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Media Consortium looking for fall interns

July 22, 2010 in industry news

The Media Consortium is based in Chicago. Note the deadline of Aug. 6.

Title: Marketing and Social Media Intern

Job Description: The Media Consortium, a network of 45 leading independent media outlets, is seeking an intern to develop communities on social networking sites (including, but not limited to, Facebook, YouTube, Twitter and MySpace); track the impact of blogs, articles and projects, and research new media trends and technologies that would be of use to our members.

This is an exciting position and we encourage creative work and thinking about community-building, technology and the future of journalism

Duration: 15-20 hours/week for 4 months, beginning late August. Applications must be in by August 6!

Duties: Intern will play a key role in crafting and measuring social networking campaigns to increase the audience and influence of progressive, independent media.

Tasks include:

  • Experiment with new social networking tools and technologies to increase audience
  • Work with TMC staff to develop and implement promotion strategy and identify distribution partners for TMC content, including blogs and reports
  • Write weekly news round-up blogs as needed
  • Manage TMC pages on FaceBook, YouTube and other sites
  • Research potential TMC funders
  • Track reprints of TMC blogs and articles
  • Assist as needed with Media Wire project

Qualifications:

  • Strong writing skills
  • Ability to self-manage and meet deadlines
  • Familiarity with Facebook, MySpace, Twitter, Delicious, and GoogleAnalytics
  • Love of independent media
  • Fascination with new media tools and strategies
  • Some College
  • 3.0 GPA or higher

Compensation: Interns will be paid a travel stipend of $100 per month, plus occasional meals and coffee should they work in office. The Media Consortium will strive to develop intern’s professional skill set and work with schools to arrange college credit. Interns will leave with a signed letter of recommendation from TMC staff. As the majority of this work will be online, telecommuting is an option for candidates with sufficient experience. Women and people of color strongly encouraged to apply. NO ATTACHMENTS PLEASE. Please email your resumé, cover letter, references and a list of your top five online media outlets to Erin@themediaconsortium.com to apply.

CNN.com offering paid internships for fall

July 22, 2010 in industry news

Full details here.

Please Note: Students @ Work Internships are paid at minimum-wage and structured to last approximately 12 weeks. Program dates are Sep 13th – Dec 3rd. Course Credit is available. Resume and Cover Letter are required. Students should have a strong academic record (3.0 strongly preferred). Students must have completed their sophomore year in college prior to the start of the internship. In addition, students may not have graduated college or graduate school prior to the start of the internship (i.e. STUDENTS MUST BE ENROLLED IN SCHOOL DURING THE TIME OF THIS INTERNSHIP). Students seeking college credit are strongly encouraged to apply. Note to International Students: All international students will be required to provide documentation of proper visa paperwork prior to your arrival if accepted to the program. Due to the high volume of candidates for Turner’s Internship Program, interested students are encouraged to apply for openings as soon as possible, as these positions will be filled on an ongoing basis. Future semester Internship postings will be available after the current semester deadline.

College Media Review available for download

July 20, 2010 in Advising, College Media

10CMR47_3-4College Media Review, a publication of College Media Advisers, Inc., is a great resource for college media advisers and journalism faculty. It’s also available for free online. The latest edition includes an article by Jeff Halliday about mobile reporting. You can download the PDF (5.5 MB) here.

Social media guidelines page

July 19, 2010 in industry news

I’ve created a page (under “Resources” above) with links to social media guidelines from various organizations. If you know of some links that I haven’t included, please include a link in the comments or e-mail me directly at scmurley -at- gmail.com.

Random quote: Ira Glass on comments

July 18, 2010 in industry news, Multimedia views

Ira Glass of This American Life giving a lectu...
Image via Wikipedia

“I don’t find it very comforting that there’s like a world of people who don’t agree with my feelings about my own show, but that’s okay with me. Like, I don’t have to feel good about that.

I feel like, you know, you make something, you put it out in the world and you want people to have feelings about it, and the feelings can include, they hate you and that seems okay. And the fact that they get to say it and it gets to stick to my name, I feel like even that seems okay.”

Ira Glass on comments in an interview with “On the Media”

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Three things I challenge j-profs to do along with their students

July 16, 2010 in Academics, blogging, College Media, Student voices

Office the The Hoya student newspaper on the f...
Image via Wikipedia

Brian Manzullo, late of the Central Michigan University Central Michigan Life student newspaper, has written a thought-provoking blog post with the enticing title: Three things I dare journalism students to do before they graduate. Hey, it’s a dare, right? So I’m going to piggy-back on Brian’s post and propose that j-profs engage in these activities as well. This post is specifically *not* geared toward administrative staff or students involved in campus media on the student services side of the spectrum, although the thoughts could be adapted to serve those readers as well.

