Friday 31 October 2014

News Values


  • Immediacy: has it happened recently?

Immediacy is more important than ever due to news breaking on Twitter or elsewhere online. However, this in turn changes the approach of other news sources such as newspapers as the news will probably already be broken so different angles might be required. Newspapers now contain more comment or opinion rather than the breaking story.

  • Familiarity: is it culturally close to us in Britain?
familiarity is very important  due to the fall of newspapers, people are now only really spend money on buying newspapers when it has a direct affect on them. therefore this means that now audiences tend to only spend money on things that affect them.
  • Amplitude: is it a big event or one which involves large numbers of people?
again people will only be interested if it is a big story and is something that many people are talking about, if it doesn't affect lots of people then people dont' "care" ad tend to look away.
  • Frequency: did the event happen fairly quickly?
with events that happen people care more because it was unexpected , which means that people people are hit by shock. again combined with other factors this is then taken into account, for instance if people are not familiar by it then it does not have an effect on them.
  • Unambiguity: is it clear and definite?
due to stories being posted online and sent around to quickly it has mean that that news institutions have had to take a difference approach. stories that are definite and that are going to take place is important , as this allows people to see if they are able to prepare or how this would affect them. for instance heavy snow coming in December, this would affect people and would be a problem if this is definite.
  • Predictability: did we expect it to happen?
if audiences know something will happen they are less alarmed however they still want to know the inside information if it will affect them. also this can lead to audiences using newspapers and social media in order to find out.
  • Surprise: is it a rare or unexpected event?
with social networking rumors tend to spread fast and therefore news is now expected for stories that are considered big. this is an example of how social networking has that newspapers have to try to have the latest information as well as being up to date and most of all having an approach that people are looking for.
  • Continuity: has this story already been defined as news?
social networking has meant that newspapers are not taking different approach for example they give expert opinions rather then providing the story in great amount of detail.
  • Elite nations and people: which country has the event happened in? Does the story concern well-known people? 
most stories on social networking sites are about western countries due to technology being more widely available and thus more people using social networking sites therefore news is about the big western countries. 
  • Negativity: is it bad news?
not all news is bad news, due to social networking more and more people are able to give views and opinions but also most news is aimed at someone therefore some audiences having a interest.
  • Balance: the story may be selected to balance other news, such as a human survival story to balance a number of stories concerning death.
due to social networking it has meant that news institutions have had to adapt stories for audiences this has meant that news is no longer as balanced as audiences what to know the important information rather then having a balance.






Wednesday 15 October 2014

Citizen journalism


Read the article from Media Magazine: The Rise and Rise of UGC (Dec 2009) and then create a blogpost where you make notes under the following headings:

  • ·         examples
  • ·         theory (audience reception etc.) 
  • ·         benefits to institutions 
  • ·         benefits to audience 
  • ·         wider issues and debates 
  • ·         SHEP


Next, answer the following questions in the same blogpost:

1) What is meant by the term ‘citizen journalist’?
2) What was one of the first examples of news being generated by ‘ordinary people’?
3) List some of the formats for participation that are now offered by news organisations.
4) What is one of the main differences between professionally shot footage and that taken first-hand (UGC)?
5) What is a gatekeeper?
6) How has the role of a gatekeeper changed?
7) What is one of the primary concerns held by journalists over the rise of UGC?

Finally, consider the following questions:

What impact is new/digital media having on the following:

  • ·         news stories
  • ·         the news agenda (the choice of stories that make up the news)
  • ·         the role of professionals in news


The Murdoch paywall

  1. Do you agree with James Murdoch that the BBC should not be allowed to provide free news online?
    I disagree with James Murdoch on his views against having free news, and having news that is all paid for. Having news that is free and funded by TV licences means that audiences that are able to access news which can be seen to be of good quality and also “bias”. This means that by the BBC providing information that is free means that audiences are able to get information that can be seen to be provides by a trusted source. James Murdoch referred the BBC as “expansion of state sponsored journalism a threat to the plurality and independence of news provision” this suggests that BBC is leading to large institution being phased out and therefore the news market and range of news that is available for the public. Although BBC has been seen to be a non-bias organisation it can be argued that in the recent year that BBC has been bias on to big situations. The first situation being in regards to the potential split proposed by Scotland, there is a suggestion that BBC did not show as much coverage for the Scottish side and therefore can be suggest to be bias. The second time is during the elections there were suggestions of certain parties not having enough coverage and therefore again suggesting that the BBC is bias. Although it can be argued that the BBC is bias and it can also be said that it can be seen in the favour for the UK and benefit them. I therefore believe that it is vital that the BBC a non-profit organisation is available online, as I feel it means that information can be seen to be more reliable and advert free which means that the audiences are able to get straight to the story. I believe that based on Repert Murdoch’s statement “the world is changing and newspapers have to adapt” it suggests that NewsCorp should adapt this as a company. The reason for this is can be said that NewsCorp have to adapt their newspaper in order to be able to meet the need of their customers and therefore ensure that survival of their company. This therefore leading the success and ensure that NewsCorp is able to survive that changing market. 
Was Rupert Murdoch right to put his news content (The Times, The Sun) behind a paywall?

i think he was right as it means that audiences are able to get news content that has been thought through and information is more reliable.

