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19
Feb 15

Are you staying warm?

I feel like universities should, every so often, make a big move to return to their classic looks. Once about every 10 years would do it. You’d have a new audience in current students and a new audience in recent alumni, plus you’d keep the branding fresh. Also, this guy is awesome and I want to buy something with him on it:

Sammy U

That’s found on the ground floor of F. Page Seibert Hall, a 4,240-seat arena. Seibert, a Florida businessman, put a lot of money into the university. Seibert also gave a great deal of money to Florida Presbyterian College, but his Samford donation was the largest in the university’s history at that time, and finished the building carrying his name in 1961. A decade ago, his grandchildren also donated a tidy sum of money for athletic upgrades. So there’s no mystery why that name is a prominent one on campus. We just don’t know why they don’t use that particular bulldog.

One other thing:


17
Feb 15

If we ignore the weather, it will go away, right?

This is ridiculous.

Bearing in mind that when I wrote that in the 8 o’clock hour here it was 5:41 a.m. in Anchorage. Ridiculous. And, also, quite the chilly day. Nothing to do about it but shiver. Because my offices never get warm. (Until about April.) So there I sat for most of the day, space heater six inches from skin, wrapped up in various clothing patterns, hoping for the best, or at least some temporary global warming. Even a bit of change would have been good. We’re all ready for spring, I think.

Newspaper fun today. This is, apparently, the rumor addition of the paper. Not so keen on that. Rumors are rumors, after all. That’s what Yik Yak is for. Right?

I tried Yik Yak. I lurked for a bit and then posted one or two things there and lurked for a bit more. I lurked in more than one community, as the quasi-anonymous platform (but not really) is geography based. I suppose if you have something to get off your chest it would be good for those thinking they can do so without proper retort. But that seems to the biggest extent of it. (I’ve read a few pro Yik Yak stories and they all have the same positive Yik Yak anecdote. You’d like to see more, suggesting they have more than the one, but not yet.) And that’s kind of depressing. So I deleted it.

So I’m playing with new platforms this week — watching and reading how others are experimenting. I’d like to venture out to the bleeding edge of things again. Once upon a time I got to play with stuff that was brand new and that no one had ever really tried. I can do that again. But first I have to make sure I’m caught up on what’s going on today. And so here we are.

Saw this while out to dinner this evening:

sticker

I’m not a big sticker-on-the-car guy, most messages being ephermal, but the anti-sticker sticker seems especially weird. Hey, someone made four bucks off of you! Congratulations!

I do enjoy the “0.0” sticker, and I run. Or shuffle.

Things to read … or at least shuffle through.

As I have not received my rejection notice, I suppose I am still in the running on this. That’s the way these things work, right? 100 Candidates Selected for One-Way Mission to Mars:

Over the past two years, more than 200,000 people have applied to be the first colonists on Mars (that we know of), and now the pool has been narrowed down to 100. The Dutch nonprofit Mars One intends to send just four people on a one-way mission to the red planet that’s scheduled to leave Earth in 2024. According to the Washington Post, the most recent cut was made after chief medical officer Norbert Kraft interviewed 660 candidates. Now 24 people will be selected for training by undergoing the most rigorous competition known to humankind: being a reality-show contestant.

Of course I didn’t apply, so there’s that.

That story is 289 words, in total, and you’ll be hard-pressed to find 300 words that better define our era than that little post.

Coverage does not equal care. Out of Pocket, Out of Control:

In the past five years, the average price to see a primary care doctor has risen 20 percent. For a specialist it’s gone up 29 percent, and for outpatient surgery it’s up 43 percent. And that’s just for employer-sponsored insurance; on average, those covered through the Affordable Care Act’s exchanges face even higher expenses.

No wonder 22 percent of people now say the cost of getting care has led them to delay treatment for a serious condition. That’s the highest percentage since Gallup started asking in 2001. Another poll found that as many as 16 million adults with chronic conditions have avoided the doctor because of out-of-pocket costs.

See if you can find the key here, Posting a photo is the worst way to get people to see your Facebook posts:

Data provided to Business Insider by the social-media analytics company Socialbakers shows just how badly photos perform compared with videos, links, and even simple text-only posts in terms of reach on Facebook.

What makes this data so remarkable is that it wasn’t so long ago that posting photos used to give brand page owners the best chance of their posts being seen by their fans (indeed, a Socialbakers study dated April 2014 declared “Photos Are Still King On Facebook”). Now the algorithm has changed, punishing photos, perhaps in response to page owners trying to game the system by constantly posting photos, or maybe because Facebook has been shifting its strategy ever more toward video in recent months.

