Showing posts with label New Media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Media. Show all posts

Perspective: Coverage of Ukraine Revolution Versus Nigeria's Boko Haram

Boko Haram leader Abubakar Shekau
Boko Haram's Top Maniac:
Abubakar Shekau (video still)
February 26, 2014 - Mediaite's Noah Rothman seems to think that only he has access to news out of Africa. Rothman complains that the latest atrocity by Boko Haram, a mass murder of dozens of students at the Federal Government College in Yobe, Nigeria on February 24 has received less attention than it deserves and that few people are even aware of it. Specifically, Rothman complains that it got less coverage than it should have because, he seems to imply, of some disproportionate attention given to the months-long violent protests in Ukraine.

Contrary to Rothman's assertion, millions of us have heard of the most recent attack by Boko Haram on a boys' boarding school. The recent Boko Haram slaughter did receive -- and is still getting -- big coverage. (Don't take my word for it; do your own Google search for "boko haram attack.")

The headline for Rothman's post was "The Horrific Massacre of School Children by Islamic Radicals You’ve Heard Nothing About." Rothman is obviously oblivious to the fact that the story is getting big coverage worldwide and is a hot topic on Twitter today. 

The irony here is that unless Rothman broke the story himself (he didn't), he undoubtedly became aware of the story after millions of other people did, and that he did so by reading about it in some of the very media that he says have not covered it well enough. The media have breathlessly updated their reports as the official body count, initially reported as 29, has risen to at least 59 and seems likely to go still higher.

UPDATE (28 Feb 2014):
While it's true that the ongoing demonstration in Ukraine got major coverage, it's also true that Ukraine's anti-Russia, pro-EU demonstrations began months before Boko Haram's mayhem on Monday of this week. Here's where the sense of perspective by Mediaite's Rothman comes into play. The Nigeria story is getting worldwide press coverage. But compared to the events in Ukraine, which ended days ago as a full-blown coup that toppled a government, sent its former leader running from his own charges of mass murder, embarrassed Vladimir Putin and now gives inspiration to anti-government demonstrators in Venezuela, the Boko Haram story seems puny.

Boko Haram history of violence is several years old, with a string of previous bloody atrocities along the way. Those incidents have received worldwide press coverage. The most recent Boko Haram outrage was a single event that began and ended quickly, whereas the Ukraine demonstrations went on for months, building up steam and producing more drama daily. There is no mystery as to why the Ukraine story got more coverage.

I don't want to downplay the significance of Boko Haram's terror. Boko Haram is a serious problem and each of the murders they commit is horrible. The fact is, however, that they are a regional problem (for now) with no significant repercussions of great scale anywhere else in the world (at present). This fact didn't stop Rothman from posting an article late in the afternoon of February 25th in which he essentially said that the most recent act of mass murder by Boko Haram, which began on February 24th, was under-reported because of some bias on the part of the media.

As far as I can tell, the only bias was one in favor of the story of Ukraine, which is far more important globally and historically than the story of Boko Haram. At least, it is at present. Rothman's error is that he downplays -- or misunderstands -- the significance of Ukraine's government changing people's revolution and the impact it has on the Great Game between Russia and the alliance of the U.S. and E.U. Rothman asks,

"Perhaps there is a geographical bias?" Of course there is: Ukraine is on the cusp of Russia and the European Union. Russia's history with Ukraine and the strategically important Crimean Penninsula, and Ukraine's proximity and desire to join the E.U., are critical factors. If Rothman looked at a map of the region and had any understanding of the history of Ukraine and the Crimea, he would not have asked about "geographical bias." And now, post-revolution, the tensions in Ukraine remain. There are new worries of separatism, and violent clashes continue.

Boko Haram may be regionally disruptive, but it does not have the potential for causing a war between Russia and the U.S. No, that's not hyperbole: A headline today in The Telegraph (UK): "Ukraine revolution: 150,000 Russian troops on alert as US warns Putin." This is frightening stuff. "The US warned Moscow to be 'very careful' in its judgements after Vladimir Putin put armed forces in western Russia on alert, as tensions mounted in the pro-Russian Crimea over the overthrow of Moscow ally Viktor Yanukovych by pro-European protesters," reports The Telegraph. "Amid fears the country could fragment in the struggle between its pro-Russian and pro-European regions, Mr Putin flexed his military muscle by ordering war games involving 150,000 troops along the Ukrainian border."

Rothman wrote his piece prior to The Telegraph article, but anyone with a basic understanding of 20th Century history could have seen this coming. "John Kerry, the US secretary of state, urged the Kremlin to "keep its word" over the unity of Ukraine, insisting the US and Russia did not need to get into an 'old cold war confrontation' over the country. NATO also turned up the pressure on Russia, saying it would continue to support 'Ukrainian sovereignty and independence, territorial integrity, democratic development and the principle of the inviolability of frontiers'."

Nigeria? Boko Haram? Russia flexing its muscle in the Crimean tinderbox? Some perspective is in order, Mr. Rothman, please.

The Ukraine "demonstrations" turned into a full-blown coup, dramatically changing the world stage, further complicating US-Russia-EU relations, and so on. The Boko Haram attack, while horrific, will not change the scenery of international politics. Given that, the larger coverage of a coup in Ukraine was not inappropriate. The significance of the Ukraine revolution dwarfs the significance of a tragic -- albeit local -- mass murders. There is, of course, a bigger picture.

The long-term global threat from Boko Haram must be taken seriously. "As the world globalizes, jihadist factions such as Boko Haram align in-kind and gain both the intelligence and the capacity to strike in increasingly urban centers and beyond national borders," notes the Wall Street Journal. "We must make no mistake: This destabilizing network is a global problem, larger in scope and indeed in mission than the international community may presume. It is not just going to go away."

There is another irony in all of this. Rothman says Boko Haram deserves more press coverage. There is an argument to be made for that. But that's his own Western bias coming into play. Those who have to live with - or die with - the Boko Haram threat don't all agree with Rothman. In fact, many in Nigeria feel that Boko Haram should get less press coverage. Some feel that heavy news coverage of Boko Haram does more harm than good.

Beslan school siege, September 2004
Photograph: S Dal/Reuters
Rothman's article starts off his article by reminding us of the September 1, 2004 attack on school children by Chechen militants in Beslan, southern Russia. "Hundreds died [more than 330] in the standoff, including 186 children, at the hands of Islamic radicals and Russian paramilitary forces," wrote Rothman.

"The global coverage of the Beslan siege and its bloody aftermath was perfectly appropriate," Rothman wrote, saying that the Beslan massacre "deserved every ounce of ink that was devoted to informing the public about it." Fine so far, then he loses his grip: "But the coverage of that atrocity makes the lack of coverage of a similarly horrific event which occurred in Western Africa on Monday night that much more vexing."

"Lack of coverage?" What's he talking about? Is Rothman really unaware of the huge coverage being given to Monday's Boko Haram attack? It's huge. "Similary horrific?" About five times as many died in Beslan than on Monday at the Nigerian boys school. About 1,000 people were held hostage for days in Beslan, whereas the Boko Haram attack was a quick hit-and-run. The Beslan school massacre, by the way, happened roughly five years before Boko Haram began its campaign of terror in 2009-2010.

