MeFe Blog
Friday, May 3, 2013
Monday, April 29, 2013
Week Twelve: CHAOS!!!!!!!
Bob Garfield’s
opinions in Chaos Scenario were very…
strong. I wasn’t a huge fan of the jargon. It may be direct, but I prefer to be
treated like an intelligent audience. Looking past that, however, Garfield’s
arguments can’t be ignored—if they can be disputed. Admittedly I don’t really
have much stock in television—it’s nice to flip it on and watch Family Guy or How I Met Your Mother, but it’s not anything I’d hate to live
without. What’s more disturbing to me is the state of the New York Times (or the New
York Fuckin’ Times, as Garfield
so aptly calls it) and other papers, which are struggling as an industry. The
fact that even the Times struggled
off to pay its debt of $400 million is more indicative of this fact of
anything. However, I don’t think that newspapers are going to die off. Other
print media are still around—Kindles haven’t eradicated books yet. It’s true
that it’s far easier to put a newspaper’s contents online than a book’s due to
length, and we’re seeing a lot more of that with the latter. However,
newspapers have weathered the test of time and the changes that accompany it.
Radio didn’t obliterate papers, and neither did television. The Internet is the
next big thing, but it, like every other media that was once new, does not
guarantee the same qualities that print does. Having the same material online
is just not the same, for online material is under pressure to be short and
watered-down. Online material of the print media will likely at one time or
another assimilate to these standards to reach readers, setting them apart from
their printed counterparts. Thus there will still be a demand for a product
that’s still original. I’ll be the first to admit not knowing enough to make an
adequate hypothesis, but there it is. Have at it like piranhas.
I was one of the
few kids who read the Times last
semester—before things got insanely busy, anyhow. One of the things that struck
me was that the coverage on Romney exceeded the coverage on Obama during the
2012 presidential campaign, but I supposed that that was because Romney was the
new candidate. Speaking as a liberal, I do not believe the Times is slanted. Of course, I don’t really read the Opinion
section where the slant purportedly shows. Anyhow, I chose “In Gun Bill Defeat,
a President Who Hesitates to Twist Arms” for this week because I’m trying to
follow the standing of gun control in America. One thing I found interesting
was the statement that Obama “rarely demonstrated an appetite for ruthless
politics that instills fear in lawmakers.” What about drones, then? I do love
Obama, but I wouldn’t call his instances of ruthlessness rare. However, I do
agree that Obama uses reason to get his way quite often (more often), as this
is one of the many things I like about him. I wouldn’t have seen this if not
for the NYTimes because I deactivated
my Facebook and am not active with Twitter, and I don’t own a radio or a car or
a television or seek out television news. Talk about cut off.
Sunday, April 21, 2013
Week Eleven: Public Relations
PR is one of those
topics I admittedly know nothing about but have long been interested in in
theory. Thus it’s probably the only topic we’ve discussed this year I’m
completely objective about. (It must be a nice break for others having to read
me spout off on my blog.) I liked our discussion in regards to it on Monday and
found it interesting that a few students were wary of it. As a journalist,
should I be wary of PR? I’m still not sure, though Wednesday’s class gave me a
bit of an idea. I’ve actually got endless admiration for the people who have to
put up with politicians’ crap and was highly amused at John Coffin’s reaction
to the question: “What do you do when your politician makes a really stupid mistake?” (I’m
paraphrasing here.) I mean, at that point, there’s really nothing to be done
except back slowly away. Too bad for Mourdock. Mwahahahahahaha. (Pardon my
schadenfreude.) Going off on another tangent: like Franki, I had no idea about
DePauw’s party ranking upon coming here—to be truthful, it amused me more than
anything—so DePauw’s PR people must’ve done a good job covering that up. My mom
actually just today made a remark on seeing DePauw’s high academic ranking and
how she knew it was good, but not that
good. Bravo! Brava! Bravi! to public relations. My expectations are a little
bit more specific this week. I’d love to talk more about how PR ties into our
careers, especially if we’re aspiring journalists.
Because of a
continuing discourse on gun background checks, I decided to go with “Seeking
Gun or Selling One, Web Is a Land of Few Rules.” I had a bit of an idea from
the aforementioned discourse but was mostly unaware of the online spin, so no,
I wouldn’t have known about this without the good ol’ New York Times. Anyhow, Armslist
is just… ugh. First of all, I love the hypocrisy of their theoretical mission
of “creat[ing] a place for law-abiding gun owners to buy and sell online
without all of the hassles of auction and shipping” while selling guns to
people who legally cannot own them. (77% of sellers would sell guns to people
who admitted they probably wouldn’t pass a background check, it says later in
the article.) Then it feels the need
to “protect the anonymity of their users.” Everything about this operation is
shady, sounding paradoxical to “law-abiding.” I’m honestly aghast at people’s
problem-solving skills or lack thereof. If this disgusting franchise is going
to continue (and it will, beyond any doubt), background checks have to be done
in tandem with the sales.