The numbers keep climbing: Smartphone Penetration, Rising in All Age and Income Demos, Hits 75% of the US Mobile Market.

The end of the beginning of the beginning’s end, TV ad model: Dead:

Television as we knew it died this week at 73. Or at least the advertising model did. Boomers and Generation X won’t have to quit ad blocks cold turkey but they will note that a growing percentage of what they see will be ads for retirement villages and Cialis. The kids, which in this case means anyone under 34, are moving online and the money is going with them.

Commercials started with a 10-second spot for Bulova watches during a baseball game in 1941. The death blow came yesterday during PepsiCo’s (PEP) conference call when CEO Indra Nooyi said her company’s ad budget would stay at 5.9% of revenues but be “reallocated.” A Pepsi spokesperson tells Yahoo Finance that means “realloacted to consumer facing activities.” I read that to mean moving ads off television and into other formats.

5.9% of PepsiCo’s 2014 revenues works out to roughly $3.9 billion. They’re the company that brought us Katy Perry and Left Shark, for God’s sake. Sports was the last great hope for ads and one of its biggest backers is drawing the line. There’s nothing in Indra Nooyi’s history to suggest she’s bluffing.

But don’t take PepsiCo’s word for it. Omnicom Media (OMC) which positions some $50 billion worth of ads a year for not just Pepsi but Apple (AAPL), McDonald’s (MCD) and Starbucks (SBUX) advised its clients to shift 25% of their budgets away from TV last year.

You live in a transitional time, to be sure.

Another, sad transition:

I don’t know Larry Stogner, in fact I’ve never even been in his market to view his work, which, of a sudden, seems a shame. But it is clear what his community has meant to him and, having known people like that in a handful of local media markets, I have a good guess what he means to the community.

At some point, not too far off, we’ll see more and more farewells. It is a generational thing. And then more people will come along and be important and stay in one market for a long time and then they’ll retire to see their grandbabies or because the pension kicks in or because they want to travel or are ill. And then that’ll be the end of it. By then every TV newsroom will likely be some version of the hub-and-spoke model and the local feel will, improbably, fade away. (You’ve seen it in radio, it is happening in some aspects of the newspaper business and, already, in some smaller television markets.) We live in a transitional time.

Atlanta’s been on this tear for a while, but as you’ll see the migration isn’t limited to north Georgia. It all started when the northerners realized we’d mastered air conditioning, and they’d ruined their rivers. Mercedes-Benz’s move to Georgia is the latest in an epic and under-reported migration:

According to the latest Census figures, the South was the fastest-growing region in America over the past decade, up 14 percent. “The center of population has moved south in the most extreme way we’ve ever seen in history,” Robert Groves, director of the Census Bureau, said at a news conference in 2011.

“The hegira to the Sunbelt continues, as last year the South accounted for six of the top eight states attracting domestic migrants,” Joel Kotkin reported in The Daily Beast in 2013.

And it isn’t just millions of American citizens packing their bags and heading south. Last month, in a move that shocked residents of northern New Jersey, Daimler’s Mercedes-Benz USA announced it was moving its headquarters from Montvale (just miles from where I grew up) to Sandy Springs, Ga. And it’s bringing nearly 1,000 people along with it, at an average salary of nearly $80,000 per worker.

I kid, of course. Tax incentives, infrastructure and a willing workforce are just as important as clean rivers.

This story is just getting itchier, isn’t it? To shill a mockingbird: How a manuscript’s discovery became Harper Lee’s ‘new’ novel Neely Tucker is a son of the South, a seventh-generation Mississippi boy. He’s perhaps got as good a read on this as most any outsider could.


13
Feb 15

No helicopters were shot down during this presentation

No kidding:

After about three hours of sleep last night — working and reworking slides takes time — I made it over to the Alabama Press Association’s convention in plenty of time to get set up for my opening morning session. We got through the technical difficulties, the APA folks were great, and then a few people strolled in. I knew one or two. I met two or three others. I figured that it would be a light crowd. Early morning, a topic like “Vetting User Generated Content” and other options meant I might not be the biggest draw.

My friend Bob Davis, who is the editor of the Anniston Star, came up to talk for a few moments. When he sat down a nice APA member was ready to introduce me and the room was full. Just look at Bob’s photo above.