Rothman compares the 2004 Chechen terror attack on Russians, in which hundreds died, to this Monday's attack on Nigerian school boys by Boko Haram, which killed less than 100, and wonders why the more deadly attack got more coverage. Rothman seems to not have considered these possible reasons: Beslan was a far more deadly attack. Such attacks are extremely rare in Russia, and are sadly not uncommon in Nigeria (or much of Africa). Russia had engaged in major military operations in Chechnya, whereas Nigeria has not mounted a major military effort against Boko Haram. Remember, too, that Boko Haram has committed so many terror strikes since 2009 - which was not their worst to date - that another like Monday's attack on the boys' school becomes "just another one" by the group. Think of it this way: Gang shootings are so common in some American cities that they don't all get reported, and most of those that do don't get on the front page.

Rothman wrote that "Boko Haram" "literally" means "Western education is sinful" or "forbidden," but that's not quite accurate. "This name is often rendered in English [as] 'Western education is forbidden.' That translation sacrifices some potential nuance and depth," wrote Alex Thurston at Sahel Blog. "There is no definitive way to translate either the unofficial Hausa name or the official Arabic name." Rothman swallowed and regurgitated what a lot of mainstream media have said "Boko Harem" means. Boko Haram is not even the group's official name: It is "Ahl al Sunna li al Da’wa wa al Jihad."

Monday's boarding school slaughter was "not the first time that Islamic militants in Eastern Nigeria carried out an atrocity against children," wrote Rothman. "In September [2013], Islamic insurgents killed 40 students attending the College of Agriculture in Damaturu, the capital of Yobe state."

"Aside from scant reports in a handful of press outlets, these and other horrific attacks have inspired little in the way of breathless media coverage in the West," Rothman said. "The lack of coverage of this event, as opposed to a similar event in Southern Russia [Beslan], has inspired some to ask a familiar question: why do some horrific acts of violence merit coverage in the West and others do not?" As I noted earlier, the Beslan school attack was far more deadly than Monday's Boko Haram school attack, therefore more sensational, and of a type that is rare in Russia. In terms of scope alone, it deserved more coverage: It was a bigger crime.

Another factor: Armed troops battled the Chechen attackers in Beslan. There was no fight when Boko Haram struck the Nigerian boarding school, committed their murders, and fled. Rothman wrote that "Media critics were moved last week to ask why violent demonstrations in Ukraine were getting so much attention while similarly violent anti-government protests in comparatively nearby Venezuela were not. There may not be a good reason." There are several good reasons, as I have noted above.

"Perhaps there is a geographical bias?" wonders Rothman. "Perhaps American audiences are more interested in news from Eastern Europe and Southern Russia than South America and Africa because more Americans can relate to European ethnic heritage." Rothman parroted a popular myth, and ignores the current heavy coverage by U.S. media of the violent demonstrations in Venezuela and of the ongoing drug war in Mexico. He also seems to have forgotten the heavy coverage given by U.S. media to the attack on Westgate Mall in Nairobi, Kenya last September by Islamist terror group al-Shabab.

"Perhaps news outlets simply do not have the resources to cover events in regions of the world that do not command the geopolitical influence that Russia does," Rothman wondered. That ignores logistics, which apply to journalism just as they do to any other industry. You put your resources where they are most needed and most cost effective. Think about it: Would it make sense for CBS, ABC, FOX, and all the other major news outlets to have full news gathering centers in every backwater county, town and village in the U.S.? Of course not, and the same logic applies globally. Why should American media, then, place the resources equally in some small village in Africa as they do in Moscow, Cairo, Beijing, Johannesburg, London or other places of "geopolitical influence?"

"There may not be a good answer," Rothman lamented, "but the question deserves to be asked." Sure, ask away. But it's a naïve question for a journalist to ask, and there are plenty of good answers.

Also See:

Obama's 'Staggering, Inapt Activities' During Benghazi Attack? What? No, Really: What?!?

May 21, 2013 - There are gaps in the timeline. Where was Barack Obama on the long night of the attack on the U.S. mission in Benghazi, Libya on last September 11? Incredibly, we don't know. The White House staff won't say. Obama won't say. His representatives won't say.

"I got nothin' here. Hmmm. I'll give it a sexy
headline and send it to press. COPY!"
Maybe someone is about to tell us. Or maybe not. Or maybe somebody will say that somebody might tell us, sorta, but won't. Yes, that's confusing. Sorry....

Redflag News has a crappy post with a jolting headline on their website today:

"SHOCK: Obama Was 'Incapacitated' Due To 'Staggering, Inapt Activities' Between The Hours Of 1800 And 2300 On The Night Of Benghazi..." The post, by J. R. Elliott, is sensational to be sure. But the post is like candy, with empty calories. If you'll pardon the expression, the post raises some red flags.

EXCLUSIVE: Breitbart Website's Dishonest Use of Two Photos In Stories About Sidwell Friends School

Does anyone at Brietbart know that L.A. is not in D.C.?
Click image to enlarge.
Sorry Breitbart: This is NOT Sidwell Friends School.
(AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes) (Damian Dovarganes)
Click image to enlarge (see original story).
Dec. 29, 2012 - BUSTED: Breitbart's "Big Government" website is using two photos that they present falsely as being taken at the exclusive Sidwell Friends School in Washington, D.C., attended by the Obama daughters. In my opinion, they did this deliberately. Sadly, both photos are being reproduced by bloggers who don't know how, or are too lazy, to do a little basic research to confirm facts.

One of the photos in question was most certainly not taken at Sidwell. The other is highly suspicious. Let me explain, and keep in mind that I am a conservative blogger who doesn't like fellow conservative bloggers presenting lies, whether on purpose or through stupidity. We all make mistakes. I sure do, but I correct them when I become aware of them. I would never do what the Breitbart kiddies did here.

BAD PHOTO #1: On Dec. 23, Breitbart's "Big Government" website published a photo as part of a story about security guards at Sidwell Friends School, the private institution in Washington, D.C. that the Obama daughters attend. The article, written by someone who calls himself A.W.R. Hawkins, is titled "D.C. School Posts Job Opening For Police Officer." A photo at the top of that article shows four burly, armed guards. The photo has no caption, and no source is given.

Trouble is, the photo was actually taken in February, 2011 on the other side of the continent, in Los Angeles. The armed men are Los Angeles Unified School District police, and they were guarding Miramonte Elementary school during a protest in Los Angeles on Monday, Feb. 6, 2012. Sadly, hundreds of conservative bloggers are mindlessly republishing the same photos as they follow Breitbart like zombies, telling their readers that the photo is of Sidwell Friends School.

Andrew Breitbart Lays Into Rachel Maddow

Hey Andrew, tell how you really feel! HOT interview by Kenneth P. Vogel at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) meeting this week. See Vogel's full report at Politico. Big hat tip to Pat Dollard. Check out breitbart.com. ALSO SEE: Andrew Breitbart OWNS Max Blumenthal at CPAC Leave a Comment * Conservative T-Shirts * Follow CNB on Twitter * RSS Feed

"If I Were a Klan Member, I Would Retire..."

A few readers left comments about my recent post, "Derrion Albert, Killed by KKK Surrogates," in which I said that his brutal killers might as well have been Ku Klux Klan members. "Worried about the KKK?" I wrote, "They're certainly a group that needs to be monitored, but these days they've got it easy. Unwitting surrogates do the killing for them, accomplishing more evil and mayhem in a single drunken Uptown weekend than the Klan ever could. The far bigger worry for Black Americans these days, however, is the black kid walking next to you on the playground. He's more likely to kill you than are the 100 or so Klansmen in your state."

"Trpy" in Santa Ana, CA understood my points. He wrote:

"As an African American, I must say that was the best article I have read. If I were a Klan member, I would retire from active duty and just watch from the side lines."

