has some production issues and some very strange B-roll shots. It gave us something to look at.

And then I showed them this:

That is never going to get old, even as fewer and fewer students are familiar with the YouTube sensation.

And then we got started in our efforts to set up WordPress blogs. They are a sharp group of students, and I’m sure they’ll be running the Internet by the end of the semester.

I have done thy bidding, Internet, and given you many more people to add content!

Lovely, busy day otherwise. It was national signing day, and the Crimson’s sports editor was posting stuff continually to their Twitter account. That earned him follows from two of the television stations in town. Nice little reward for his work.

My open letter to new signees got repackaged.

On the way home I stopped at Buy Buy Baby to get something off a friend’s registry. This place is full of things you didn’t know you needed if you’re raising children. Glancing at the products it is amazing any of us made it out of toddler years without these things in our homes.

The store is bright and smells of baby powder. Just add water, I suppose.

That’s an improvement, though, really. The last time I was in this store it was still a Circuit City. As I noted on Twitter, it was dank and dim and smelled of desperation then. I remember trying to test a camera of some device and the guy there was not able to put a battery into the thing.

I looked around at the deep sockets of the eyes of the few people actually in the store, realized that everyone there was touching, but no one was buying. I knew it was over.

Within a year they were all gone.

If only that one floor guy had bothered to look for a battery, things might have gone differently.

But probably not.

Anyway, in a much more pleasant environment with a thoroughly enjoyable young lady helping, I managed to find the appropriate burp cloths. They were very, very decorative. I’m sure yours were just a flat white, once upon a time.

Three recent items on the other blog:

Localizing the big stories

Have you tried SoundCloud?

USPS to drop Saturday deliveries

I have a lot of things stored away to write over there. Get used to the links, I guess.

Saw this sign, the oracle of our time:

Krystals

I know the owner. His son and daughter are friends. The sign has become a big fun quasi-event lately. It isn’t true until Krystal’s says it is, and all that.

When I took that picture it was halftime in the Alabama-Auburn basketball game. Alabama was leading Auburn 23-13. Halftime. In a basketball game, full of varsity, scholarship players. Presumably for both teams. (So you see why the word “Just” is important on that sign.)

In the second half Auburn went on a 36-14 run — that was all of the scoring. The final was 49-37, Auburn. Weird game. But Auburn held Alabama to its lowest point total in the 146 game series history, so there’s that.


5
Feb 13

The past and the present all come together on this page

Cloudy and in the mid-60s today. For February? You take it. We’re going to get a bit more of the chilly stuff, you can count on it, but we can also enjoy the trend toward nice spring days.

Rosa Parks is getting a stamp. She would turn 100 today.

You might not see that stamp on Saturdays:

Saturday mail delivery costs the U.S. Postal Service $2.7 billion a year, and it’s a burden the cash-strapped agency is trying to shed — to the dismay of greeting card makers everywhere. Cutting Saturday delivery is a key part of USPS’ five-year plan to save $20 billion by 2015, but it is bumping up against businesses such as Hallmark that benefit from six-day mail delivery.

That story also tells you Hallmark spent $240,000 for lobbying on postal issues. I wonder what Hoops and YoYo would say about that.

Journalism is the best job ever:

Yes, there are too few really good jobs and too many people fighting for them. Yes, salaries start out quite low. Yes, the hours can be long and irregular. Yes, the industry is in a period of extreme disruption, with lots of old jobs being destroyed, and the new ones typically offer less security and require different skills.

None of that changes the core fact here. For those who are cut out for it — and that’s definitely not everyone — journalism is a uniquely rewarding, wonderful career.

Most of his reasons are wonderful. But I wonder: Does he have a robot?

Where Visual Revenue believes it can add real value is in being able to recommend specific actions within an editorial framework outlined by the organization — that is, using an algorithm to tell a newsroom when it should tweet and also what it should be tweeting. Mortensen likens these computerized suggestions to the role of a deputy editor: Someone who knows the editorial values of the paper, and can determine the best publishing strategy as a result. Except, in this case, that someone is a robot.

“We set out with this idea of empowering the editor, but not to beat him to the extent where we can automate his job,” Mortensen said. “We actually sit down with the editor in chief and ask him, ‘Give me my instructions just like you tell your deputy editors what they can and cannot do.’ Then we simply adopt those, adhere to those as strictly as possible. And if I’m brutally honest with you, of all of the editors, you’ll see that we’re the only ones that only adhere to the guidelines because we’re an algorithm not a human.”

Another upshot: Non-humans aren’t tethered to print-era concepts that have bled into an online era of publishing. A robot doesn’t care about newsroom culture or tradition; it only cares about the data.

When the machines can accurately read the traffic flow patterns at intersections, that’s when you worry about them taking over. Until then, they are just helpful.

My friend Andre Natta at the Birmingham Terminal asked “What is Virtual Alabama?

So glad he asked. In answering his own question he shared this case study, which really only seems to scratch the surface, when you think about it:

Finally, the Alabama Backroads Cycling Series. I want to do it. Think I might (try).