So I spoke and talked and then spoke and talked. I told a few jokes. I live-tweeted my own speech — actually I scheduled some topical tweets last night and guessed on the times and it all worked out to the amazement of a few people. I only made one Brian Williams joke (and one David Carr reference). It all seemed well-received. I got some nice questions. I was hoping for a bit more back-and-forth, I thought it might be nice to hear from others about what their outlets are doing with UGC, but that didn’t happen. But there were nods and compliments.

My slides:

I stayed after my session to hear some of our students who were leading a panel session on their journalism. Here’s managing editor Halley Smith, editor-in-chief Sydney Cromwell and news editor Emily Featherston (l-r):

Crimson

I took notes:

Then I hustled back to campus and grabbed a bit of lunch. I had some class prep. I had a class. After class I helped a student worked through some story ideas. And then I hoped in the car and put the sun behind me:

Mirror

East it was, then, to Atlanta. Almost made it there before dark, but for the ubiquitous traffic and an unfortunate accident I passed along the way. Made it there in time, though. There was a concert. A terrific show.

And I’ll put stuff here about that tomorrow.


12
Feb 15

A thousand words, and none about sleep

Another long day and late night. And it will continue on well into tomorrow.

I am writing an amazing presentation and slideshow, or at least one that will, hopefully, be helpful. I get to address the Alabama Press Association’s winter convention tomorrow and I’d like to at least make a good use of their valuable time.

I only have one Brian Williams joke in the entire thing. And, now, sadly, a David Carr observation. I just happened to be online when that started to unfold, just in from dinner, and it was strangely handled, which would amuse Carr. I found a recent video of him and he was just a shell of himself; the guy must have been going through something terrible.

You’ll see this again this weekend:

It has been a quarter of a century, by the way.

I was once told by a professor, in the 90s, that Michael Jordan no longer had any marketing star power. Pretty laughable in retrospect. But, here again, no one ages in an age when everything is available for recall and repeat.

Things to read … because they’re better than my sports tweets.

From the If You’re Not Doing Anything Wrong You Have Nothing To Worry About Dept, Government wonders: What’s in your old emails?

If you’ve been remiss in cleaning out your email in-box, here’s some incentive: The federal government can read any emails that are more than six months old without a warrant.

Little known to most Americans, ambiguous language in a communications law passed in 1986 extends Fourth Amendment protections against unreasonable search and seizure only to electronic communications sent or received fewer than 180 days ago.

The language, known as the “180-day rule,” allows government officials to treat any emails, text messages or documents stored on remote servers – popularly known as the cloud – as “abandoned” and therefore accessible using administrative subpoena power, a tactic that critics say circumvents due process.

As you rush to purge your Gmail and Dropbox accounts, however, be forewarned that even deleted files still could be fair game as long as copies exist on a third-party server somewhere.

There’s nothing especially new in that excerpt, but it remains spooky. If you’re snooping around for intel on bad guys or crimes, the contemporaneous information would seem to be more valuable. So what makes this so important?

This is pretty great, Telling stories in 3-D in an immersive, interactive and integrative way:

Professions like architecture and the gaming industry have integrated 3-D technologies into their day-to-day workflow. But journalism hasn’t been as fast to integrate. To demonstrate 3-D capabilities in journalism, we’ve been working on a story about a young fashion designer who draws inspiration from a University of Missouri 175th anniversary exhibit of historic costumes. This story also forms a good backdrop to illustrate a near-term future scenario where 3-D content can be an integral part of the stories we consume and share.

The story was appealing for multiple reasons. The historic costume collection features pieces from prominent university leaders whose names are associated with some of the landmark buildings on campus. The three-dimensional nature of these dresses and richness of detail present interesting workflow challenges to produce 3-D content for storytelling. Moreover, the viewers who see this exhibit in person are not allowed to touch them, given their age and fragility. This provides an interesting opportunity for 3-D technologies to present an engaging story allowing the viewers to interact with virtual representations of these historic costumes. We were also keen to use off-the-shelf hardware and software technologies that are affordable for any news organization.

I like that last point a lot.

She’s a 4-foot-11 college senior with a constant smile. She’s also a lot tougher than you or me. Auburn gymnast Bri Guy inspires Tigers with incredible recovery from two torn Achilles tendons:

Guy was actually dealing with an injury few trainers ever see. Gymnasts are prone to tearing one Achilles tendon; tearing both at the same time is a little like a trainer’s version of seeing a unicorn.

“I have never heard of it,” Auburn trainer Janet Taylor said. “The doctors that we worked with hadn’t heard of it, either.”