Tuesday 14 October 2014

Build wall analysis


1:The essay is for the people who were present at the event/ incident but did not take part, David Simsons forgives him-self.

2:Arthur Sulzberger Jr.publisher of The New York Times and  Katharine Weymouth, publishers of  The Washington Post.

3:good information should not be free and paid for by people.

4:using online websites in order to pay for subscriptions can be seen as dangerous.

5:Rupert Muroch believe that it is easier for U.S. newspaper publishers could meet in a bathroom somewhere and talk bluntly for fifteen minutes

6:National newspapers continue to retrench and regional papers are destroyed outright.

7:You must act together, both news organizations must inform readers that their Web sites will be free to subscribers only.

8:No half-measures, no TimesSelect program that charges for a handful of items and offers the rest for free, no limited availability of certain teaser articles.

9:You must both also individually inform the wire-service consortiums that unless they limit membership to publications, online or off, that provide content only through paid subscriptions. 

10: When the Justice Department lawyers ask why America’s two national newspapers did these things made the paywall argument. Say, We never talked. Not a word. We read some rant in the Columbia Journalism Review that made the paywall argument.

11: The Times and The Post are ongoing, according to sources at both papers.

12: Should the Times go behind a pay curtain while the Post remains free, or vice versa?

13: Will it work?

14: For the Times and The Post, entities that are still providing the lion’s share of journalism’s national, international, and cultural relevance-their reach has never been greater.

15: Print circulation into a profit center for the first time in years, by raising the price, with news stand prices rising in June to $2 and up to $6 on Sunday.

16: If the only way to read the Times is to buy the Times, online or off, then readers who clearly retain a desire for that product will reach for their wallets.

17: The newspaper is all but dead, they will insist. Long live the citizen journalist.

18: While their resentment and frustration with newspapers, given the industry’s reduced editorial ambitions are justified.

19: In the ensuing thirty years, we have become a nation that shells out $60, $70, or $120 in monthly cable fees.

20: Content is all.

21: Wall Street command profit margins of 25 and 30 percent.

22: Unlike television, in which industry leaders were constantly reinvesting profits in research and development, where a new technology like cable reception would be contemplated for all its potential and opportunity.

23: The remaining monopoly newspapers in American cities, roped together in unwieldy chains and run by men and women who had, by and large, been reared in boardrooms rather than newsrooms.
24: In the 1970s, American auto manufacturing was complicit in its own marginalization through exactly the same mindset: Why not churn out Pacers and Gremlins and Vegas, providing cheap, shoddy vehicles that would be rapidly replaced with newer cheap, shoddy vehicles? 

25: The analogy doesn't quite capture the extraordinary incompetence exhibited by the newspaper industry.

26: A blog here, a citizen journalist there, a news Web site getting under way in places where the newspaper is diminished.

27: Detroit lost to a better, new product; newspapers, to the vague suggestion of one.

28: A certain wonderment that so many otherwise smart people in newspapering could have so mistaken the Internet and its implications.

29: There is firstly the familiar industrial dynamic in which leaders raised in one world are taken aback to find they have underestimated the power of an emerging paradigm.

30: In 1995 the Baltimore Sun were explaining the value of their free Web site in these terms: this is advertising for the newspaper. 

31: On the business side, they were a little busy hurling profits at Wall Street to pay much attention.
32: When newspapers never charged readers what it actually cost to get the product to their doorstep.

33: This specific dynamic maximized everyone’s blindness to the real possibilities of a subscription model.

34: For example, if The Baltimore Sun’s product isn't available in any other fashion than through subscription, online or off and if there is no profit to be had in delivering the paper product to homes at existing rates.

35: Consider: 10 percent of the existing 210,000 Baltimore Sun readers, for example, who pay a subscription rate less than half the price of home delivery, or roughly $10, would represent about $2.5 million a year.

36: Last, and perhaps most disastrous, the rot began at the bottom and it didn’t reach the highest rungs of the profession until far too much damage had been done.

37: As early as the mid 1980s, the civic indifference and contempt of product inherent in chain ownership was apparent in many smaller American markets.

38: Last year at The Washington Post, the paper’s first major buyout arrived at about the time of its six Pulitzer victories.


39: To employ another historical metaphor: when they came for the Gannett papers, I said nothing, because I was not at a Gannett paper.

40: For the industry, it is later than it should be; where a transition to online pay models would once have been easier with a healthy product, now the odds for some papers are long.

