Media News
Tuesday, January 06, 2009
All the news fit to print. (And a page 1 advert)
Loyal readers of the New York Times were left spluttering into their
coffee cups Monday morning when their beloved paper was encroached
upon by a controversial innovation: front-page advertising.
The decision to strip a display advert for CBS television across all six
columns at the bottom of the front page is the latest move by the paper
to find ways out of the financial crisis. The move brings it into line with other US papers which have succumbed
to commercial imperatives and broken with the tradition of
editorial-only front pages. The Wall Street Journal started taking page
one adverts in July 2006. But the argument that it is falling in line will not assuage traditional
readers, who have long looked to the front page of the New York Times as
a bastion of editorial standards in an increasingly commercial world.
While the page, with its multiple stories turning to inside sections, is
often criticised for poor design, it is equally often held up as a model
of editorial excellence. In a statement, the paper said it would only place adverts on the lower
half of the page - 'below the fold' in print parlance. The New York
Times's motto, 'All the news that's fit to print', continues to appear
on the front page.
(The Guardian)
Other stories:
EJC Press Releases
Time to TH!NK ABOUT IT
The EJC has registered 50 bloggers for the first Europe-wide blogging competition, TH!NK ABOUT IT. We’ll get going with the January 2009 launch event, running until the European Parliamentary Elections in June.
TH!NK ABOUT IT will host three bloggers from each EU member state in a a forum alive with debate and discussion - a dynamic online community of bloggers, journalists and journalism students sharing their thoughts on the EU and the upcoming European elections.
Invited bloggers are asked to cover, report, critique and debate on campaign issues and candidates. The goal is to get Europeans to TH!NK ABOUT IT and to express their views on Europe.
There is still room for more bloggers. All ages and experience levels are welcome.
The bloggers will meet in real life to kickoff the competition. The two-day TH!NK ABOUT IT launch event will be held from 25-27 January in Brussels.
At the kickoff, invitees are briefed on the European blogsphere, European Parliament, elections and on understanding the EU from a journalist’s perspective. The event also launches the blog contest, which invitees participate in throughout the official campaign season.
If you are interested in getting into the EU blogging scene or will be writing journalistic pieces on the European elections next year, please give the competition a thought. Fabulous prizes are up for grabs!
For information beyond what’s available on our infosheet, e-mail . You are also welcome at the official Facebook group.
Banners for your website in various sizes can be found here.
Posted on December 1, 2008 by EJC
Filed under blogging.
EJC updates web mag for expats
The European Journalism Centre has updated its web magazine for expatriates in Maastricht, editor Sueli Brodin announced this week.
The 7-year-old magazine, Crossroads, has been given a makeover and re-launched. Further, it now has its own domain name at: http://crossroadsmag.eu.
Crossroads, like most EJC publications, is also available via RSS feed.
It is also possible to receive news updates via email.
The new template allows the display of a larger selection of stories on the homepage, as well as dynamic new features such as video clips and a daily updated list of recommended news articles (both in English and in Dutch) via Crossroads’ account on Delicious.
“Needless to say, I’m very happy with the new template and eager to explore the many possibilities it offers for further customization,” Brodin said.
An overview of the articles published since our last update on July 14, 2008:
- Cultural season opens in Maastricht, 19 September
- Researchers’ Night: That’s Edutainment!, 8 October
- Review: All that Jazz!, 24 October
- Centre Céramique hosts 2008 World Press Photo exhibit, and more, 27 October
- Kader Abdolah: “I learned this arrogance from the Dutch”, 11 November
- Going Glocal in the visual arts, 22 November
- Welcome to the reading table, 3 September
- From Peru to South Limburg via Libya, Sri Lanka and Thailand, 24 September
- Does Dutch music sound like eel?, 27 September
- Moroccan-Belgian student in Maastricht: “It’s the heart that counts”, 13 October
- Ghosts and Goblins, 9 November
- Kruisherenhotel: A unison of times, 26 October
Reviews:
Feature articles:
Through the lens:
Posted on November 24, 2008 by EJC
Filed under website.
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Blogging journalists: survey results
Hear Paul Bradshaw discuss the results of his 2008 online survey of journalists with blogs who felt their work had been impacted by the technology. Bradshaw polled 200 journalists from 30 countries.
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Featured Resource:
What is financial journalism for?
A Harvard economist was invited by the New York Times to write about stock build-ups in the United States. He penned a prediction saying the stock market would crash.
Upon review, The Times did not run the article, calling it too alarmist. One year later, in 1987, the market crashed.
That economist, John Kenneth Galbraith, is among scores of sources cited in an academic treatise on financial journalism published 15 November. It’s a time-consuming read but worth the printer ink.
Galbraith’s experience with the NYT is typical of the world of financial reporting as presented in the study, What is financial journalism for? Ethics and responsibility in a time of crisis and change.
According to this POLIS report, boosterism and group think plague business sections in the United Kingdom and United States.
The “digitally driven speed” of reporting in the Internet era exacerbates this tendency, as does the proliferation of public relations professionals.
This in-depth examination of the business journalism landscape begs many questions, chief among them: Are financial journalists to blame for the credit crisis?
Russian toons go global
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