things to read


12
Nov 12

It’s going to be a fake hit

Found this in a book I’m reading, Reporting World War II: American Journalism 1938-1946. I paid $.60 for it, used on Amazon.

notes

This particular copy has been bought and sold many times. There are notes in the margins. They read like critical rhetorical notes, which seems odd in a book of collected journalism. Maybe the book was used for a reporting class like the note says. Maybe those were the pages the owner had to read. One of the owners, anyway. The book has layers and layers of used book stickers common to college bookstores. Seven layers, each telling a story of a high sale price and a pittance for their return at the end of the term. Those stickers are the adhesive geology of some professor who found value in the text and taught from it over and over.

I’m a third of the way through the book and have found two or three stories I’d like to use in class. Or, in a different time, would have enjoyed reading with a professor. I imagine both as small seminars where everyone is incredibly sharp and talkative and asks a lot of questions. What a great special topics of journalism class it would be.

And I began to wonder: How are we going to collate this generation’s batch of excellent reporting? Will there be a book edition?

Rainy day today. Woke up to clouds and they just kept rolling in, piling on top of one another, the day growing dark and deeper and darker until finally one bumped into another and dipped over the full capacity of the cloud. Rained for hours, cold and quiet.

It rained a little more than a half an inch, which should help our extreme drought. A little more than seven percent of the state remains in the dark red on the climatology maps. We’ve been there for more than two years. Rain, even the kind pushed in by the cold, is always welcome.

In the evening we strolled into the movie theater. Rainy days are good for that, too. We watched Argo. Based on a true story. Not without historical inaccuracies. The two best scenes were strictly cinema:

“Nobody is good-looking enough to play me,” Mr. Mendez said with a laugh. “But really, he did a fine job. A lot of the things I told him he took to heart. Especially those moments where you have concern, those 15 seconds of reviewing your plan internally.

“Your gut tells you if it’s going to be OK or not — and if you ignore that, you probably will get into trouble. I saw Ben do that on the screen. The audience just sees him not talking, but I knew exactly what he was doing.”

Like many movies based on actual events, “Argo” takes a number of dramatic liberties. In the film, the rescue mission is called off the night before the six Americans leave Iran; the group makes a nerve-wracking, in-disguise visit to a crowded and noisy Tehran bazaar; Iranian police cars and a truck full of rifle-wielding militants chase the getaway plane on the tarmac.

Though those scenes make “Argo” more suspenseful, that kind of action didn’t happen.

It played to the Hollywood formula, and thus you knew the outcome, but still it gets you in all the right spots.

Here’s an interview with the guy that inspired the Ben Affleck character, Tony Mendez:

It is storytelling of a different kind, but still good storytelling. It is … taut. The editing does the trick.

Thanks for being so generous with your time. Do come back tomorrow. There will be … something.


31
Oct 12

New Jersey, with a dash of NYU

When they talk about the boardwalk in New Jersey they mean Seaside Heights:

That’s amazing. I’ve been there, we visited a few years ago. Here’s one tiny sliver of the boardwalk:

frogbog

I have other photos, of course. They are on the one SD card I can’t seem to find at a moment. But nevertheless, terrible scene in New Jersey, among many places. The Yankee spent part of her summers on that boardwalk. And, like Gov. Chris Christie said, it’s all gone or in the ocean.

What awesome might the ocean can throw at the shoreline. No one talks like that, but we all think it as more and more of these stories come out.

I like this kind of story from the New Yorker:

By late Monday, the conditions were frightening. The lights were out. There was no water. The toilets didn’t flush. There were power failures in the emergency room and the transplant unit. Medical personnel had to bring more than two hundred patients down the stairs and get them to other hospitals all over the city and beyond. Earlier, Virginia Rossano had been going through a seizure—just as planned. But now was no time for that, and she was given Ativan, a drug that relaxes the brain and relieves seizures.

Medical personnel (including one med student) put Virginia on a kind of sled and began moving her out of the building. “Three young men carried Virginia down twelve flights of stairs, so slowly, so methodically,” Cathy Rossano said. “They were phenomenal.”