"TH," on the other hand, misunderstood my clearly stated points, and wrote this:

In MY opinion I really don't approve on how this article was written (see [url]http://rogersparkbench.blogspot.com/2009/09/derrion-albert-killed-by-kkk-surrogates.html[/url]. Yes its true black senseless kids killed Derrion Albert and yes blacks are constantly killing blacks which is sad and sickening. But let's talk about the whites killing the whites and the hispanics killing the hispanics. REALITY it's just a people killing people. Now and days there is no race that is better than the next. There is crack/heroin addicts, prostitutes, rapist, Drug Dealers, Killers, and abusers in every race that lives in the USA so who are you to talk down on blacks. It seems the media tries to brain wash blacks into believing that they are never goning to amount to nothing.

My response to TH:

Believe it or not, TH, you actually agree with much of what I wrote, but you missed part of the point. People are people, yes. I mourn the loss of that young black man, Derrion Albert. What you say about bad people being in every group (racial, ethnic, etc.) is true, my point is that people like Jesse Jackson Sr and others are wrong to constantly demonize whites by way of exaggerating the actual current impact of the Klan. ("Klan" for Jackson is code for "whitey.") Many, many Black Americans acknowledge the severe problem of blacks killing blacks, moreso than within any other group. That doesn't mean that black people are inferior; it means that there is something wrong with much of their culture. 70-90 percent of black children born to single mothers, for example. The unwillingness to "snitch" by many [Black Americans] on killers and drug pushers, for example. I was not talking down on blacks, TH. I was talking down on the Jesse Jacksons who don't address the real problems in preference for passing the buck, and not admitting that more blacks are killed by blacks than are killed by the KKK currently.

Michael Kerr, Director of Business Development at Red County, understood the article. I cross posted it to Red County, but Michael was oddly frightened by what I wrote:

"I wanted to give you a heads up regarding your last article. It was unpublished. I recognize the point of your article but we think that some people might use the KKK reference and try and misconstrue the point you are making. You might want to tackle that one from a little different angle. Lots of bozos on the left are always looking to try and paint conservative bloggers as racist and we thought the KKK reference might be something they would latch on to."

My response to Michael Kerr:

I find the stand taken by Red County to be cowardly, very disturbing and rather hypocritical. You say you are afraid of a reference to the KKK? Seriously? That's absurd, particularly so given the numerous references to "KKK" at redcounty.com (Google search for "KKK" at redcounty.com at http://bit.ly/VCLcW.) The stand taken in you remail seems ludicrous in light of past posts, especially one with the title "Abortion/Eugenics: Progressive Berkeley minister denounces ‘genocide’" by Andrew Walden on 07/15/09. I can no longer associate myself with Red County, since it seems that it now wants to be politically correct. If so, perhaps Red County could just be a republishing aggregator for Huffington Post. Please remove me from the list of Red County contributors.

As a post-script to Michael Kerr, let me repeat the kind comment from "Trpy":
"As an African American, I must say that was the best article I have read."

Red County, a "conservative" web site, claims to "strive" to "provide intelligent, well-informed insights into local political issues affecting the lives of readers in each market we serve."  Red County doesn't specify cowardice and an inconsistent adherence to political correctness as part of what it strives for, but those would fit nicely into their mission statement.

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10 Great Events in the Rise of the New Media

Friend Jerry Agar wrote a great piece about the influence of blogs and bloggers on American politics. He came up with a great list of "transformative moments" in recent political history. Those moments range from the influence that bloggers and micro-bloggers (Twitter) had on the aftermath of the Iranian election to major elected officials being taken down. It's a fascinating list that serves as a touchstone for any researcher. Jerry Agar can be heard on WGN 720 AM in Chicago. He has worked at other superstations, such as WLS in Chicago and WABC New York. He is currently also involved with the Illinois Policy Institute. 10 Great Events in the Rise of the New Media by Jerry Agar Not so long ago in America if it wasn’t on Walter Cronkite’s news report or in the pages of the New York Times, it wasn’t news. Most of the rest of the electronic and print reporters and commentators relied on those two entities to show them what was important. A person who knew something the big news operations did not, especially if their news contrasted with the way the media chieftains saw the world, was labeled as a crank and dismissed. The cost of setting up a competing news operation was a barrier to entry only a select few could penetrate. It is so cost prohibitive to start a daily paper that former KGB General Oleg Kalugin told me that it was the only piece of the “long march through the institutions” the Russians were unable to achieve. No more. The recent explosive story exposing the depths some ACORN employees were willing to sink to in order to thwart “the man” is the latest example of how powerful a tool the Internet is to the little guy and gal. With the help of local bloggers listed below I have compiled a list of the “10 Great Events in the Rise of the New Media.” We have tried to make a list of transformative moments.The Virginia Tech shootings, the landing on the Hudson and the 7/7 Tube bombings in London were initially reported by cell phone and blog, showing the power of on-site reporting with new media, but were perhaps not seminal moments, as they would have been reported anyway, and quickly, by the mainstream media (MSM). The list is an attempt to put these events in order of importance, rather than chronology, but it is not presented as definitive. Lists like this are inevitably arguable and worthy of discussion. Please, leave comments and discuss. That is the point. SEE THE LIST at Illinois Policy Institute The following bloggers helped with the list: The Chicago News Bench, Wilmette, Publius' Forum and Thoughts of a Regular Guy Conservative Hats & Shirts Leave a Comment - Chicago News Bench RSS Feed Visit us on Twitter!

The New News Report, a Study of Chicago's New Media

A new document was released on June 17, 2009 by the Community Media Workshop in Chicago. "The New News - Journalism We Want And Need" is a survey of local media and an attempt to better understand the impact of online, digital journalism. Downloaded the pdf here.

The CMW says this about their report:

“Understanding how online information and communications are meeting, or not, the needs of the community is crucial to the Trust’s project supported by the Knight Foundation. To this end, the Trust commissioned the Community Media Workshop to produce The New News: Journalism We Want and Need. We believe this report is a first of its kind resource offering an inventory and assessment of local news coverage for the region by utilizing the interactive power of the internet. Essays in this report also provide insightful perspectives on the opportunities and challenges.”

The study looks at local digital news outlets ("blogs," if you will) and their impact on local news coverage. It ponders how journalism and newspapers arrived at the crucial moment they are now in, and wonders whether they can survive. Overall, the document is fascinating and informative. Does it provide answers or remedies? No, of course not. It is, however, a very interesting and thought-provoking piece that should be read by anybody interested in the subjects of journalism, newspapers, media, advertising, web sites and the blogosphere.

By now, most people are probably aware of the financial crunch that many newspapers are suffering nationwide. The current recession has made things even more difficult, but the problem started for newspapers long before the current economic turmoil. Web sites that report news and current events information, as well as entertainment, have been cutting into the readership of newspapers for more than 10 years. Like dinosaurs looking at a monster comet bearing down on them, the newspaper publishers saw the disaster coming but did not comprehend its significance. Not until, that is, it was too late. Even then, once they realized that disaster was upon them, most still seem incapable of adapting to the new climate in which Journalism finds itself.

Like the dinosaurs 65 million years ago that floundered and died in the aftermath of the comet strike, newspapers are today floundering about in the rubble, not fully comprehending what just happened to them, and not able to figure out a new survival strategy. The Christian Science Monitor has gone completely digital, publishing only online and no longer killing trees for a paper edition. Only a handful of other major dailies have made that bold transition, however.