1. Propose major curriculum adjustments to your journalism school – and get support:

Some of my own thoughts: I’m sick of seeing online media as an option, or a track, in the journalism degree. Online media should be a requirement. Media law should still be a class, but it also should be taught to various degrees in other classes. Social media should be taught, but as a universal topic (because who knows what we’ll be using 3-4 years down the road). Experience at a student newspaper or internship should count as credit.

I’m happy to say that Eastern Illinois University‘s journalism department overhauled part of its curriculum two years ago to require all journalism students have a basic class in multimedia reporting. I agree with Brian’s sentiments there. In fact, I’d say any journalism school that isn’t requiring a course in multimedia reporting at this stage of the game is doing a disservice to its students.

If your journalism department doesn’t require a course in multimedia reporting (at least hyperlinking, blogging, audio and video-based reporting), you need to be pushing for that requirement.

Unfortunately, academic bureaucracy moves slowly, so it may take a couple of years for the course and curriculum to be approved. But every delay puts you that much more behind the curve.

Brian’s second point hints at integration of skills into other classes. This is more problematic, as there are several hurdles that must be overcome. First, many classes are already packed with material. When I taught beginning newswriting, we never finished covering all the topics that were covered in the textbook. Adding multimedia/social media skills to that mix will be a challenge. Also, professors may not feel comfortable with the software/terminology or what constitutes “good” work in these areas.

At Eastern, we have a campus technology center that provides tutorial classes for students across campus on some basic computer programs. If you’re tasked with trying to integrate “new” media into your class, you might check and see if your campus provides similar opportunities. This fall, I’m requiring my multimedia students to attend a tutorial class on basic Final Cut Express skills, for instance.

For a basic writing class, instructors could – at the very minimum – require students to submit a certain number of hyperlinks to related content with all of their stories.

Other ways to integrate new media into another class can be as elementary as creating a class wiki, or requiring students to write blog posts, or following certain politicians or celebrities on Twitter and study the ways these individuals use the platform.

2. Form a news startup online and compete with the student newspaper:

This is a bit more tricky for some professors who also serve as advisers to student newspapers (like several of our faculty at Eastern). When do you stop encouraging students to innovate and explore new avenues of coverage and start cannibalizing your other media outlets?

Joe Gisondi, a colleague at Eastern, had an interesting twist on this last year in his sports reporting class. Rather than compete with the Daily Eastern News by having his students do stories about Eastern athletics, he set up a site specifically for the local high school. The students got to experience online sports coverage in a way that didn’t directly compete with the campus sports writing staff.

Obviously, on a larger campus, with more j-students, an online site that competes with the campus media outlets might be much less of a conundrum. Either way, engaging students to think like entrepreneurs is a good thing. And crossing the professor/student divide to collaborate on such a project can have myriad intellectual benefits for all parties involved.

3. Form a network of students that meets regularly to discuss readings and projects:

It’s simple: Get a group of awesome young journalists together (and maybe a professor or two, if you’re so inclined) and think of a good time during the week where everyone can spend one to two hours in a room together.

I would amend Brian’s proposal a bit and suggest that you form a network of forward-thinking journalists (professors and students) to meet regularly and discuss readings and projects.

I have benefited tremendously from my interactions with the CoPress gang, for instance (at one point they were meeting weekly on Sundays). And at times, I’d like to hope that I’ve challenged their thinking enough that they considered some things that you might not see from a student’s perspective.

This could be a problem if students use the time to complain about professor so-and-so’s lecture style, or a class project deadline.

But if the focus is really on improving the educational environment, and growing through the inclusion of different, challenging ideas, then I think both professors and students could benefit from a group like Brian suggests. Brian also has some great suggestions for different activities that could be included in such a group.

We’re all in this together

At times, I get disheartened when I see blog posts like the one I’m responding to, because I get a sense that students think journalism professors are all about hindering the progress that could be made if only the students could shake things up. There is – undoubtedly – some of that. But I’ve experienced the opposite effect at times as well – students who are too set in their print/tv/radio ways to really embrace the myriad ways the Internet can improve journalism.

