Tuesday


20
Sep 11

Do not be dissuaded by the gray atmosphere

Rain today.

rain

But it is like summer isn’t even trying anymore. Summer knows this is her last official week, and is conceding the point. The rain was just a sprinkle, a pat dropping of precipitation. There was nothing dramatic about it. It was probably even cold.

So maybe summer is slinking off. Maybe that will make way for an actual season of autumn this year. Maybe there’ll be months of the stuff, instead of days. Maybe we’ll grow weary of crispy mornings, sharp colors and the fragrant smells of the grill and evening fires. Maybe the crickets and the katydids will stick around, and the lightning bugs, too, but the mosquitos will be pushed off in an evening breeze.

It’s a pipe dream, but a good one. Summers are lovely and long. It will be mid or late October before the seasonal average high dips below 75. There may be troughs and cold fronts and odd chills in there, but there will also be the spikes. Beyond a certain point temperatures flirting with 90 are a bit demoralizing. That point is October 17th.

So we’ll see how that goes this year.

Class today. Students working on stories, some of them are quite strong. All have promise. Fifteen kids given one assignment and there are probably nine different angles they’ve explored. These can be interesting times in the development of young student-journalists.

Some of those stories will possibly be in The Samford Crimson sometime soon. That bunch of student-journalists, a bit older than those in today’s class, are working on their latest issue now. All of this is great fun.

Like sports teams, each year’s staff has their own personality. This year the Crimson has more guys on the editorial staff. There’s more talk of fantasy football teams than sorority functions. They all work hard, though, each staff going late into the night, and early into the next morning at the beginning of the year.

So far this year’s new staff has finished their paper at 5:30 a.m., just an hour before it went to press, and then 3:30 a.m. last week. At least I think that was the time last week. I find it hard to remember now. I can’t imagine why.


13
Sep 11

Busy week

Even my deadlines have deadlines. And those deadlines aren’t very patient. So things will be brief. Very brief.

Class today, based on the same lecture I taught to another section last week. The laughs weren’t there this time. And some of the jokes were even better! It happens. Small group dynamics are interesting things. Maybe they’ll find the next class more to their liking.

Saw this on the morning drive:

octagon

Some octagons get all the luck. Some just get to see all the sites. Good thing it picked up the truck. Those many flat sides to an octagon make rolling around a difficult proposition.

Geometry puns! Free of charge!

Updated a page I wrote in July. Last winter I did a piece on Dean Hallmark, Texas boy turned Auburn man turned World War II hero and prisoner of war. I’ve been corresponding with his fourth-cousin, the family historian. Last month he and I had the chance to meet in person. Today he sent me an email containing the update. Interesting echoes from the 1930s.

That’s enough for now. Back to newspapering.


13
Sep 11

Things to read

Hey kids, gather round and let the Boston Globe tell you how they built an all-in-one website. This is a useful approach because, as you know, we are all approaching the Web in our own way, which means the experience is a little better different for you on your laptop than my on my iPhone or the next person on their pad.

Why is this important? Mobile consumption is about to surpass the tied-to-your-desk variety. The current watchdate is 2015.

The year 2015 is when Back to the Future II takes place, too. Just so you know.

What will people be doing online? A little bit of a lot of things, but mostly social media if current trends hold. A lot of news spreads via social networks at this point, so that’s not entirely a bad thing.

There’s also niche news sites, which are becoming a growing field.

Everyone’s friend Andy Carvin, on how he balances the job and his valuable role live-tweeting the Arab world. Sanity is a word that appears in the headline, so that’s something to keep in mind.


6
Sep 11

Unexpected home day

The phone has one of those customized ringtones that I prefer to make by hand. Oh, sure, I could download an app, stream a snippet of a song off of Telstar 6 and make everyone thing I’m contemporary. I could pull a file off of some site designed in 1996 and retrofitted to look like 1999 — please make it look like Angelfire! — and have a great Family Guy punchline as my ringtone.