There have been numerous studies and reports about this, big and small, from newspaper groups, independent think tanks, journalism colleges, and others. Nobody has come up with a model for that would ensure the survival of newspapers. My guess is that nobody will, frankly, and that individual newspapers will have to find their own best paths. There is talk of the Government stepping in to “save” newspapers. God help us all if that happens. Do we really want government officials pulling the financial strings of the very media that we trust (or hope) will keep those bums honest? I hope and pray that few of us do.

Phil Rosenthal doesn't get it
Needless to say, the CMW’s report has its critics. Those critics, however, are likely to be some of the very dinosaurs I refer to above. Incapable of fully comprehending the stark reality around them, unable to choose a survival path quickly enough, and not nimble enough to outrun the more versatile and swifter rodents around them, the dinosaurs look at the study and comment on it derisively.

One such dinosaur is Phil Rosenthal, a kunbarrasaurus of a man still mired in the Cretaceous swamp of Old Media. Rosenthal writes primarily about the endangered species in the media world, specializing in articles about television and other mainstream news and entertainment outlets. He writes about them for one of the biggest and most recently bankrupt dinosaurs around, the endangered Chicago Tribune.

On June 10, a full week before the release of CMW’s "The New News" document, Rosenthal wrote a column titled "Study measures Chicago's non-traditional online news sources." An excerpt:
A new report due out Wednesday [June 17] from the Community Media Workshop, commissioned by the Chicago Community Trust with $25,000 of a $250,000 grant from the Knight Foundation, attempts to look at alternative news sources. In recognition of the economic pressures wreaking havoc on traditional news outlets such as this one, "The New News: Journalism We Want and Need" offers an inventory and assessment of area online news sites.
"We decided we should do an environmental scan to see who was doing some of the work that we were thinking about doing ourselves," said Ngoan Le, vice president of programs for the Community Trust.
It's earnest but hit-or-miss.
“Hit or miss?” The report itself acknowledges that it is not a blueprint for action, nor a prescription for any cure. The CMW’s report surveys a number of local media outlets (which includes blogs such as this one), but does not include all blogs or web sites. It simply can’t, and to attempt to do so would be foolish. For one thing, there are thousands of blogs in the Chicago area, and more than 70 million worldwide. It would be a silly effort to include them all, not only for time and space consideration, but also because most are insignificant. Rosenthal’s dismissal of the report smells of bitterness and fear.

Rosenthal himself acknowledges that CMW makes no pretense of perfection, as illustrated by this quote in his June 10 column:
"It's the first kind of study like this, and now we know why. It's really hard," said Gordon Mayer, vice president of the Community Media Workshop. "One of the things that we said to people while we were doing this is that trying to take a snapshot of what's going on with online news in Chicago right now is sort of like trying to take a picture of a speeding train from a moving car. We don't think this is a definitive study."
Rosenthal’s bitterness bubbled through the brackish swamp water with this:
"Outlets such as chicagotribune.com and suntimes.com were left out "because it would just blow everyone else out of the water," Mayer said. Yet the Tribune's Daywatch e-mail is at No. 27 and Lynn Sweet's Sun-Times blog is No. 28. Chicago Tribune parent Tribune Co.'s Chicago magazine's Web site clocks in at No. 47." [Emphasis mine]
Chicago News Bench comes in at No. 32. The Chicago Reader is No. 36. YoChicago is No. 38. But so what? The numbers are not as important as what the study attempts to accomplish, which is to show the current state of the media and an attempt to discern the alternate futures that lie ahead for it. Rosenthal, winds up his June 10 column by further mocking CMW’s effort by quoting Mayer again:
"This is a report that everyone will find something to hate about," Mayer said. "It's not a flashlight. It's a candle, or a match, in a dark room."
“A $25,000 match,” notes Rosenthal. Smell the bile rising up? Rosenthal’s obsession with the irrelevant cost of the study (modest when compared to just about any government sponsored study) ends up blinding him to the significance of the report.

As I noted previously, the study is not perfect, it is not all-inclusive, and as Rosenthal himself highlights, CMW itself admits this. What Rosenthal misses is not only the comet bearing down on him and his fellow Archosauria, but an honest attempt to find an escape route to safer ground.

Either he cannot see it or chooses to dismiss it. A "match," he called it, but it's really a comet. It's as bright a sun, but he's closed his eyes.

Some of the dinosaurs learned to fly and became birds by the end of the Cretaceous period 146 million years ago. They adapted and thrived. There are writers and journalists today who are flexing their primitive wings and learning to survive in a brutal new world. The featherless Rosenthalsauri will perish, but the lineage will continue in a smaller and swifter form long after the comet strike.

Lake Effect News, Lemons and Lorraine Swanson

Today is Day Three for "Lake Effect News," an online news site by veteran journalist Lorraine Swanson. She's been covering neighborhoods on Chicago's north side for 16 years, and most recently was the editor and primary writer of News-Star. In March, Chicago Journal sold off News-Star and Swanson was on her own. She has turned lemons into lemonade by doing what few laid-off journalists have done. Rather than sit around lamenting her fate, or complaining about the tax structure of for-profit, dying newspapers, Swanson has put her personal devotion to local journalism to work. Lake Effect News (LEN)is off to a good start. LEN was linked to overnight by about 200 other web sites. The first ones to link to LEN, of course, were local blogs such as 24/7 North of Howard Watchers (in Rogers Park) and Uptown Update. Of course, we linked up right away too; I believe that we were the only ones to publish her entire, well-crafted press release. (Whoever wrote that release should be working for major PR firm or ad agency.) Then the local "big boys" got into the act. A glowing report by Mike Miner of The Chicago Reader didn't hurt, and has helped to direct a lot of traffic to Swanson's LEN within it's first two days. You can see a list of who links to Lake Effect News by clicking here. Swanson and LEN seemed destined for well-deserved success. Chicago's north side neighborhoods are richer for having them. Leave a Comment on our Guestbook! CommieBama Hats and More Chicago News Bench RSS Feed Follow ChiNewsBench on Twitter

2009 Illinois Bloggers Conference, May 8

I'm looking forward to attending a great citizen journalist event next Friday, May 8, 2009. You can attend too - click here to sign up. The 2009 Illinois Bloggers Conference will feature award winning investigative journalist Trent Seibert. He's one of America’s top investigative reporters. (Read more about Trent at "Gone To Texas: Trent Seibert Uses His Pulle-Down Menu" at Nashvillepost.com.) The host of the event, Sam Adams Alliance, defines it as a new media forum "where bloggers and e-activists from across the country can gather together to network and share ideas. Samsphere will be specifically geared toward bloggers and e-activists who focus on local and state-level politics, and who are dedicated to the principles of individual freedom and limited government." Trent Seibert currently writes for Texas Watchdog. He will give a presentation on citizen investigative reporting. Trent is an award winning journalist based out of Houston, TX with his claim to fame being his investigative work on Vice-President Al Gore’s “Inconvenient Truth” about Gore's private mansion’s enormous energy consumption. Seibert is also a host of his own online TV show, “Trent TV.” Register now to join Trent, Illinois Review and the Sam Adams Alliance as well as some of the finest New Media minds in America. Additional information as well as an event agenda can be found at www.samsphere.org. 2009 Illinois Bloggers Conference Friday May 8, 2009 Carlucci Restaurant in Downers Grove 10:00am to 4:00pm 1801 Butterfield Rd., Downers Grove, IL Phone: 630-512-0990 $15 Registration, Free for Bloggers (Lunch included) 10:00-10:30am: Opening Remarks 10:30-11:00am: New Media & the Political System 11:00-12:00pm: Discussion - the State of the Media in Illinois 12:00-2:00pm: Working Lunch Panel - Illinois Bloggers Talk about Blogging in Illinois 1:30-2:00pm: Being a Blogger-Owner - How Bloggers Can Engage the Media Vacuum in Illinois and Change the Political Climate 2:00-3:00pm: Presentation Panel - How Bloggers Can Better Engage their Community 3:00-3:45pm: Investigative Reporting - Trent Seibert, Editor of Texas Watchdog 3:45-4:00pm: Closing Remarks - John Tsarpalas, President of the Sam Adams Alliance For questions, please contact Emily Zanotti, Director of Web Strategies for the Sam Adams Alliance at 312.920.0080, ext. 312 or by email at emzanotti@samadamsalliance.org. CommieBama Hats and More Chicago News Bench RSS Feed Follow ChiNewsBench on Twitter