The delicate process, repeated with hundreds of patients, took nearly a half hour, and, when they got to the street, the Rossanos encountered a line of ambulances, many of them with volunteers who had driven hundreds, even thousands, of miles to help. “There were people from California, Texas, from everywhere,” Cathy Rossano said. “Our guys were from somewhere in Illinois.”

I think I can use that as a good example of an anecdotal lead for the next year or so. It starts with a medical procedure called a craniotomy, which is not something you’ll ever forget once you hear it. It has great detail of getting patients out of a non-working hospital and has that everyone-came-together-and-made-it-out happy ending. Definitely worth your reading time.

Speaking of Chris Christie, and we were, here’s something else I read about the governor and his unrequited love for Bruce Springsteen. I feel like it gets some things wrong, but it gets so much right:

He is flushed and beaming. The song ends, and he releases his commissioners, who seem happy to bask in their governor’s attention and also happy that he did not crack their windpipes. We’re all feeling elation—if the E Street Band at full throttle doesn’t fill you with joy, you’re probably dead—and it strikes me that this is the moment to ask the governor a trick question: “Do you think Mitt Romney could relate to this? To a Bruce Springsteen show?”

He looks at me like I’m from France. “No one is beyond the reach of Bruce!” he screams over the noise of the crowd, and then screams it again, to make sure I understand: “No one is beyond the reach of Bruce!”

What about Newt?

“He’s been married three times!,” Christie answers. “He’d get this. You know what I mean?”

Not really, but I accept the point: something about longing and sin and betrayal and the possibility of redemption.

Jeffrey Goldberg’s piece on Christie is a fairly usable thumbnail on the governor, so it isn’t just the Newt joke. There are a few other good lines worth remembering, too.

(Update: Aww, look, Springsteen whom Christie says “feels guilty that he has so much money, and he thinks it’s all a zero-sum game” actually complimented his governor in a Halloween show at Rochester. Probably made the guy’s day.)


30
Oct 12

Journalism in the clouds

Journalism, journalism, journalism. My day was just eaten up with the stuff.

All of the Sandy material in the world, it must be read, if not looked at. I find it harder and harder to look at hurricane damage. Tornado damage isn’t easy, but hurricanes, I’d rather just look away, if only I was allowed. Sometimes the work supersedes the want. Tornado damage, though, has a different scope. Devastating, sure, but to fewer people. The volume of a hurricane’s destruction is hard to comprehend and that can be a lot to bear.

Tornadoes? Not quite as bad. Or at least that’s what I thought until the giant tornado carved a path between Tuscaloosa and Birmingham last year. I’ve watched a lot of tornadoes. Chased a few, even. Seeing that monster on television was hard to watch, though. This one, from the ground during the same storm, I’ll never forget. The rotation is just behind the mall and you can tell from the shot how hard they were fighting against the wind. Those are just tornadoes, though, right?

The humanistic response outweighs the journalistic impulse and I think I’d be happy never to cover a hurricane, thanks. Just look at the scale:

Showed that in class today. And then we did Associated Press style for the rest of the afternoon. Then I had to give an interview to a student who is working on a project about the phone hacking scandal in London. She was a freshman, but she’s clearly done a lot of research and put a lot of thought into the project. It was a pleasant surprise. I figured we’d talk about ethics and process. Behave better, this is how this is supposed to work. She wanted to talk about organization. OK then, there were many corrupted people acting unscrupulously, and it seems to go all the way to the top.

From time to time someone wants to come and interview me about how some aspect of the working media operates. That’s wonderful and we should have more of that. This young lady pulled out her digital recorder and her pages of notes and I knew I was going to be talking for a while. It was a lot of fun. Hopefully I gave her something useful. And so we did.

Then, of course, tonight is the night the student-journalists put out their paper, too. So I stuck around for that so I could answer important stylistic questions like “Do you like this? Or that?”

There’s also reading things like:

Lance Armstrong shows why the disruption in journalism matters

Journalism ethics in a digital age

And my favorite, Drone journalism set for takeoff – once they’re permitted to use our airspace

I want one:

And here’s an entry-level, legal in the U.S. model, the Parrot AR.Drone 2.0 It has limited range and altitude, of course, but it also has two cameras on it.

