Samford


8
May 14

The indoor picnic

Cards and letters in the mail — with Charlton Heston stamps, mind you. Old newspapers recycled. The newsroom is clean(er). My office is clean(er). Next week’s student work schedule has been set. Locks have been changed. Some things have been graded. It was a productive day.

And, why yes, I would like a piece of pie, good sir.

Pie

This was at the department picnic, which is now held indoors after a few blistering thunderstorms in previous years. This should have been held last week — also indoors, but there was enough bad weather to close campus, and so here we are, dining in a classroom. Barbecue. Pie. And we’re giving out awards and scholarships and honors to students who are among the highest GPAs on campus. We’re presenting items to people who are student-leaders and acknowledging the honors they’ve been getting all year.

There is a program and about two dozen of the names inside of it are people I’ve had in class or worked with on some media project or another. All of that just means I’m lucky to work with talented young people.

And, at the end of the year, I get pie. And more grading.


7
May 14

Last day of class

So last night and today, in our final meeting on the 99th volume of >The Samford Crimson, we said goodbye to the old staff. Most are graduating and, as grizzled veterans of our regular critique meetings I let them lead the show today. They immediately made fun of me, which is great. They also find and understand the various and very occasional design and news problems as well as I do, which is even better. If we’ve made them nitpickers and sticklers, we’re doing something right.

Immediately after that I met with much of the new staff. The new editor-in-chief is moving up from the news editor position. Many of the editorial board members have also been in my classes or are familiar faces as contributors. A few of them I remember recruiting on far too many phone calls when they were in high school and look at us now.

Before we were doing they were making fun of me too, which is great.

My last class of the term was today. They did not make fun of me — within earshot at least — because I’m still grading them, I’d guess. I have, roughly, 120 things to read between now and then, so everyone is playing it cool with the jokes.

My day started with a run — I did 5K with negative splits and a sub-7:30 mile to finish — I do not know what is happening. This evening I’m finishing with a run through papers, where I made small dents in the grading pile.

Things to read … because reading only leaves dents in my brain.

End of an era: Jet Magazine to Shift to Digital Publishing Next Month

ESPN beat them to this, I’m afraid, but there is still plenty to be tinkered with and to learn from the experience: Here are the BBC’s plans for the first ‘24/7 World Cup’

Fascinating journalism geekery here: Approaches to digital fact checking across the world

Some news sites cracking down on over-the-top comments

Springfield students relaunch school newspaper

A lesson from the disruption of the news business? Don’t wait until your backs are against the wall to innovate

Such an important move: Why More Firms Are Hiring Journalists As Content Strategists

Some of our alumni and their incredible work: One of the city’s youngest film production companies grew out of a class project.

This is a cool story. At this Mississippi high school, the football team gets coached up by a hall of famer and a former Alabama coach: Brett Favre reduces role, former Alabama coach Ray Perkins steps in at Mississippi high school


6
May 14

Last Crimson issue of the year

Tonight the hard working student-journalists at The Samford Crimson are putting to bed the last issue of the 99th volume of the award winning newspaper. Most of the editorial staff is graduating, and I can say I’ve had the good fortune to be around many of them since they were freshmen.

They’ve all just grown so much and gotten so big!

Zach Brown, the departing editor-in-chief, was in an introductory class I taught. He changed over to a history major and still managed to land the top spot. He’s done a great job, is a thoughtful, smart young man and a pleasure to be around. He also let me take this picture of him, which might have been ill-advised:

Zach

Zach is also one of the best collegiate illustrators in the southeast. And, last week, he received word that he is now a Fulbright Scholar. The same day he got engaged. (How was your Friday?)

Zach has worked on this paper for two-and-a-half years now. He started as the editor of the opinion section and he never let one challenge get by him. He’s the kind of guy you hope to see on a project like this, truly. But I could say that about everyone that has devoted any serious time to this project.

Take this guy, Clayton Hurdle. He’s been the sports editor for two years. I had him in an intro class as well. He’s been writing for the Crimson for three years and he just gets better and better every time out. I just wrote him a letter of recommendation and I couldn’t have been more excited to do so. He’s also one of the best sportswriters in the Southeast.