It’s not an either/or proposition. I know many journalism professors who are earnestly working to better j-education, just as are many students. And I tend to think we’d get farther if we could work at this together to break through whatever barriers exist in the minds of other j-profs, j-students, or j-pros.

Are there other things j-students and j-profs might be doing beyond those listed above? Please feel free to comment.

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One way not to do online comments (rant)

July 16, 2010 in Community, ethics, industry news, management, social media

Credit cards
Image via Wikipedia

Over the life of this blog, and in my studies of the online news business since 2001, I have seen so many efforts to rein in online comments that my eyes roll when I see a new round of pearl-clutching from news editors and publishers about how nasty commenters are on their web sites.

But of all the efforts, this effort by the Sun Chronicle in Massachusetts has got to be the prize-winner for ways to kill off a commenting community. The SC not only wants readers to register to comment using their real names and addresses, they want users to give up credit card information and pay a one-time fee of 99 cents for the privilege!

The opportunity to post comments on stories on Sun Chronicle websites will be restored this week, Publisher Oreste P. D’Arconte announced today, with posters required to use their real names.

To enforce this change, all posters will be required to register their name, address, phone number and a legitimate credit card number.

The credit card will be charged a one-time fee of 99 cents to activate the account.

Look, I can understand the desire to have a well-functioning, civil community of readers commenting on your web site. I can even understand the desire to have people use their real names when commenting (although I disagree). But demanding that readers give up sensitive financial information and then billing them just to leave a comment on a web site is … well, I can’t use the words I’m considering right now on a family web site.

Of course, if the Sun Chronicle were serious about wanting comments, they could use Facebook Connect. It’s not 100 percent foolproof, but it would tie a comment to a user’s online identity in a more meaningful way and discourage or eliminate “anonymous” comments (pro-tip: when a user puts a name – even a made-up name – in a comment box, it’s not technically “anonymous,” but “pseudonymous”).

More likely, this change will drop the Sun Chronicle’s commenting community to near zero. And if I were an enterprising web denizen in one of the paper’s communities, I’d be busy putting up a web site that allows users to comment on SC-related articles without registering. Just provide headline links to SC stories in blog posts and allow comments on those posts. No need to steal content.

I’ve often gotten the vibe that a vast number of news media professionals hate comments, and would rather not deal with them at all. After all, people on the Internet can be real jackasses when their name is not associated with what they write.

But shutting off comments on your site – or trying to get people to pay to do so – is no real solution. It just drives people to other places on the Internet where they can comment without fearing for their jobs, or their social status, or whatever.

Last year, Va. Tech’s Collegiate Times student newspaper went through a similar type of situation. A campus committee was dismayed that there were racist comments showing up in the comments on the Collegiate Times’ web site. So the committee’s solution was to try to get the news org. to stop allowing anonymous comments by cutting off university funding.

Brilliant!

No mention of, you know, actually dealing with the disgusting underbelly of racism that brings these comments out. Just sweep the problem under the rug so the campus community looks pristine.

The truth of the matter is that managing an online community of commenters is work. It’s like tending a garden. If you don’t put in the work to root out the weeds (abusive commenters), you won’t get the vegetables (cogent commenters) to flourish.

The Sun Chronicle‘s recently announced policy roots out the weeds by digging up the entire garden.

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Stuff I’ve been reading

July 15, 2010 in Links

Once again, a list of links to articles I’ve been perusing on the Internet:

via

The Black Sheep – via the CMA Listserv, a humor newspaper targeted at college students. The site is apparently recruiting students to help produce publications targeted at specific universities around the country, and they’ll probably be soaking up some of the available advertising dollars on those campuses, so something to keep an eye on.

Ethical lessons for news entrepreneurs – Mark Briggs details some ethical considerations offered by Poynter’s Kelly McBride for those who are working on small news start-ups.

Ten good-enough predictions about tech, media and news – Steve Yelvington puts on the futurist hat. Yelvington has been pretty solid in the years I’ve been reading his stuff, so you should check out the list. For the record, I think I’m drawing the line at location-awareness for the moment.

iPhone 4 is unlocked in Canada too: I really like what I’ve seen of the iPhone 4′s video and photo capabilities. Too bad U.S. customers have to put up with locked-in AT&T service. Yay, free markets!

Invincible Apple: 10 Lessons From the Coolest Company Anywhere: Some things to consider, even though the tone is a little too fanboi-ish for my tastes (see above re: AT&T iPhone lock-in). (via)

Newspapers’ paywall announcements are misleading: Steve Buttry does a good job taking down the marketing/propaganda that passed for “reporting” when three Gannett papers announced they were putting up paywalls last month.