Pulido Gets Another Un-Endorsement

Nominal "Republican" Rosanna Pulido has been un-endorsed yet again, this time by York Township Trustee Moon Kahn. Pulido is running against Democrat Mike Quigley in the special April 7 election for the Illinois 5th Congressional District seat. Mr. Kahn withdrew his endorsement because of off-color, offensive remarks made by Ms. Pulido anonymously on the Free Republic website. Mr. Kahn's un-endorsement of Pulido was reported in an odd posting on the Progress Illinois website on Wednesday, April 1. Mr. Kahn wrote a letter to Ms. Pulido, in which he explained why he was withdrawing his support for her. In his letter, he cited "the continuous revelations of [a] plethora of your provocative statements, which were completely unknown to me until a few days ago, delineate a disturbing mindset." Progress Illinois notes that they "have a copy of the full letter," which is published on their site - but there is no indication of the date of the letter. The Kahn un-endorsement was not the first for Pulido. Progress Illinois, a Left-leaning website site, describes itself as being "run by a team of reporters/bloggers committed to fair and rigorous journalistic inquiry." Sure, okay. Did Mr. Kahn omit the date? Doubtful. Did PI omit the date? Probably. Does the date matter? Yes, because if PI omitted it, it puts a dent in their claim of "rigorous journalistic inquiry." Surely, inclusion of the date of an important letter would not be a "rigorous" task, but for PI to omit it would be either lazy or sloppy, or both. Assuming, for the sake of discussion, that Mr. Kahn did not date the letter, somebody at PI should have called his office to ask him when he wrote it. Perhaps the rigors of phoning a township trustee were just too much for the committed team of reporters/bloggers at PI. If Progress Illinois really practiced "rigorous journalistic inquiry," they would have discovered with five minutes' worth of Googling that at least two other key un-endorsements had been made, probably before Mr. Kahn's. I say probably because, as already noted, PI did not note the date of the letter. No matter. Regardless of the date, Mr. Kahn was not the only one to pull an endorsement from Ms. Pulido. I publicly un-endorsed the Pulido campaign in a March 23 post on this blog. I wrote, "Since the March 3 primary win, Pulido's campaign has come under the unfortunate 'management' of one Tom Hoefling, an Alan Keyes sycophant and National Chairman of Keyes' America's Independent Party (AIP). All of the above is enough to make me withdraw support for the Pulido campaign, but there are other reasons as well." I daresay that my support for the Pulido campaign, from early February through March 22, had more positive impact on the campaign than did that of Mr. Kahn. That is not meant to diminish Mr. Kahn in any way, it is only to say that he does not have a blog that reaches thousands of Ms. Pulido's base every week. Another public un-endorsement was by fellow blogger Chris Barkulis. He, too, had given heavy support to Ms. Pulido on his blog RightNotWrong.com, and with a pro-Pulido Facebook group that he created. On March 23 Barkulis wrote, "In light of the recent development of what those comments actually were, I cannot in good conscience back Ms. Pulido or her campaign. As much as I would like to see a Republican elected from the 5th during this special election, I don't believe it should be someone marred by questionable activities in online forums." I'm not sure why Progress Illinois' "rigorous journalistic inquiry" failed to turn up two bloggers' un-endorsements, particularly since both of us had numerous posts supporting Pulido. One wonders if Progress Illinois includes basic Google searches their world-class regimen of rigorous journalistic inquiry. Chicago News Bench RSS Feed CommieBama Hats and More

Is Pulido's Campaign Secret? No, But Illinois Review Thinks So

UPDATED, 23 March: About Rosanna Pulido's Trouble Campaign Is Rosanna Pulido's campaign "secret?" Illinois Review thinks so. I love Illinois Review, but I must say that I personally know that they are quite mistaken. Pulido is the conservative Republican running against Stroger Democrat Mike Quigley in the April 7 special election for the Illinois 5th Congressional District. Editor Fran Eaton, whom I admire and consider a friend, wrote a confusing piece for IR on Sunday, March 15 in which she wrote the following. Sure beats us as to what point Rosanna Pulido's supporters are trying to make by keeping their efforts to win Rahm Emanuel's congressional seat a secret from like-minded and widely read conservative sources such as Illinois Review, but being open and giving interviews to national political sources such as RedState.org. What's up with that? First, it must be pointed out that RedState.org is not some insignificant website. Neither is Illinois Review, but the hard cold fact is that RedState is much bigger. Bigger, that is, in terms of reach, of links to the sites, of traffic in general. You can check this for yourself by comparing the websites marketleap.com and at Alexa.com, where you'll find that Redstate.com has a traffic rank of, 42,655, whereas Illinoisreview.typepad.com has a traffic rank of 425,669. (The lower the number the better for traffic ranking.) Fran Eaton's post continued: From RedState we learn that Tom Roeser hosted an exclusive secret meeting on winning back the seat April 7. We'll stand by and report from afar....as Pulido and Roeser obviously want it...Good luck with that, folks! Chicago News Bench was at Tom Roeser's meeting on Saturday, March 14. It was not "secret," as Fran Eaton charges, nor was it "exclusive." "Ordinary people" were in among the approximately 40 guests. To call it "exclusive" gives the wrong impression that only VIPs were. Hell, I was there, so how "exclusive" could it have been?!? Pulido did not control the invitations. It was Tom Roeser's party, so to speak. The entire purpose of the meeting was to discuss strategy for raising the public awareness of the Pulido campaign. The fact that Pulido's campaign made RedState aware of their meeting is due to several things: There was no attempt to keep the meeting "secret" or not even RedState would have been made aware of it, albeit after the fact; friend Warner Todd Huston, who wrote the piece for RedState, was at the meeting himself, so it's no mystery that RedState had the story before Illinois Review did; Fran Eaton either missed her invitation to attend the meeting or was not invited - in either case, you'd have to ask Tom Roeser about it, whose party is was and who controlled the invitations. Complaining about imagined conspiratorial motives by the Pulido campaign is pointless. Fran Eaton continued, "Secondhand, we'll report what RedState wrote..." whereupon she quoted from RedState's post. Wouldn't it have been more efficient to simply phone the Pulido campaign and request an interview? I think so. I would hate to see this turn into a website pissing war for territory by conservative websites. I don't think it will, since the much bigger RedState.com probably doesn't much care whether smaller competitors like Illinois Review tosses barbs at them without concern for any collateral damage it may do to the Pulido campaign. However, doing so would not serve the mutually held goal of putting a conservative into the seat of the Illinois 5th Congressional District. It would only harm a campaign that Illinois Review says it cares about. RELATED: Illinois Republicans Can’t Stop Eating Their Own (RedState) Chicago News Bench RSS Feed Cool Stuff...

