CCJ Tools

Journal gets a Murdoch makeover

By RJI on December 17, 2007 0 Comments

In the Wall Street Journal newsroom on Dec. 13, the day the paper officially became News Corp. property, Rupert Murdoch and new publisher Robert Thomson addressed hundreds of reporters who came loaded with plenty of questions.

Is This Any Way to Win a War?

By RJI on December 14, 2007 0 Comments

MISSION STATEMENT: Public Affairs fulfills the Army’s obligation to keep the American people and the Army informed, and helps to establish the conditions that lead to confidence in America’s Army and its readiness to conduct operations in peacetime, conflict and war.

Surge 'Meet' Escalation

By RJI on December 14, 2007 0 Comments

Nothing has the capacity to frame political debate more successfully than a good turn of phrase, characterization, or metaphor; nor can anything do more to pervert democratic discourse than inaccurate, imprecise, or misleading language. George Orwell understood the game and called its bluff more than sixty years ago. In words that offered an eerie forecast of the rhetoric of Vietnam, he noted that “defenceless villages are bombarded from the air, the inhabitants driven out into the countryside, the cattle machine- gunned, the huts set on fire with incendiary bullets: this is called pacification.”

Covering the World

By RJI on December 14, 2007 0 Comments

The elevator transported the visitor from the gray squalor of Jakarta into a bygone era: a bustling news bureau with seasoned foreign correspondents, photographers, a TV camera crew and a network of stringers. The only thing missing was the clatter of the Teletype machine.

A sign in the hallway read, "The Associated Press."

Regret The Error' Posts Top Corrections Of The Year

By RJI on December 12, 2007 0 Comments

NEW YORK Barack Obama appears to have been the top target for press errors among candidates in the presidential campaign, according to regrettheerror.com, which posted its top media errors and corrections today.

Strike deadlock cancels TCA press tour

By RJI on December 11, 2007 0 Comments

The January TCA press tour became the latest casualty of the writers' strike. Dave Walker sent word to members of the Television Critics Association Monday night that he has reluctantly become the first TCA president ever to cancel one of the biannual press tours.

Addressing Errors

By RJI on December 11, 2007 0 Comments

Suggestions for handling errors and corrections in a way that your readers and viewers will appreciate:

Five Rules for Building a Successful Online Community

By RJI on December 10, 2007 0 Comments

The following is a summary of an article Robin Miller wrote for the Annenberg Center for Communication at USC's Online Journalism Review about how to bring your website's discussion areas "to life."

After AP Airs Hot Quote, 'NYT' Posts Upcoming Huckabee Profile

By RJI on December 10, 2007 0 Comments

NEW YORK The New York Times posted on its Web site today a lengthy profile of suddenly serious Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee that will not appear in print until this Sunday.

The Associated Press circulated last night a hot quote from the profile that gained wide attention, and then the Times put up the piece, titled "The Huckabee Factor." The quote AP used from Huckabee was: "Don't Mormons believe that Jesus and the devil are brothers?"

Viewers' Choice

By RJI on December 5, 2007 0 Comments

How can a local television station be more responsive to its viewers? One idea comes from KMOL-TV in San Antonio, TX, [now WOAI-TV] where the station asked its audience to help decide what stories it should cover. The weekly feature, called "You Choose the News," offered a menu of three or four topics that viewers could vote for, by phone or e-mail. The winning story appeared on the 10 p.m. newscast the following night.

Telling the News Through Conversation

By RJI on December 4, 2007 0 Comments

How many times have you been advised to "people-ize" your stories? Nothing wrong with the idea, but in practice, it often means just grabbing some M.O.S (man on the street) interviews at the scene. Consider an alternative approach: Ask people to discuss the subject among themselves, and shoot their conversation.

Does Diversity Make a Great Newsroom?

By RJI on December 3, 2007 0 Comments

If the question is "Does diversity make a great newsroom?" the answer simply and apparently is "no." Simply taking the Epcot Center, Small World, one from Column A, two from Column B approach to personnel matters will not give you a great newsroom.

Getting Past Barriers to Newsroom Communication

By RJI on November 26, 2007 0 Comments

While copy editors often lament that managers and others don't listen to their complaints, a San Jose (Calif.) Mercury News manager suggested [recently] that those barriers to communication are sometimes created by the copy editors themselves.

Using Graphics in Continuing Coverage

By RJI on November 20, 2007 0 Comments

In an October 10, 2007 article on the Global Journalist web site, Andre Schiffrin laments the control French president Nicholas Sarkozy has been exerting over the press and describes the state of media ownership in the country.

Using Context to Make Stories Interesting

By RJI on November 19, 2007 0 Comments

David Halberstam was a 1964 Pulitzer Prize winner for his coverage of the war in Vietnam for the New York Times and best-selling author of The Best and the Brightest, The Powers That Be, The Children and many other works of non-fiction. Halberstam died in a car accident in April 2007. The following excerpt is from notes taken by CCJ Founding Chairman Bill Kovach on November 9, 1996.

New Citizen Journalism Sites Add to '08 Presidential Campaign Coverage

By RJI on November 14, 2007 0 Comments

Pauline Millard, E&P's online editor, writes:

Two new citizen journalism sites are offering coverage of the 2008 presidentiral election, according to EditorsWeblog.org.

OffTheBus.com (OTB) is a project launched by The Huffington Post for the campaign. Arianna Huffington and Jay Rosen of New York University publish OTB.

Everyone's Guide to By-Passing Internet Censorship

By RJI on November 13, 2007 0 Comments

In September 2007, Citizen Lab, a project of the Munk Centre for International Studies at the University of Toronto, published an electronic guide to help journalists and all international citizens get past Internet restrictions in their countries.

Hyperlocal Copy Editing

By RJI on November 7, 2007 0 Comments

If newspapers and Web sites are getting increasingly local in their coverage to survive, shouldn’t we also have copy editors become increasingly local? Instead of consolidating copy desks, why not have copy editors work more closely with reporters, not only in the main newsroom but also in newspaper bureaus?

Rethinking "The Merc"

By RJI on November 5, 2007 0 Comments

The San Jose Mercury News is trying to get readers involved in an overhaul of the newspaper and its website. The interactive project "Rethinking the Merc" is an attempt to find out from readers what they want in their local news organization.

This is a great example of an organization making more than just a token recognition of the role the public plays - and should play - in deciding the direction of its local news provider.

Living Your News Organization's Values

By RJI on November 5, 2007 0 Comments

The United Kingdom's Guardian news organization has put both thought and meaningful effort into assessing how what it does and how it does it measures up to the "high standards" outlined by the CP Scott Trust, which owns the organization.