Archives for June 2010

Newspapers Break the Mask of Anonymity

As traditional journalism (print and broadcast) struggles to find a way in the digital realm, one of the biggest hurdles has been how to deal with the feedback. Reporters and editors aren’t used to “listening” in an age where everyone can be a publisher. Sure, there are “Letters to the Editor,” but those always came with the caveat and expectation of heavy moderation.

Later, it occurred to newsrooms that allowing people to comment on stories would be great. Anything involving your community of readers must be good; if it drives pageviews, then so much the better. But they were not ready to deal with the problems of trolls and astroturf (like I chronicled in Alabama’s Bingo Battle.)

The award-winning Anniston Star and all its sister publications at Consolidated Publishing are turning the Klieg lights on the cockroaches with a new policy for online comments: [Read more…]

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The Library in Your Friend List

I don’t like talking about current events much, because they have a tendency to soon be not-so-current. But one in particular may signal the tipping point of a trend that is of extreme relevance to the way you and I find useful information.

The rumor is that Google is developing a true Facebook competitor called “Google Me.” I’m not interested in the details of whether they are, but rather the facts behind why Google needs to.

Why Google shouldn’t?

There are always the concerns when a business gets away from its core, and Google has had its share of outright bumbles. Buzz and Wave may not be great, but they aren’t horrible either. And when you’re the size of Google, you don’t pretend to live in just one box. In fact, you could say the acquisition of Youtube was brilliant, as Youtube is now the world’s number two search engine (behind the almighty G itself.) Youtube might never turn a profit, but there’s no telling how valuable the data under the surface might be.

Which brings us to the reason Google ought to be firing up a major competitor to Facebook: because Facebook may yet provide the greatest threat to Google’s core search business. [Read more…]

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Kill Art and Craft, and you Might Share The Coffin

One of the finest compliments I ever received was from Dan Cates, who was then my assistant news director at the ABC affiliate in Birmingham.

“I wish I had a whole newsroom full of Ike Pigotts.”

It was weeks before I could walk through a doorway without my big head getting in the way.

I knew what he was talking about, but even then, I knew how bad that would be. Every reporter brings a different perspective and approach to their stories, and some approaches work better for certain needs. That’s because at that time, there was still an art to storytelling in television news. The artist who works in oils might be a horrible sculptor, or might not paint well high on scaffolding. If you believe in bringing the right tools for the job at hand, then part of a news manager’s job was to match up the right personnel with the story that needed telling. [Read more…]

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Space and Time

How space affects a woman’s perception of time.

Conclusion:

Apparently, space increases overall satisfaction.

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When Should You Aim?

Fire. Ready. Aim.

It’s a common enough phrase, and it describes the manner in which people or organizations jump before knowing where they will land. It describes those instances where there was no strategy or thought into a goal before one starts an activity.

We make fun of those people, and the silly mistakes they make. But consider this story: [Read more…]

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So Right, You’re Wrong

I got an interesting piece of feedback from my Seven Signs and the Jena Six post about some ways you can identify a potentially viral rumor or message that would damage your organizational reputation. Essentially, the comment boiled down to a question about the ranking of those threat factors, because Emotion tends to turn even the most judicious of thinkers into a hair-trigger auto-forwarding machine.

Here was my response: [Read more…]

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Are you slapping skin or are you dancing?

Did you see this viral video? The drummer who is in the wrong band? If not, then watch it, because there is a lesson here.

You may want to click into it about a minute or so, and then things will be more apparent. While the rest of the band is performing ZZ Top’s Sharp-Dressed Man (in a pedestrian manner, no less), the drummer is just playing.

The song is not that complicated, three chords and a cloud of dust. But the drummer is taking it to a different place entirely, because his focus isn’t on slapping the skins.

The Master Sought a Master

If you get an opportunity, check out the documentary “Rush: Beyond the Lighted Stage.” VH-1 will air it Saturday night, June 26 at 9p.m. Eastern. I had a chance to see it in the theater a couple of weeks ago, and it is highly entertaining even if you don’t like the band. But in particular, watch for the segment with drummer Neil Peart and his drumming guru, Freddy Gruber. [Read more…]

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