Clayton

He’s won that sportswriting competition two years in a row. We’re presently trying to talk him into grad school for a try at a three-peat.

There are others. Our features editor is one of the most highly regarded students in the major. Our opinion editor this year is graduating with a degree in education and, for having never even used InDesign before last fall, has done some really neat things. We have two great photography editors and a cast of writers and copy editors and others that always work on the edges and in the gaps and can produce nice work.

So it is a sad and fun night. Sad, only slightly, because it will be a while before we see some of these people again. But you are happy for them too. They’ve learned a lot from a fine faculty and they’ve worked hard across big handfuls of projects and conflicting deadlines and they somehow keep it all together and do it well. The student-journalist is an under-appreciated thing, really, they carry as large a workload as anyone on campus.

And it pays off for them, too. Previous editors with whom I’ve worked are people who work at Apple, one runs a small magazine, another works at a magazine. The two most recent editors, in their first two years out of school, run social media for a six-state retail chain and an independent photography business. Zach, meanwhile, is going to go teach English abroad for a year. Former section editors work on campus, do mission work, have amazing non-profit roles, work in book publishing, headed to graduate school and so on.

I always tell them that an editorial staff position, helps get them places, teaches them skills they can use there and sets them apart from their peers. It is more about their ambition and quality of work they produce than the role, but there’s a great deal of truth to it. They prove it every year.

For example, in one of the drawers of my desk a 1990s-era student — whom I’ve never met — signed his name. He wrote:

desk

I’m still waiting to sell it on e-bay, but that guy has worked at MySpace, Netflix, Entertainment Weekly and at a YouTube analytics startup.

I occasionally joke that the best part of my job is that the students have to do the hard work. But, really, the best part of my job is that there are students willing to do the hard work.

Things to read … because life would be hard without reading.

Not to be biased, because there is some other impressive stuff going on in other buildings around campus. Samford students win cash in Regions business plan competition

Can an algorithm solve Twitter’s credibility problem?:

The Twitter commons have a credibility problem, and, in the age of “big data,” all problems require an elegant, algorithmic solution. Last week, a group of researchers at the Qatar Computing Research Institute (Q.C.R.I.) and the Indraprastha Institute of Information Technology (I.I.I.T.), in Delhi, India, released what could be a partial fix. Tweetcred, a new extension for the Chrome browser, bills itself as a “real-time, web-based system to assess credibility of content on Twitter.” When you install Tweetcred, it appends a “credibility ranking” to all of the tweets in your feed, when viewed on twitter.com. Each tweet’s rating, from one to seven, is represented by little blue starbursts next to the user’s name, almost like a Yelp rating. The program learns over time, and users can give tweets their own ratings to help it become more accurate.

Maybe. But people would work, too. I refer you to the key components of evolutionary algorithms, which were inspired by biology: reproduction, mutation, recombination, and selection. We can fix our own problems online, and Tweetcred could help, but it is also seeking your help to help it help you.

I get seven blue stars.

The Disruptive Technology of Drones in Newsgathering

Ban on drone photos harms free speech, say media outlets in challenge to FAA

Marketers at Mid-Sized Companies Struggle to Engage Audiences, Manage Tech

Investigative journalism: why we need it more than ever

The father of wearable computers thinks their data should frighten you

So Many Jihadists Are Flocking to Libya, It’s Becoming ‘Scumbag Woodstock’

Russian warplanes buzz California coast, gathering intel

Watch Tuskegee Skydivers attempt Guinness World Record by body painting while free falling

Crimson


5
May 14

They’re cured

Two weeks ago I had a picture of a grounds crew pulling up the old FieldTurf at Seibert Stadium at Samford. Today they are putting down the new material:

SeibertStadium

The old stuff lasted for nine years. It has been interesting to watch them roll and shake and shovel and unroll the new stuff. Plus you never have to mow it.

I wonder if they can come to my place next.