Interesting, there’s a significantly large paragraph on Wikipedia’s Family Guy page for criticism. None of it has to do with how every one of their jokes is ripping off someone more clever.

Anyway, I could do those things with my phone. But I like to find songs no one has ever heard and edit the entire thing down to a 30 second snippet. I do this in Adobe’s Soundbooth, save it as an mp3 and then undertake the software steps necessary to convert the mp3 into something my phone will recognize. These steps are almost as complex as what launched Telstar 6 in 1999.

Rest assured, when I invent my time machine, the third trip I’m making is back to 1980. We’re going to have a talk about the old Apple slogan. I’m changing it to “Soon there will be 2 kinds of people. Those who use computers, and those who can’t people you have made such a ridiculous mess of iTunes.”

But I digress. The ringtone is important. Sets the tone and all of that. Also it tells you when your phone is ringing. I had a great De La Soul track from which I distilled an entire narrative into 30 seconds. Loved it. Everyone loved it. I grew self conscious of it, however. This is fits into the constructs of the person I imagine myself to be, but may defy the vision you have of me as independent, abstract character.

So I searched for new songs. I have another I love, a Fitz and the Tantrums song you’ve never heard. It is terrific, dramatic and soulful. It has to do with a metaphorical wind, and how this is going to change everything, and the intended target must simply deal with it. Great bass line, nice chorus, the perfect fade. It stands out when the phone rings. I may have to change the thing again.

I say this because it woke me up this morning, the ringing phone, from the other room. The Yankee said “Your phone is ringing.” After careful analysis we later concluded I said “Hrmmmmfarple potato sack race phone.”

The call went to voicemail. And then it rang again.

Fine. I’ll answer the farple potato sack race phone.

Turns out there were several message, most of them text alerts. The central portion of the state had been hit in a less than gentle way by the remnants of Tropical Storm Lee. There were trees down on roads. Water covered roads. Hundreds and thousands without the pleasant hum of power that keeps you living a few milliseconds up from Little House on the Praire. These things I new when I retired last evening.

This morning I learned that campus also had no power. The place was closed. Class was canceled. I made a call to the boss. We decided there would be no paper tonight. Various other phone calls and text messages were shipped off into the early morning.

“I’ll be working from home today.”

So I did that, watching as a grimly light, overcast morning turned into a drab, chilly afternoon. We turned off the air last night, opened the windows and let the cat enjoy bird sounds. This was the first day you could have the windows open since mid-May. This is unseasonably cool — I marked the evening with the first long-sleeved t-shirt of the year — but not unwelcome, and brought on entirely by the clouds from that storm.

Oh, we got some rain, and our temperatures dipped into the 50s, odd for September in Alabama, but that was the bulk of it here. We needed the rain and that was plenty. We also had four tornado warnings yesterday, but nothing came of them.

So I read and tinkered at home today. I watched a bit of television. I fell asleep so hard on the sofa the cat thought I was dead. The cat was not overly disturbed. (She knows the next three days of Catember are auto-posted. So long as she has food, water and is famous on the Internet, she’s fine.)

Linky things: If you are looking for me a $60-70,000 birthday/Christmas combo gift, I’ll just point you in the direction of the Switchblade, a flying motorcycle, or any of the comparable competitors out there. If that’s a little more than you want to spend on me, that’s fine. I have ideas in every price range.

But a flying motorcycle? Sixty-three miles to the gallon on the ground? An 800 mile range at about 155 miles per hour by air?

You could chip in with everyone else that has me on their shopping list and I would send you all the best individual thank you cards. If you are with a 400 mile radius I’d hand-deliver them, by air.

Time is now running two new Tumblr accounts. The first, Lightbox is based on their similar photoblogging efforts elsewhere. The second, Time on Tumblr, “aims to be a digital scrapbook of (Time’s) vintage work, its indelible cultural influence and our own anecdotes on the work we do.”

