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Citizen Journalism is What Happens When the Letters To the Editor Section Storms and Occupies The Front Page

May 4, 2006

Dispatches: Immigrant Rights Protests As Seen by Nonjournalists

  Video: Demonstration in Austin, TX

  Tony Herrera, an immigrants’ rights activist, interviews Allan Mansoor, who’s mayor of Costa Mesa, CA. Mansoor is calling for Costa Mesa to be the first municipality in the US to enforce federal immigration laws at the local level. Video.

  Video: Immigration Rally, NYC.

 

Josh Marshall: “most media outlets are simply not used to getting any sustained feedback or criticism from their consumers. The crushing meaninglessness of old style letters to the editor? Please. It’s a spigot that can be turned off by non-acknowledgement.” The People Formerly Known as the Audience want to become peers in a meaningful way. This doesn’t mean they don’t value journalists or journalism — it just means they want to have a two-way conversation with them.

WeMediaFringe; photos of the We Media conf, London, on Flickr. More.

Most brilliant experiment: The Greensboro News & Record’s addition of a comments section underneath the online version of each letter to the editor. You know when you’ve got a successful blog when your readers use your comment section as a place to hang out and talk to each other more than they want to talk to you. N&R has accomplished it with one stroke.

My friends in media who are pursuing “blog strategies,” harken ye: Forcing people to blog is like forcing people to bowl. It’s cruel and it freaks out the other bowlers.

Jack Beatty, Victor Navasky, and Robert Kuttner on The Role of Journals of Opinion. There’s sure to be something about blogs in the audio of this talk which will be posted later this week. Hat tip to Pheonix media critic and blogger Mark Jukovsky.

Kris Krug and Roland Tanglao of UrbanVancouver.com are giving a talk. (Kris and Roland work at Bryght, an online hosting service for community sites. I use them to make H2otown, my community/news site for Watertown, MA possible. H2otown now hosts over 300 blogs by local residents which are aggregated onto the front page.

Lone blogger Betsy Devine has been doggedly following “PhoneJammer Gate,” a story that dropped from the headlines nearly two years ago. During the 2002 statewide elections in NH, the GOP funded a dirty-tricks campaign to use autodialers to jam phones at the state’s Democratic Headquarters on the day that they were launching get out the vote calls. Four Republican operatives have been indicted or convicted, and Betsy has been driving to her home state of NH from Cambridge, MA, to observe the trials and report them on her blog.

3 comments

  1. Have you taken a look at the Daily Hampshire Gazette (http://www.gazettenet.com)? The Gazette is using blogs as a means of posting headlines–its blasts and its long articles allow comments. T

    he problems are, however, from what I can see, that the blogs/articles are written mostly by staff (the hybrid journalist/blogger) and only those who subscribe to the gazette–online or print–can leave comments. The model restricts the community (outsiders can’t view entire articles nor comments.)

    The restriction may be a means to generate revenue by guarding content and interactivity (similar to the WSJ and TimesSelect.)

    I have no idea what the gazette is planning for the future–it’s not obvious nor could I find anything on research. It may all be a grand experiment. I plan to interview the editor to see how much they are willing to expose–if anything. Transparency isn’t important to everybody.


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