Class today. We talked about advertising and someone showed this clip of Mad Men:

I always wonder why Don didn’t write “They’re cured.” I mean if everyone else’s cigarettes are poisoned and you’re selling comfort, security and happiness …

We watched this video, which students showed in this same class a year or two ago. It always blows peoples’ minds:

Oh, and there’s another one:

I had the Whataburger today that I didn’t have on Saturday. I swam a mile this evening. Let’s call it speed work since I kicked some and I was out of breath a lot.

Things to read … because when you read you can catch your breath.

And your weekend? 2 local girls raise thousands for brain tumor research

We’ve talked about this at conferences and in our visions for the future. We now live in the first part of the future. The ‘Holodeck’ Arrives in Newsrooms. How Will VR Influence Storytelling?

This is troubling. Survey: Most says journalism is headed in the wrong direction:

The reporters, editors and producers who put out the news every day are less satisfied with their work, say they have less autonomy in their work and tend to believe that journalism is headed in the wrong direction, according to the initial findings of “The American Journalist in the Digital Age.”

This is an inevitable move. Publishers go it alone with their own video hubs. But that isn’t the only answer, as we discussed in February: What to do when your video is winning social media, but it’s a copy that’s getting the clicks? The answer is pretty easy: be a lot of places.

Have you noticed someone has been writing Twitter obits since the platform was born? Twitter is not dying

No Regrets for the Founder of Tumblr After Yahoo Sale:

When Yahoo bought Tumblr for $1.1 billion a year ago, it sent a ripple of excitement — and anxiety — through the tech industry. Would Yahoo and its recently arrived chief executive, Marissa Mayer, breathe new life into Tumblr? Or would Yahoo smother the start-up, as it did after acquiring popular young services like GeoCities and Flickr?

So far, the worst fears have begun to dissipate. Tumblr, a microblogging platform, has more than doubled its staff to 220, and its audience continues to grow, up 22 percent in the last year, according to the metrics company comScore.

5 Social Media Facts Every Marketing Professor Should Know

10 mobile marketing statistics to help justify your budget

U.S. businesses are being destroyed faster than they’re being created:

The American economy is less entrepreneurial now than at any point in the last three decades. That’s the conclusion of a new study out from the Brookings Institution, which looks at the rates of new business creation and destruction since 1978.

Not only that, but during the most recent three years of the study — 2009, 2010 and 2011 — businesses were collapsing faster than they were being formed, a first. Overall, new businesses creation (measured as the share of all businesses less than one year old) declined by about half from 1978 to 2011.

The authors don’t mince words about the stakes here: If the decline persists, “it implies a continuation of slow growth for the indefinite future.”

This a neat feature about archeology going on at terrible sites in American history. And they managed to only work Abu Ghraib into the piece twice. ‘We did this to ourselves’: Death and despair at Civil War prisons


28
Apr 14

We’re fine after the storms

Part of my job is to be watchful. My students work in a learning laboratory after having absorbed great lessons from talented faculty in the classroom. They are, historically, a thoughtful lot. They are also diligent and hardworking and all of that means I watch a lot, confer some and often say yes and seldom say no. All of the journalism that is done in our newsroom the students do, as it should be. You learn a lot from the practice. You learn a lot from success and from obstacles, too.

I have this great job of watching them work hard, see them figure it all out and then help them as they get stuck or when they need a small course correction. I provide advice and the occasional as-needed oversight, though that sort of thing is usually minor. I’m proud of the work they do, and it has more to do with the first paragraph than this one.

Then the weather rolled in. It had claimed 16 lives in Arkansas and we’ve been waiting for it to arrive here for days. So, I actually did the tiniest bit of curating of news on the campus paper’s Twitter account. And I do still enjoy the feel of pecking away at breaking news, something we occasionally have on our beautiful campus, though not often of this type.

And the weather got a little close tonight. The part of the storm that had the best chance of threatening our campus was tracking a few miles to our northwest and, even then, it did before it got into our area. For a few moments it was a concern.

And then the shelter selfies started. A moment or two later the skies calmed down locally. We can’t be sure one didn’t have to do with the other, but let’s not discard anything to hastily.