Carnival of Journalism

Once a month we get together and write about the same topic directed by a different host each time. Read our About Page for more info and maybe join. The ongoing results of the Carnival are below!


HOW IT WORKS

  • 1. Join the Carnival of Journalism by filling out this form. Or check out our Google Group
  • 2. Write and publish a blog post on the topic proposed and let the COJ host know about it by leaving a comment on the original blog post.
  • 3. There is no apologizing in the Carnival of Journalism

January Carnival of Journalism – Can a Journalist be a Capitalist

January’s carnival of journalism comes to us from Michael Rosenblum.

In his post he asks: “Can a good journalist also be a good capitalist?” If so, how? Or why not?

The content of his full post is below. But the heart of the prompt is above.

Due Date: Friday January 27th at Noon PST.

You can publish anytime over the weekend and then we’ll do a classic Carnival Round-Up post.

How to Make Millions as a Journalist by Michael Rosenblum.

I am writing today’s blog in conjunction with the Carnival of Journalism , Dave Cohn’s ongoing journalism project.
If you feel like participating, please do.

The issue I wanted to write about for some time is Journalism and Capitalism – or “Why We Can’t Seem To Make a Living”.
The Carnival Of Journalism requires a question to which everyone responds, so my question is:
Can a good journalist also be a good capitalist?

Jeff Jarvis, much to his credit, recently launched the Center for Entreprenurial Journalism at CUNY.  And bravo Jeff!
The world of journalism needs more thinking like this.

Alas, there is an instinctive aversion to the idea of making money amongst most  journalists.

On the heels of attending one of Jarvis’ classes in Entrepreneurial Journalism, I was so impressed, I went to see Nick Lemann, the Dean of the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University, my alma mater, and a place I had taught for 8 years as an adjunct.

Lemann was aghast at my suggestion and practically physically recoiled.  This, alas, is all too typical for the ‘professional journalist’.  We instinctively associate making money with ‘evil’.  We like to investigate it. If someone is making a ton of money, then they must be doing something wrong.

“Follow the money” says Deep Throat to Woodward and Bernstein.

As a member of the generation that was inspired by Woodward and Bernstein, let me amend that.  ”Follow the money, figure out what they are doing and how you can make even more”.

I like that one better.

Making money is no crime. In fact, it is the ulimate good. With money you can do stuff.  Without it, you are the perpetual victim and the perpetual employee, which is what most journalists are.  And that is crazy.

Listen, the Internet ‘happened’ to our industry first – the information industry.  That’s what the web was all about – the gathering and the processing and the distribution of information. That was and is our business.

So we should have been out there first, cleaning up.  We should own the web. But we don’t.  We let it get away from us because we never saw ourselves as Capitalist.  We let ourselves get pounded.

Craigslist, which pretty much eviscerated newspapers classifieds should have been developed and owned by us.
Google – all the news that fit to print – and a whole lot more – should have been developed and owned by us.
Youtube, Facebook, you name it.  We should be exploiting this mother for all she is worth.  But we don’t.

We are the perpetual groveling employees, beggaring for a few crumbs and generally seeing our jobs and incomes slashed as the web and new digital technologies roll over the old.

And why is that?
Why are we such schmucks?

It’s in our nature.  It’s in the image that we have made for ourselves.

“My job is to afflict the comfortable and comfort the afficted” says Peter Finley Dunne.

Crap!, I say.  Crap.

Who came up with this idea?

What is the crime in making money? In making lots of it?

Anyone who became a journalist could just as easily have become a lawyer.

Lawyers work for the ‘good of mankind’, but they don’t seem to attach any stigma to making a lot of money.

And they’re equally happy to defend human rights and the Constitution and help the poor and a whole lot of other stuff without feeling like they have to live in perpetual poverty for the rest of their lives.

Look at how we present ourselves to the world.  Look at the image of the typical ‘journalist’ in the movies.

Russel Crowe, journalist in “State of Play”.

Look at him.

Drunken stumble bum.
Bad clothes
Unshaven
Messy
Bad haircut
Bad car
Crap life

And he’s the hero!!!

What is the matter with us???

Is this a guy who is going to Goldman Sachs for an IPO?
Is any Venture Capital firm going to invest in him??

Not a chance.

Why do we do this to ourselves?

And how do we tolerate the crap way we are treated by our ‘employers’?
Bust your butt for The New York Times or NBC for 25 years and what do you get?
A luncheon!