L3C's Won't Save Newspapers

Friend Sally Duros, with whom I've had a number of good natured, coffee-infused political arguments, has an interesting piece in the non-newspaper Huffington Post. Dated February 9, Sally proposes restructuring as the path to financial salvation. (We should define "newspaper" before we continue. "Newspaper," as I use the word, is a physical piece of paper or pieces of paper, upon which information about current events is printed. This is important, because it is the physical medium of a newspaper that has become antiquated. The same information is more easily and less expensively published electronically on the Internet. It is also faster and cheaper to distribute that electronic information. That being said, we should not confuse "newspaper" with "newspaper company" or "newspaper publisher.") Duros, a former Chicago Sun-Times Real Estate Editor, apparently did not get into the business end while she was there. To be fair, she was editing stories about the real estate market. (But would she propose L3C restructuring for Countrywide Finance as a solution to its problems?) Chicago's newspapers could find a lifeline to solvency and a return to social purpose in a new kind of business structure called an L3C, or low-profit limited liability company. Why is that? I respectfully disagree with Sally Duros. She attempted to explain why L3C restructuring is a the solution to the financial woes currently being suffered by the newspaper industry. Partial proof of this is the fact that Australian newspaper companies are faring well, thank you very much, unlike most of their counterparts around the world. Their success is due largely to their creative mixing of Internet presence with the traditional dead-tree publications, as well as a different model for advertising revenue. L3C status has nothing to do with the Australian newspaper publishers' recent gains in readership. Unfortunately, she barely even alludes to the root causes of the industry's problems. She wrote, for example: The low-profit, limited liability company, or L3C, is a hybrid of a nonprofit and for-profit organization. More specifically, it is a new type of limited liability company (LLC) designed to attract private investments and philanthropic capital in ventures designed to provide a social benefit. Unlike a standard LLC, the L3C has an explicit primary charitable mission and only a secondary profit concern. But unlike a charity, the L3C is free to distribute the profits, after taxes, to owners or investors. (Source: http://www.nonprofitlawblog.com/) Newspaper companies already have low profits, they don't need lower profits. Sally Duros proposes that they voluntarily lower their profits even more by transforming themselves into L3C entities. (Is she writing Barack Obama's "capitalism has failed" speeches?) Deliberately lowering profits is never a solution and would only ensure a faster path to bankruptcy. Any capitalist can tell you that. Duros dwells on the "social purpose" of an L3C: "The L3C is different from a typical nonprofit because it can earn a return, but the social purpose must trump the financial purpose," she wrote, but failed to note that a solid daily newspaper does have a social purpose, and that purpose is informing the public and stirring up debate about current issues. Furthermore, Duros (who admits to being a "progressive" liberal) can't seem to climb out of her neo-socialist mindset wherein "profit" is evil and, therefore, anything "non-profit" is "good" so "low-profit" must be "not so bad." That's just wrong. Newspaper companies are not losing money today because of the way their companies are incorporated. Rather, they are losing money largely because they are losing readers. That trend began well before the recession hit. Competition from the Internet and other distractions have taken "eyeballs" away from newspapers. That's one strike: Lowered profits from reduced subscription revenue. Strike two comes from lowered advertising revenue. Advertisers either decided to not adverstise in a paper that gets less readers than they desire, or they insist on lower ad rates. Add to that the fact that the newspaper industry still operates on a 19th Century basis in one important way. Although they use modern presses, they are presses nevertheless, and they need to be inked, maintained, fed dead tree byproducts (paper). Then, using technology that's as old as the human race, the papers are tossed by hand onto the dwindling subscribers' doorsteps, sometimes landing in puddles, dog poop, or the wrong yard. None of those problems - lower readership, high cost of production, inefficient delivery - would be or could be addressed by restructuring as an L3C corporation. Duros did not address any of those factors. The Internet, obviously, can put information "out there" instantly. You simply cannot do that with a newspaper. Many (most?) newspaper companies these days have their own websites and are updated regularly with breaking news. But that's not a newspaper, it's a website produced by a newspaper company. Newspaper companies' websites are not, literally speaking, newspapers. Duros did not address this, either. There is an interesting passage in the Duros column, which we'll deconstruct: The idea of the Newspaper L3C is to bring back those journalistic contributions like neighborhood reporting, music reviews and book sections and make them part of the community service. And ads are part of the mix too. As if it was an afterthought Duros wrote, "ads are part of the mix too." Wrong again. Ads are one of the two main ingredients, the other being content (reporting, music reviews, book sections, whatever). Regardless of how much profit a particular newspaper is making, that content is still "part of the community service" provided by the newspaper. "I think there is a lot of viability to newspapers still," [creator of L3Cs, Robert] Lang said. Back in the days when automobiles were still novelties, people and goods were transported largely by horse-drawn buggies and carriages. Imagine a buggy whip enthusiast 109 years ago saying something like, "I think there is a lot of viability to buggy whips." He would have been right for the moment, but that viability was waning and the buggy whip soon went the way of the brontosaurus. The difference between buggy whips then and newspapers now is that most people still needed buggy whips in 1900. These days, in America anyway, most people do not need newspapers. Yes, we need sources of news and information, but just as people in 1950 needed transportation just as much as people did in 1900, they no longer needed buggy whips. Or horses. Or carriages or buggies. Whereas the automobile gradually replaced horse-drawn transportation, the Internet is replacing newspapers at a far more rapid pace. Could the L3C save Chicago's newspapers? No, it cannot. Lowering the profits of an industry that is in trouble because of lowered profits is, well, crazy. It may fit into some pie-in-the-sky Utopian dream, but it's still crazy. You might as well ask whether the L3C could save Detroit's automobile industry, or any other troubled industry. "Somewhere you still need a newsgathering [sic] organizations," Lang said. Newspapers still drive much of the news circulating on the web, he added. True. There's no argument about the need for organizations that gather news. But what Lang and Duros both fail to point out is that there are many news gathering organizations do not kill trees or burn fossil fuels to produce and disseminate their information products. Associated Press and other wire services, for example, have driven much of the news circulated in newspapers but have not themselves printed newspapers. A growing number of websites (including bloggers) produce original news reports that are often picked up (almost always without attribution) by newspaper editors. The tail is beginning to wag the dog, and the dog is getting dizzy. The Christian Science Monitor, one of the world's most respected newspaper publishers, will go paperless and entirely online in April, 2009. When that happens, CSM will technically no longer be a newspaper publisher. They will, however, continue to "drive much of the news circulating on the web." The dinosaurs currently dominating the newspaper industry need to understand the new business model. They need to stop floundering around, hoping that L3C-style "fixes" will save them. Unless they evolve, and quickly, the bankrupt and extinct newspaper publishers will become zero-profit companies, not "low-profit" companies. That will provide no service to anybody, including the few subscription holders, the information hungry public, their shareholders, and their out-of-work employees. A final note: It is ironic that Sally Duros chose to submit her article to the Huffington Post, which is strictly online and does not publish a paper version. While she may hope for the salvation of the buggy whip, she does so in a V-8 roadster. RELATED: Dying big papers - The Tribune, TX Newspapers hold on in the online age - Stuff.co.nz, New Zealand CNB RSS Feed