Anyhow, salaam, shalom,
peace out, wear a flower, promote positive change, and make love, not war!
Sunday, April 14, 2013
Week Ten: Lectures Galore!
Last Friday we heard Dave Weatherwax, photographer for the South Bend
Tribune. His lecture was pretty interesting. What stood out for me,
however, was his point that some local story beat Bin Ladin’s capture
for the front page story and picture. Pardon the strong reaction that is
to follow, but... what the hell? Is small town media really that
self-absorbed? I understand that a drastic occurrence hitting a little
closer to home (literally) is the easier draw, but why not at least put a
little of both stories on the front page rather than allow a huge photo
to hog all the room? (Yes, I understand that this is in direct
contradiction to the lecture, but... I think what I think.) This is
nothing against Dave--it’s more a question for the editor than
anything--and most newspapers in smaller towns are surely in this vein
of thinking, but I just find it ridiculous to condone the insular frame
of mind that is exhibited by many Americans today.
On Monday we were graced with the presence of Kim McDaniel who works with various media for the Salt Lake Tribune. I didn’t really understand the ideas surrounding various online media, but the manner in which the Salt Lake Tribune,
a print source, connected to audiences using Facebook, Twitter, etc.
was really fascinating, especially in how it reached differing
demographics. I think it ties in really well with Losing The News in that the Tribune,
along with many other papers, is doing what’s necessary to
survive--going multimedia. I only know what Facebook and Twitter are and
have no clue about anything other platform mentioned, but I think I got
the gist of it: online media are being integrated into print news.
Papers are reaching out to new audiences by expanding their output to
online media. It’s neat.
Wednesday
might’ve been my favorite class this week. Even though I couldn’t
really relate to Jill’s stories about the Ellen (Degeneres?) show, her
enthusiasm was infectious. Besides, I’ve always wanted to go to
Australia. What she said about working her way up by doing tasks quickly
and thinking on her feet is applicable to most any occupation, so I did
appreciate that bit of advice. I learned from Alyssa the benefit of
interning at smaller locations. She mentioned getting to do a lot of
things while she was in Paducah, KY, even directing a little bit.
There’s the logical progression of everybody knowing each other and then
the also obvious idea of less people, more work. It sounds vastly
appealing. I enjoyed Dave’s talk and appreciated that he disagreed with
the commonly-held belief that downloading songs was leading to the music
industry’s demise. I did wonder why he wasn’t in the School of Music if
he aspired to be a musician as early as college, but I forgot to ask.
Whoops.
Talking
to Angie over Skype on Friday was really cool because before college,
I’d listened to NPR for most of my life. Now that I don’t own a radio or
a car, it’s less practical to do so. However, I’ve always been
impressed by the balanced perspectives. (At a young age I recognized
this; Dad never failed to scream at an opposing viewpoint, provided it
was dumb enough.) Of course NPR also exudes a quality in its news output
that is nothing to be sneezed at. It’s the only source I trust that
isn’t a newspaper. Anyhow, what I found perhaps most interesting about
Angie’s lecture was the fact that NPR receives no government funding. I
knew that they pushed the donations from listening to the show so often,
but I guess I didn’t realize why.
For
this week’s article analysis, I chose Friday’s “With Police in Schools,
More Children in Court.” So far police officers are creating new
problems, and it’s unclear as to whether or not they’re solving the
problem at hand. (The NRA has seized the opportunity to advance their
views according to the anecdotes they provided in the article.) What
seems to be the issue here is this: school officers are hypervigilant.
They’re wasting their time on the smaller issues, which could mean
they’re missing the bigger ones. (Marijuana crowd: does this sound
familiar to you?) Until this problem is solved and officers learn to
treat school principals as superiors except in cases of emergency, it is
unfair to judge their effectiveness. I would not have known about this
were it not for the NYTimes.
Without a working laptop, I didn't even know Margaret Thatcher died
until Media Fellows class later on that day. The one I have right now
has a slow connection because I haven’t got an ethernet adaptor, so I
still don’t receive much news. Anyway, my point is proven.
I
know not what my expectations are for subsequent classes, but I do know
that they are high. All of the alumni and guest lectures this week got
my head spinning about internship possibilities, and, needless to say,
I’m excited.
Monday, April 8, 2013
Week Nine: AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
For my article
this week, I chose “Syrian Newspapers Emerge to Fill Out War Reporting.”