A single Achilles tear takes roughly six months to resume normal activity. A gymnast usually takes six to eight months to return to action. Doctors figured tearing both should take even longer.

“I don’t think they had any idea of me doing anything remotely close to what I’m doing right now,” Guy said. “They thought, ‘it’s February, maybe she’ll start doing one or two events’ not ‘she’s going full speed on three events, trying to do a fourth.'”

We were there when it happened. It was a loud and boisterous meet. She was taking the floor, the last routine and her team was very possibly going to get an upset win. It looked like she felt the tendons go and she did what she could, but she landed on her head.

She was still. The place got very quiet very fast. She protected her head and neck somehow and by the time they carted her off she had that beautiful smile on her face again. It was great to see it on her face again last weekend and she continues working on her comeback. Can’t wait to see her do that fourth event, the floor, again.


29
Jan 15

About that burrito bowl

Random sighting in the cafeteria:

cereal

You just don’t see a big mound of large bags of cereal every day. And, given the lunch the last few days, this was looking pretty good. They brought in this new vendor last fall — because food is definitely a place you seek out the lowest bidder. Meanwhile …

I … just …

Things to read … because that’s a screwed-up picture.

Tomorrow is the anniversary, Remember ‘The Great Raid’ of 1945:

A group of more than 100 Army Rangers, Alamo Scouts and Filipino guerrillas traveled 30 miles behind Japanese lines to reach the camp. Along the route, other guerrillas in the villages muzzled dogs and put chickens in cages lest they alert the Japanese.

The 30-minute raid liberated 513 POWs.

Some of them weighed so little the Rangers could carry two men on their backs. At a rendezvous point, trucks and 26 carabao carts — local wooden carts — waited to carry them to safety. Villagers along the way contributed more carts because the Americans had little or no clothing and shoes, and it became increasingly difficult for them to walk. By the time they reached American lines, 106 carts were being used.

Audacious things are done by audacious individuals.

Such great news, ‘Rescue Ship’ rescued: ‘Batmobile’ driven by 1980s Birmingham good Samaritan set for restoration:

“It’s like ‘Where’d this thing come from?'” said Lee Shook, who’s making a documentary about the car. “It’s a time capsule. It’s amazing.”

The 1971 Ford Thunderbird is labeled the “Rescue Ship,” and three decades ago that’s exactly what it was.

In the early 1980s, Willie J. Perry drove the car around Birmingham looking for people who ran out of gas, had a flat tire or otherwise needed a helping hand. The Rescue Ship was an icon, covered with flashing lights and a flashy paint job, and equipped with a record player, toaster oven, and more inside.

The future!

Graphic Body Cam Footage Shows Oklahoma Cop Shoot and Kill Fleeing Suspect
Microsoft’s HoloLens Is a Viral Hit. Next Test: Real Life

And the present, The state of the ombudsman in 2015:

Daniel Okrent, who served as The New York Times’ first public editor, made reference to a “downgrading” of the position, based mostly on financial constraints.

“At a time when newsrooms are shrinking and news holes are shrinking, the idea of paying someone to criticize a newspaper is perceived by management as more and more obtuse,” he said.

The position is often the first to go when news executives are trying to trim their budgets.

“Do we really want to be spending scarce resources on an in-house critic?” New York University journalism professor Jay Rosen asked, hypothetically. “There’s the sense that media criticism rains down on us from all sides. Isn’t it better to let outsiders handle it?”

Buzzfeed editor in chief Ben Smith has often said as much—that the instant Twitter critics make a formal ombudsman unneccessary for the company.

Maybe I’m alone in this, but it seems that this is exactly the reason we need public editors right now. There’s such a thing as getting in front of an issue.

Need to be overwhelmed by data in numbers? The Internet in Real Time

And, finally, I’m told this happens in schools all over the country now. ‘No zeros’ grading policy awards students half credit for work they don’t turn in:

A policy instituted by Principal Nichole Davis Williams in the fall states that “Students should not receive a grade lower than 50.” This means that students at the school can fail to turn in work, and still receive some credit for the work.

[…]

The policy, which is not a district-wide policy, was implemented after a parent questioned her child’s low score on a progress report, the teachers said. Some students who are aware of the policy aren’t doing classwork and projects, and just taking 50s. The teachers said they have noticed behavioral problems they believe to be connected to that policy.

“Students aren’t learning because we can’t get them to do the work,” one of the teachers told AL.com. “When do we hold the students accountable?”

Can’t imagine what that does to the culture of the campus.