UPDATED X2: Chicago Reader's Rogers Park Issue

I was upset with the Chicago Reader yesterday. Since then, I've had some civil exchanges by phone and email with them. Before I continue, I'll repeat what I said to Mick Dumke, staff writer at the Reader, when he interviewed me a couple of weeks ago in preparation for their current "Rogers Park and West Ridge Issue." I told him that the Reader seems to be making great improvements in recent months. Those of us who have been reading the weekly publication since the late 1970's know that they used to do hard-hitting, often ground-breaking journalism. Then they got fat and lazy, and had none of their legendary mojo through most of the 80's, all of the 90's, and most of the current decade. The Chicago Reader, once great, sucked for about 25 years. It was common to hear people say that it was worth picking up a free copy of the Reader only for the classifieds and entertainment listings. But things are changing for the better. Over the past year, there seems to have been a sincere effort to put writing at the forefront again. Great writers like Ben Joravsky and Mick Dumke, to name only two, have been crucial to that effort. Joravsky, for example, has earned himself a reputation as an expert on all things TIF and wasteful government spending. Dumke is one of the best interviewers on the scene and has put together many a fine feature, both political and nonpolitical. Both Dumke and Joravsky carry the Reader's "Clout City" column, which has become a go-to source for many writers at other newspapers, as well as political bloggers such as yours truly. This brings us to my spat with the Chicago Reader yesterday. I'd written a post on Wednesday evening, in which I said nice things about the current issue and urged people to go out and pick up a copy the next day, when it would be hitting the newsstands. The next morning, I added links (the issue did not go online until after midnight, 12:01 a.m. on Thursday). In doing so, I added a photo from Joravsky's article about Ald. Joe Moore. The photo, of Moore and Mayor Daley in front of a fire truck, was taken at the recent opening of a fire station on N. Clark Street in Rogers Park. The photo was taken by Mick Dumke, and I set it up so that it was linked directly to Joravsky's article. In other words, I was directing traffic, at no charge, to the Reader's own website. In effect, they had a free ad on this blog. An editor at the Reader, however, didn't like what I did, and she sent a chilly email to me. That set off the spat. Here's the deal. It is common practice for websites to use photos from other websites. There is a right way and a wrong way to do that. It's an unwritten etiquette, if you will, and I adhere to it strictly. That etiquette calls for attribution and a link to the source, whenever possible. In the case of my using the Dumke photo of Moore and Daley, I did just that. Nothing was "stolen." The Reader lost nothing by my action. If anything, they picked up a few more eyeballs for their website. Again, the editor didn't like that. I publicly complained yesterday that some things I said to writer Mick Dumke were off the record, and that something else was a misquote. I had a pleasant conversation with Mick this morning. He's a real gentleman and a pleasure to talk with. He apologized to me for using anything that may have been off the record. To be fair to Mick, I now apologize to him. Lord knows I have misquoted and misunderstood in the past. I've always corrected or retracted when I know that is the case, and having been in Mick's shoes, so to speak, I will give him the benefit of the doubt. I may not have emphasized that something I said was off the record, or it may have been an honest misunderstanding on his part. The bottom line is that Mick Dumke's article about bloggers in Rogers Park was balanced, well written, and captured the essence of what I said to him when he interviewed. I remain an fan and admirer of Mick Dumke. He and I have differing views on many subjects, but I know him to be fair and highly ethical. Back to that photo. Now and then, someone will use one of my photographs or graphics. I don't mind that as long as they link back to me, or at least give proper attribution. I lose nothing by that, and know that it could result in an increase in readership for my website/blog. On the rare occasion that I find one of my photos or graphics used without attribution, I let the offending website know that they should add an attribution and, preferably, a link as well. But I would never demand that they remove my work, for to do so would be the same as removing an ad for my work. The Reader does not seem to understand this basic principal of the electronic media. It is ironic that the Reader's current issue lists an article in Time Magazine with the title "How To Save Your Newspaper." Here's an excerpt:
Currently a few newspapers, most notably the Wall Street Journal, charge for their online editions by requiring a monthly subscription. When Rupert Murdoch acquired the Journal, he ruminated publicly about dropping the fee. But Murdoch is, above all, a smart businessman. He took a look at the economics and decided it was lunacy to forgo the revenue — and that was even before the online ad market began contracting. Now his move looks really smart. Paid subscriptions for the Journal's website were up more than 7% in a very gloomy 2008.
Note: I did not ask Time for permission to use that excerpt. Even if Time becomes aware of it, I seriously doubt that they would (a) care, or (b) send me a terse note demanding that I remove it. Why? Because they would probably understand that it (a) is not a loss to them, (b) is linking to their website and providing full attribution to them, and (c) does not violate the fair usage part of copyright law. I hope that the folks at Chicago Reader read that Time article several times. I hope they get it. I hope that, after reading it carefully, they understand that they need to jump into the 1990's and accept that we are now in the Age of the Internet. The Reader's website is not a subcription-only website. It's free. Anybody can view it at no charge, just as anybody can grab a print copy of the Reader at no cost. The Reader makes money by selling advertising. Advertising rates are based on readership. Links to the Reader on blogs such as this one increase their readership. The editor who sent me a note demanding the removal of that linked photo should kiss my derrier and thank me for the free plug, then beg me to reinsert it with full permission. She should further grant me, and every other blog and website that she's pissed off, future permission to do the same. Her advertisers would appreciate it. The newspapers and magazines and websites that Matt Drudge links to on his Drudge Report website understand this well. Drudge's site is mainly links to stories, but he frequently uses photographs and graphics that he did not create. He often publishes links to embargoed stories. However, the publishers he links to not only don't mind his fair usage, they hope to God for a link on Drudge because his site can literally drive hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of hits to a linked source. If your newpaper's story is linked on Drudge, you can bet that it will be seen by far more people than if not. Imagine Drudge posting that Reader photo of Daley and Moore, with a link to the associated story, and a Reader editor sending a terse note to Matt Drudge demanding that he remove it. Chicago News Bench, of course, is a speck of dust compared to the Drudge Report. While CNB can only dream of being able to drive a few hundred thousand readers anywhere, we do get anywhere between 500 and 1500 direct hits every day. "Pass along" readership applies to electronic media, too; CNB is heavily linked on other websites and is part of several blog networks. One link to one of our posts on another website could, potentially, indirectly send thousands of readers to another site (such as chicagoreader.com). That's something to be desired. Nevertheless, the Reader's editors seem to think that free links, free publicity, free traffic to their monetized website is a bad, bad thing that must be controlled. That's stupid. For the editor to demand that I remove their photo is also a waste of her time. With the way that their website is currently set up, she can't possibly control all of the bloggers and websites out there who might crib one of their photos. Furthermore, it's interesting (and hypocritical) that the Reader editor who chastised me for using a photo "without permission" voiced no objection to excerpting some of their text, another common practice that is acceptable if full attribution is made. Many websites do try to prevent copying of any kind. I won't bore you with the technical aspects of how, but it's a simple matter to add a bit of code that would curb or prevent copying. On some websites, photos cannot be saved by the common practice of right clicking on them. Other embed a watermark in their photos. Still others set their sites up so that you can't even copy text by highlighting. Even those methods, however, cannot prevent somebody from making a screenshot of a photo, then using it without attribution, and anybody could simply type the text from an article instead of using copy-and-paste. As I said, the Chicago Reader needs to accept this new reality, jump into the 1990's, and be happy that people like their material enough to make reasonable use of it. They should certainly monitor outright theft, such as when no attribution is given or when the full text of an is used, but otherwise they should be happy that nutjobs like me are willing to direct more traffic their way at no charge. Chicago Reader's website, it must be said, is beautiful and organized very nicely. It is easy to navigate, has a clean layout and beautiful graphics. The staff there is relatively young and hip. These facts only make it more mysterious that they don't understand the etiquette of the Web, and that they don't recognize the advantages of attributed fair use of their content. Will the Reader editor also send an email blast to all of the Reader's subscribers admonishing them to not save any of their website content to their hard drives without permission? Of course not, but there's an irony there. When somebody saves a photo or article to their computer, it does not drive traffic to the Reader's website, nor does it encourage people to go out and pick up a print copy. When bloggers like me post the Reader's content with full attribution, however, it does. I humbly recommend that the editors of the Reader come to terms with that, and stop their self-defeating policy of pissing off bloggers.