In the midst of the revolution, news standards are going down. Some sources are even using Facebook updates as official sources. In the midst of this, a newspaper called Sham uses 15 reporters all over Syria, none of them activists, to promote objectivity and write good news. I actually found this while in the middle of another story and felt it better suited my interests as a journalist. I definitely wouldn’t have found out about it any other way since my computer and charger finally succumbed to old age and years of being battered around. Any electronic work I want to do is moved to the library until I get a new computer, which doesn’t exactly leave time for web-surfing and other extraneous activities: if I trek out to the library, I mean business; no way am I going there to Google every little term that catches my fancy, so I’ll have to live archaically for a bit. (I wish I had the hard drive of my dictionary and thesaurus.) Anyway, quite frankly, the lack of factual material in news reporting in Syria is anarchic in a way and pretty scary in another. The media controls our perception of events beyond the places we can see, and thus it must be pretty hairy when it’s contaminated with bias and unverified facts. One can only hope in such a case that people there would know not to believe what they read, but even then it’s a world of paranoia where one doesn’t know whom to believe. It’s a lose-lose situation.
In the midst of the revolution, news standards are going down. Some sources are even using Facebook updates as official sources. In the midst of this, a newspaper called Sham uses 15 reporters all over Syria, none of them activists, to promote objectivity and write good news. I actually found this while in the middle of another story and felt it better suited my interests as a journalist. I definitely wouldn’t have found out about it any other way since my computer and charger finally succumbed to old age and years of being battered around. Any electronic work I want to do is moved to the library until I get a new computer, which doesn’t exactly leave time for web-surfing and other extraneous activities: if I trek out to the library, I mean business; no way am I going there to Google every little term that catches my fancy, so I’ll have to live archaically for a bit. (I wish I had the hard drive of my dictionary and thesaurus.) Anyway, quite frankly, the lack of factual material in news reporting in Syria is anarchic in a way and pretty scary in another. The media controls our perception of events beyond the places we can see, and thus it must be pretty hairy when it’s contaminated with bias and unverified facts. One can only hope in such a case that people there would know not to believe what they read, but even then it’s a world of paranoia where one doesn’t know whom to believe. It’s a lose-lose situation.
I read Neil
Postman’s Amusing Ourselves to Death
before starting school and was highly impressed by it. I never watched
television news to begin with (Dad raised me right), but I was even more wary of it after reading
this book. (I suppose it can’t be too bad if cross-referenced, but why do that
when my sources now are perfectly sufficient? *wink) Yes, I love Sesame Street—who doesn’t?—but I see
Postman’s point there, that it makes education entertaining and, through his
eyes, superficial. I would agree that “Sesame
Street is an expensive illustration of the idea that education is indistinguishable
from entertainment,” though I’d disagree that watching it would have any
serious consequence. Children are children. They develop concepts of deeper
subjects and their serious sense as they grow.
Monday, March 18, 2013
Week Seven: Not Feeling Clever Enough For A Title
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I’m not feeling
up to a great blog post this week, and since I turned in my project, it’s going
to be incredibly short, so I apologize for the lack of quality. Life has been
horribly chaotic this past week.
For articles,
Wednesday’s on the pope was my obvious choice for two reasons—one, I thought
the red hats in the header picture were fezes because I miss Morocco and two, Francis, 76, is First Non-European to Lead
Church in 1,200 Years. The last pope (I don’t remember his name, and
frankly I won’t remember this one’s) was the first in 600 years to retire, and
this one is the first non-European in 1,200 years. Not only is that two
consecutive firsts, but one number is divisible of the other! How cool is that?
Frankly—and I hope I don’t offend anybody by saying this—I don’t really much
care about the pope, didn’t care about the last one, doesn’t really affect me at
all until one or the other starts making homophobic comments. Anyhow, I think
this is newsworthy because the guy’s Argentinian, and apparently this is big
news. Maybe they’re going for diversity in the catholic church? (The pope is catholic,
right?) Obama seems to be happy about the choice unless he was just feeding the
media a line, which seems likely since he’s president. I definitely would not
have seen this if it were online because the only reasons I was attracted to it
were the fez-likes hats in the accompanying picture and the fact that 1200
divided by 600 is two, thus making the second pope the first in twice as long.
Class
expectations haven’t changed. I wish I had more energy to put something more
meaningful, but alas, I do not. I’m giving my presentation tomorrow, so perhaps
I expect that to be an informative experience as I’ll get to know all the
mistakes I made in the Soundslides and perhaps learn what I need to know going
forward with the video project in May. Speaking of May, Maybe I’ll go sleep now. I know it would surely benefit others in
my presentation, since being articulate is typically a good thing.
Sunday, March 17, 2013
Midtern Soundslide
My actual blog is coming later tonight. However, in the meanwhile, I present that which you have all been waiting for: my midterm Soundslide! Enjoy with fervor.
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