Here’s a video from a slightly more expensive make, shooting footage over Detroit:

Clearly you could get some great storm damage footage this way.


22
Oct 12

Padding with pictures

Nothing but pictures and slideshows and more photos and then some camera things. I’ve stared at so many photographs today I’m not sure what is in focus any more. This one is going in tomorrow’s presentation as the thrill of victory:

SpringGarden

That was in 2008. Time flies. She’s gone on to college, made the dean’s list several times and probably graduated by now.

Twitter! For grades! It isn’t just for your breakfast anymore.

It hasn’t been about breakfast since roughly ever, but people that don’t understand it tend to default to such things. A television producer asked me once if I could learn as much about news on Twitter as I could on television. I told him of all of the tidbits I’d learned that day — there happened to be a plane crash and I knew as much or more as you’d get in a television recap of any story — and apologized for not knowing more; I hadn’t been online as much as I normally was.

I think I sold him. But I digress. There is a study that suggests “>Twitter is good for learning:

(C)ollege students who tweet as part of their instruction are more engaged with the course content and with the teacher and other students, and have higher grades.

“Tweeting can be thought of as a new literary practice,” said Greenhow, who also studies the growing use of social media among high-schoolers. “It’s changing the way we experience what we read and what we write.”

[…]

Greenhow analyzed existing research and found that Twitter’s real-time design allowed students and instructors to engage in sharing, collaboration, brainstorming and creation of a project. Other student benefits included learning to write concisely, conducting up-to-date research and even communicating directly with authors and researchers.

I have a Twitter paper that will be published later this year. It will be more about the communal nature of the tool. I look forward to telling you all about it.

I’ll be using this photo essay in class tomorrow. This is the story of a naval EOD who became only the 5th quadruple amputee survivor at Walter Reed, but also his long road back and the love he’s walking with once again. Amazing story, all right there in pictures.

That Buzzfeed piece has turned his friend and photographer, Tim Dodd, into a star. “The site went from boasting 220 views per day at its peak, to 36,000 views per day literally overnight.”

And then The Chive got hold of it. They say they’ve raised $250,000 for Morris in a matter of days.

Media law: SPLC executive director Frank LoMonte on the creep of Hazelwood:

When Hazelwood was decided, First Amendment advocates comforted themselves that the ruling affected only minors enrolled in K-12 schools – and then only in the limited “curricular” setting, such as a class-produced newspaper. That was a logical reading of the case and, as time has proven, an overly optimistic one.

[…]

The creep of Hazelwood onto college campuses is troubling because, in practice, courts regard Hazelwood as a “rational-basis-minus” level of review, under which censorship decisions need only reside in the deferentially viewed vicinity of reasonableness.

[…]

That level of control would be unthinkable in college, where principles of academic freedom are widely accepted to give instructors the latitude to air provocative and even offensive topics. But the inescapable conclusion – that a student could be disciplined for speech that would be constitutionally protected if uttered by a nonstudent – is equally unsustainable. If words are inappropriate for a college audience and might be confused for the government’s speech when uttered by a student, then they are doubly so when said by an adult authority figure.

Quick, fun read: Superman quits the paper.

Tomorrow I’ll use this picture as an argument for taking your camera everywhere:

truckfire

Took that picture five years ago and remember it like it was yesterday. Not for the picture. I just happened upon that as I drove to a visitation.


16
Oct 12

Tuesdays go so fast

An overcast, almost cool day. No wonder I saw cider at the store. We’re not there yet, but soon, I’m sure.

Saw this guy on the road this morning. Always nice to see them moving sedately down the interstate:

firetruck

Saw this guy on a support column this evening. Always nice to see them wait for me to get the best shot I can, which is to say a blurry, fuzzy, nighttime snapshot off my iPhone:

insect

In between I taught a class, arranged a big meeting with several publishers for next week, helped a student with a story, talked cutlines and all of the other rewarding things that go into a Tuesday. Life is pretty good, indeed.

Some things from the other blog:

A tweet to start your day

Preventing plagiarism

Looking for a new venue? Tumblr on over

What’s wrong with this video?

Clery Act data

More on Twitter, and something new on Tumblr tomorrow.