An In-Depth Look at How People Are Using the iPad – Mashable summarizes research from Resolve Market Research. The results are somewhat surprising.

Behind the scenes: Unveiling MediaStorm’s website redesign – Tim McLaughlin details the work that went into a major reworking of the MediaStorm site.

It’s Time to Prepare for the End of the Web as We Know It – Steve Rubel intones about the changing nature of content in a mobile smartphone-enabled world. And the article has no hyperlinks (sigh). You may need to subscribe to read this article from AdAge, but it’s a pretty useful site, so caveat emptor.


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Who do you write like?

July 15, 2010 in fun

I Write Like is an interesting little analytical tool that supposedly shows what famous author your writing is like. The funny thing is, depending on what text you submit, you will write like a different author. For instance, pasting in the text from this post about oil disaster coverage, I get this:

I Write Like by Mémoires, Mac journal software. Analyze your writing!

Which is interesting, because I’ve never read David Foster Wallace’s Infinite Jest book.

But submitting this post about summer projects, I find this:

I write like
Stephenie Meyer

I Write Like by Mémoires, Mac journal software. Analyze your writing!

I don’t even know who Stephenie Meyer is. Apparently, she’s the Twilight author.

A long time ago, I noted that I would pick up little conventions from whatever author I was reading at the time. I went through a period of reading Hunter S. Thompson, so I’d use a lot of “indeed’s” in my columns. When I was reading John Irving, I’d pick up some of his conventions. I like to think I’ve broken that pattern. I hope I have.

Update: I pasted the majority of my as-yet-unfinished dissertation, and got David Foster Wallace again, for what it’s worth.

(via)

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There will be oil: college media covers the BP disaster

July 12, 2010 in College Media

Mashable highlights this neat (in a sickening sort of way) web site: Instant Oil Spill, that allows you to cause an oil spill on any web site. (check out the video above for an example of oil spilling all over the ICM front page). Mashable points out that this is one of the ways the Internet is being used to highlight the effects of the oil catastrophe and what’s being done to ensure it isn’t forgotten in the 24/7 news cycle.

I’ve been visiting my parents in Beaumont, Texas, over the past week, and the underwater oil gusher is a top topic of conversation, even though the leaked oil hasn’t really affected the Texas Gulf coast yet.

Meanwhile, oil containment efforts continue in Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and parts of Florida.

It’s a story of a generation (maybe more). A casual trip through the web to a few student newspaper web sites shows that so far, not a lot is happening coverage-wise. The best coverage I found comes from LSU’s Daily Reveille. They have daily coverage of the spill that they are updating using CoverItLive.

The Auburn Plainsman has been publishing articles (like this one about Auburn researchers discussing oil dispersants, and this one with suggestions of ways to help out on the coast). Southern Miss.’s Student Printz also has an oil spill story. The Kaleidoscope at UA-Birmingham has a story about the impact on Alabama. I suspect more school newspapers will begin covering the spill as school gets back into session. I hope more schools along the coast will devote resources to this developing story.

A couple of suggestions for student news outlets who are going to be covering the oil disaster with any regularity:

First, follow the Reveille’s example and create a dedicated landing page (“section” if you want to use newspaper speak) where a viewer can go to find all of the news, instead of having to use a search box or pick through the stories about local news about Blockbuster video stores closing, etc. Check out nola.com for another example.

Second, if you’re going to write about organizations who are helping with the cleanup, or organizations people can contact to contribute money or time to the effort, provide hyperlinks to the organizations’ web sites! This is the Internet, not your newspaper. You can make a word link to another web site. Do it.

Finally, this is just a nit I’m picking, but it’s one of those word geek things: This is not an oil “spill,” even though Instant Oil Spill uses the word in its name. An oil spill happens when the oil is in a container. The Exxon Valdez tragedy was a “spill.” When a pipe bursts in your house, you don’t say you had a sewer “spill.” You call it what it is. So be precise in your terminology. This is an oil gusher. An oil leak.

And for some really detailed technical discussion of the oil disaster, I highly recommend The Oil Drum. Normally, the site focuses on “peak oil,” (Wikipedia link), but since the Deepwater Horizon explosion, they’ve been keeping a running discussion of the technical issues involved with capping the well.

As always, if you know of other school news outlets that are providing coverage, mention them in the comments, or shoot me an e-mail at scmurley -at- gmail.com.