You think of all of those archives and you just want to say “Publish faster, guys!”

I can note this: A few weeks ago, I guess it was, I noted on Twitter that a squirrel had walked up onto the back porch and stole the grill’s cleaning brush. The brush is much larger than the squirrel, has no redeeming value (barely serving at that level as a grill brush) and would have presumably been too much plastic and heft for a rodent to carry in his jaw. But as was pointed out on Twitter, the squirrel heart what the squirrel heart wants.

We noticed over the weekend, while grilling, that the brush was gone. I gave a cursory glance around the yard, focusing on where the squirrel ditched the brush the last time — he’d escaped to the trees by way of the side of the house, and he could not leap, climb and hold his bristled friend. But the brush was not to be found.

Found it today. The squirrel carried the thing halfway through the yard, finally giving up his prize when he reached the neighbor’s fence.

I’m tying the brush to a hubcap.


6
Sep 11

Things to read

What comes next for journalism in the social media? David Cohn has assembled a list of sites you need. He ends with a caution:

If you ignore these sites, you will fail to understand how a growing portion of the population deals with the flow of information, and inevitably how more people will deal with this flow in the future. The best journalists will be problem solvers on the social web.

If you are a journalist your JOB is to understand and insert yourself into the flow of information. That’s what Google+ represents, the flow of information.

Meanwhile as to the branding of a journalist, here’s one successful case study, by Jennifer Gaie Hellum:

It takes extra effort to maintain an online presence as a journalist. And I admitted I couldn’t tell him which tweet would be the one that got him retweeted 25 times, which blog post would be shared around the world or which skill listed on his LinkedIn profile would make him rise to the top of a search.

Nonetheless, I assured him all that extra effort was worth it because each tweet, each blog post and each online profile defined his brand and provided a virtual trail for potential employers to find him. I told him I knew this personally because I’d sent tweets that got dozens of retweets, written a blog post that someone translated into Spanish and shared from Peru to Spain and been contacted for jobs via LinkedIn, all while I was still a grad student. And I said there was no reason he and his classmates couldn’t do the same.

Today’s j-school students have everything they need to start mapping out their careers. They can write niche blogs, create simple portfolios, connect with others doing the work they aspire to do and develop professional networks across the country before they’ve even begun their job searches.

The task is clear, then.

Statistics for journalists. Great primer, there. Ten rules for visual storytelling, from Professor Mindy McAdams at Florida. It starts with this:

“I want to know more. I always want to know who, when, and where. Always! For me this is part of authentication, which is part of what makes it journalism and not interpretive art. A photo without a caption is not journalism.”

A photo without a caption is far short of adequate reporting.

This week marks the 10th anniversary of the Sept. 11th attacks, of course. Here’s how the Wall Street Journal, headquartered across the street from the World Trade Center, published their Pulitzer Prize-winning Sept. 12, 2001 edition.

Here’s an image of their rare six-column headline. They hadn’t ran that style since Pearl Harbor was attacked. The headlines — how do you cover a story that everyone knows about? — are instructive.

Meanwhile, our shared experience is becoming history. Here a teacher tells of his students with no memory of Sept. 11th. Too young. That changes things, doesn’t it? If you’re in college today you were probably 8- to 12-years-old. How does your generation perceive Sept. 11th? How has that perception changed in the last decade?

You’re welcome for free the story idea.

Quick hits: TV in the cloud, which gets to the heart of something mentioned here previously. This, too, will become a stratified industry as executives retrenches online. Here’s a bit more on the shifts in television distribution.

Finally, Professor Dan Gillmor said two interesting things on Twitter yesterday:

Journalists stopped being gatekeepers when they became stenographers, a long time ago.

The gatekeeper of the future is you. You will designate the people (and orgs) you trust to tell you what is going on.

That second statement is of great interest, both for you as a journalist and as a consumer. Which noun form do you suspect “you” takes there?