When It Comes to Bloggers, Mancow Doesn't Get It

UPDATE, FEB. 11, 2010: Pink slip for Erich 'Mancow' Muller - Chicago Tribune I was interviewed this week by one of the newspapers here in Chicago. The topic was blogging, bloggers and their effect on local politics. This morning, I wrote the following to the reporter who interviewed me, and I wanted to share it with you. I wanted to briefly add something to what I said on the phone. I think it was Monday of this week when I heard Mancow on WLS; he dissed bloggers in a typical and unfair way. To paraphrase Mancow, he said that bloggers just copy a few lines out of newspapers' online articles and add a few snarky comments. Uh huh. Prior to that, Mancow's show was all about him making snarky comments about items in the news, on which he provided no original reporting. After his remarks about bloggers, the rest of his show was (you guessed it), more of the same snarky comments about stories in the news, all of which he learned about in precisely the same way that your average blogger does. There is the hypocrisy of so much of the criticism of bloggers: It's okay if a Mancow or a George Will make snarky remarks on current events that they learned about from news organizations, but for some reason, when a blogger does exactly the same thing, he/she is criticized for it. Furthermore, for a blogger to use information from a newspaper to base a blog story on is, in practice and effect, virtually no different from a newspaper using news wire copy [e.g., Associated Press or Reuters]. The obvious differences are these: The newspaper pays the wire service for the copy, whereas both the wire service and the paper consciously put the story on the web, where they not only know it will be picked up by bloggers, but they also hope it will be picked up by bloggers because that gives the story more eyeballs. Not only that, but the better bloggers out there are very conscientious about giving proper credit to sources and will link directly to a source, which in turn gives the newspaper's web site many more clicks (and more eyes for their advertisements) than it would get without links from the bloggers. Conversely, newspapers are frequently tipped off to news stories by reading about them on blogs, but rarely credit the blogger as the original source. The starkest example of this that I can think of is the coverage of local politics. In 2007, the Trib and the Sun-Times provided scarce and scanty reports of the aldermanic races. In many neighborhoods, that information void was filled by local bloggers. Mancow, however, either misses a crucial piece of the picture or chooses to dismiss it. That piece is the fact that virtually all of the bigger bloggers (I include myself in that, although I like to say that I'm at the bottom of the top) include significant original content on their blogs. The commentary that I might add to an article in the Chicago Trib, for example, usually adds more information to the story (often by drawing from other news orgs, but frequently from my own information or direct observation). We add to the conversation and fortify the information that's out there, while providing what amounts to an aggregation service for the readers of our web sites. Mark Josephson, CEO, Outside.in, summed it up well in a commentary he published on June 4, 2008 about hyperlocal news coverage by bloggers, (Outside.in is the organization that designated Rogers Park as the fifth bloggiest neighborhood in the U.S.) Josephson wrote: "We are huge fans of the incredible group of individuals blogging about their local communities. The quantity and quality of these hyperlocal bloggers is exploding, and their ability to cover more news and information at the hyperlocal level far outweighs that of a hand-picked, full-time “traditional” editorial team. We are tracking more than 140 discrete hyperlocal content sources in Chicago alone, for example. (Great examples of hyperlocal news coverage are here and here.)" Josephson's article is available here. Kind regards, Tom Mannis Chicago News Bench Subscribe to Chicago News Bench

We're Here, We Blog, Get Used to It

"Blogger" has been a four letter word for some time now. Also called "citizen journalists," bloggers have proven their powerful influence in many spheres, not the least of which is politics and public policy. Still considered to be on the edge, bloggers are becoming more and more accepted. Paul Verna, Senior Analyst at eMarketer, goes so far as to say that bloggers are now "mainstream." He supports his argument in an interesting post titled "Blogging Becomes Mainstream:" Blogging has become so pervasive and influential that the lines between blogging and the mainstream media have disappeared. I wouldn't say that the lines have "disappeared," but they are certainly getting blurry. Verna does make a point, however. Reporters and personalities at most newspapers, radio stations and television stations, it seems, now have their own blogs embedded within their paper's own official web site. Hey, if you can't beat 'em, join 'em. Verna quotes an expert on the subject of the rise of the bloggers: “Blogs are now mainstream media,” said Richard Jalichandra, CEO of Technorati, in an interview with eMarketer. “We’ve certainly seen that with the number of professional, semiprofessional and passion/enthusiast bloggers who are creating real media experiences. At the same time, you’re also seeing mainstream media come the other direction to add blog content.” Often, that blog content is lifted and used without attribution, giving no credit or acknowledgement to the blogger or citizen journalist who wrote it. Bloggers often scoop the big media, and the Internet in general is doing serious damage to newspaper circulation. Insecure politicians across the country have been screaming "Those damn bloggers!" for years now. Bloggers have been dismissed as fringe kooks, insignificant busy bodies, not "real" journalists, and less flattering terms by public officials who grew comfortable in an era of big corporate newspapers that paid no attention to them. As noted above, if you can't beat 'em, join 'em. That was a double edged sword, however. On one side, for example, many a city council member ("aldermen") in every city has bemoaned the lack of attention to his or her good works. Thirsting for good press, those little dictators were often frustrated that they could not issue an edict commanding the Big Local Newspaper to regurgitate the fluffy press releases sent to them. The editors and reporters often have bigger issues to pay attention to. After all, when a newspaper (or radio or television station) covers an entire city, some alderman's over-inflated pride in his exaggerated Green Corps petunia planting program will be competing with gang killings, citywide tax issues, schools, and much more. On the other side of that double edged sword: The aldermen are quite happy when the same big media news organizations ignore the failures and controversies in their fiefdoms. Living in the shadows, as they often did in the pre-Internet days, made them less visible to voters. When you're a corrupt, lying politician, that can work to your advantage. Those days are gone. Along came the Internet, and with it the ability of Anybody to write about anything and post it for all to read. Discredited aldermen like Chicago's Joe Moore (49th Ward) panic. Moore, in fact, actually has interns in his ward office spend many hours at a time printing out blog posts that he considers to be offensive. Moore keeps dossiers on at least two bloggers in his ward. Think Nixon and his infamous Enemies List. Politicians like Moore just don't understand the ways of the 21st Century and the New Media that comes along with it. The voice of the people, it seems, is just too loud for them. Many politicians learned to take advantage of bloggers, in the same way that they've taken advantage of "real" journalists for centuries. Some even embrace them. Those politicians understand that a blogger who writes about pot holes in her neighborhood is no different in practice than Ben Franklin was when he printed his little newspaper in Philadelphia. It is clear that citizen journalists, or "bloggers," will not go away. Those who think that blogging is just a passing fad are mistaken, in the same way that fools were who once thought that of rock and roll. Barring the rise of a dictatorship, blogging and citizen journalism will never die. That, of course, is something that so many bloggers stand against each and every day, from discredited petty tyrants like Joe Moore to the highest levels of officialdom.