Bust your butt for a NY law firm for 25 years and what do you get?
A partnership!

Do you see any journalists being offered partnerships in The New York Times Company???

We are a mess.
But we are not beyond redemption.
We can change.
We have to get our act together.

We have to embrace making money – lots and lots of money – as a good. As a goal.

We should arrange ourselves the way lawyers do, as limited partnerships.  Then some of the partners can carry on with their ‘investigative journalism’ while the others engage in more lucrative PR or Image Control and others launch web-related IPOs.

And instead of ‘working for’ the NY Times or NBC, we should simply license our work to them.  For a fee.

I read a lot about the ‘dire situation’ that journalism is facing, but to me, the only ‘dire situation’ is the way that we have chosen to arrange ourselves.

Journalists of the world, arise. You have nothing to lose.

Nothing at all, apparently.


December #Jcarn Roundup

This month’s Carnival of journalism saw bloggers tackling a two-pronged question, appropriate to both the season and being hosted on a Developer blog:

If you are a journalist, what would be the best present from programmers and developers that Santa Claus could leave under your Christmas tree? And, correspondingly, if you are a programmer or developer, what would be the best present from journalism that Father Christmas could deliver down your chimney?

Aside from some dissent about the the Christmas slant, the either/or stance of the question was legitimately challenged by Heather Billings. “How many times do programmers have to prove they can be journalists, and vice versa?” she asked.

Content management systems loomed large in people’s wishes. Daniel Bentley yearns for “an open source content management system that doesn’t suck.” Kathy Gill wants Santa to “put someone other than IT in charge of all CMS purchases.”

A couple of people wanted more semantic mark-up, but Jacob Caggiano identified one common problem in the semantic web space – “overlapping projects that don’t play nice with each other due to individual political interests that result in frustration for the average user.”

Andrew Zaleski pleased me by pointing out that “the problems of large-scale information architecture for news sites are really hard problems.” Don’t I know it. His wish was for a system that would help editors deliver news websites that retained the clear information hierarchy associated with print products, rather than the often messy list views that we end up with today.

Jonathan Frost at Wannabehacks also warmed my heart by concluding that “User experience should be the next big thing in journalism and development. Don’t leave the designer out in the snow.”

Donica had a great idea for a useful resource, a “a go-to-wiki that includes a directory of all the cool tools developers are making that relate to journalism, with links to examples, how-to guides and user comments.” Nicola Hughes, meanwhile, made her post into a cartoon strip, and Paul Bradshaw made a fascinating wish list.

Patrick Thornton asked for there to be more appreciation of technology amongst journalists – but added a note of caution:

An appreciation for tech skills and developers doesn’t mean chasing the latest buzzwords. In fact, watching many news organizations chasing trends instead of meaningful innovation leads me to believe that there isn’t a healthy enough appreciation for technology in newsroom. There simply aren’t enough people in newsrooms with the skills to know what is worth pursuing and what isn’t.

And finally, out of the things that particularly caught my eye, the Guardian’s own Mary Hamilton appealed to the supernatural powers of Santa – “Please bring us all more time“:

In an age of cutting costs, one of the most precious resources we have left is our time. Anything that saves it, that means it can be spent doing journalism or making tools that journalists can use is a wonderful thing.

December’s “Carnival of journalism” blog posts

Here is (I think) a complete list of those taking part:

Alfred Hermida: The role of technology in journalism
Andre Natta: A #jcarn holiday wish for journalists – help us show relevance
Andrew Zalesky: Programmers, here’s what I want
Clarisa Clarity: Is it crap or craptastick?
Daniel Bentlet: Dear Journalism Santa, I want a CMS that doesn’t suck
David Cohn: If this works – it will be a Google+ public update and automatically create my December Contribution to the Carnival of Journalism on my personal blog
Donica: JournalismPress
Heather Billings: I see what you did there
Jack D. Lail: Just surprise me
Jon Offredo: The Jobseeker’s journo wish list
Jonathan Frost: All I want for Christmas
Kathy Gill: What I want for Christmas
Martin Belam: Presents for all!
Mary Hamilton: Dear Santa, please bring us all more time
Nicola Hughes: Journalist versus Programmer
Patrick Thornton: Journalism needs more journalists that appreciate programming and technology
Paul Bradshaw: Tools or Tales?
Jacob Caggiano: All I want for Christmas is Semantic Metadata
Steve Outing: Carnivals and holiday trees, for journalists and technologists

Geoff Samek: Why ask why?


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