41: If the Times and The Post go ahead and build that wall, one possible scenario will be that The Times and The Post survive, their revenue streams balanced by still-considerable print advertising, the bump in the price of home delivery and newsstand sales, and can lead profitable online subscriptions. 

42: Reassured that they can risk going behind the paywall without local readers getting free national, international, and cultural reporting from the national papers.
43: Some of the chain dailies may well make the mistake of taking the fresh revenue and rushing it back to Wall Street.

44: Others do reinvest in their newsrooms, hiring back some of the talent lost.
45: Scenario two: In those cities where regional papers collapse, the vacuum creates an opportunity for new, online subscription-based news organizations that cover state and local issues, sports, and finance.
46: In a metro region the size of Baltimore, where 300,000 once subscribed to a healthy newspaper, imagine an initial market penetration of a tenth of that 30,000 paid subscribers (in a metro region of more than 2.5 million), who are willing to pay $10 per month.
47: That’s $300,000 a month in revenue, or $3.6 million a year, with zero printing or circulation costs.
48: Round it up to $4 million in total revenue, then knock off a half million in operating and promotional costs.

49: Third scenario is except for one in which professional journalism doesn't endure in any form, this is the worst of all worlds.
50: Imagine major American cities without daily newspapers, and further imagine the Times or The Post employing just enough local journalists in regional markets to produce zoned editions.
51: The longer it takes for the newspaper industry to get its act together, the more likely it is that regional dailies will be too weak and hollow to step through the online-subscription portal.

52: Mr. Sulzberger and Ms. Weymouth have yet to turn that last card. Until they find the will and the courage to do so, no scenario other than the slow strangulation of paid, professional journalism applies. 

David simons's-

The argument in this essay is about what effect audiences would have if newspapers set up online pay walls. Throughout the essay Simon looks at two newspapers “the times” and “the Washington post”. He looks at the effects of what happens when a newspaper introduce a paywall or if the newspaper is free and how that effect audiences as well as on competition. Arthur Sulzberger Jr.publisher of The New York Times and Katharine Weymouth, publishers of The Washington Post are that main focus of this essay. The essay looks at how charging users for reading newspapers online if effectively and profitable or does it lead to a fall in customers. Due to the decline of newspapers it had mean that many newspapers are closing down due to people using “free” information. The essay looks how good information is and does a newspaper that paid for provide better information and give audiences a better insight. Customers don’t want to pay a lot of money for things that are not beneficial nor useful to them and therefore means that customers may not pay a large fee in order to subscribe online newspapers. In this essay Simson looks at 3 possible situation if the times and the post were to go ahead and introduce a pay subscription, this suggests that Simon believe that my introducing a pay wall it can have a massive effect on the audience.

comments-

"I know that commentary—the froth and foam of print journalism—sells itself cheaply and well on thousands of blogs. I know that the relationships between newspapers and online aggregators—not to mention The Associated Press and Reuters—will have to be revisited and revised. True, all true."

This suggests that simon agree that newspapers are in decline and that information is more easily available however it is not all true and therefore several sources need to be compared in order to ensure reliability.

"The proof is that while online aggregation and free newspaper Web sites have combined to batter paid print circulation figures, more people are reading the product of America’s newspapers than ever before."

this suggests that Simon feels that there is still demand for physical newspapers and that people still prefer this however they don't want to may for it.

"The Times and The Post survive, their revenue streams balanced by still-considerable print advertising, the bump in the price of home delivery and newsstand sales, and, finally, a new influx of cheap yet profitable online subscriptions."

this suggest that he feel that if a pay wall is introduced then it means that demand may fall for physical newspapers and therefore only those who really want it would be able to get it however at a premium.

i believe that newspaper should have a pay wall the reason for this is because it means that journerlists can be paid and therefore more research and dedication can be done on certain stories which means that more information can be provided as well as reliability. i also believe that in order for newspapers to survive they need to provide something which is unique and make them wanted among customers. finally i believe that newspapers can be considered a "luxury" or "premium item" due to customers who really want would be wiling to pay and other will result in looking at free sources in order to find there information. 

Snap chat?


http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2014/oct/12/teenagers-snapchat-images-leaked-internet

this story looks at how third part applications have breached "13GB" of nude photos of people and some of those being children.. Images have been shared through online social networking sites as well as through forums which have created a massive concern.

this shows that privacy is a massive concern for users and due to "thrid-part applications" has meant that people are more prone to risks and privacy breaches. this means that usrs to be more careful what they do and send using applications.

Wednesday 8 October 2014

Anonymous turn good?





The hacking group anonymous that had taken down massive businesses is now tackling down on child pornography and pedophilia. Anonoymous are finding the people who are hosting, trading and selling child pornography and are taking the sites down. The identification of potential pedophiles has already led to one casualty as Belgian official Hans-Peter Luyckx temporarily resigned from his position after his name appeared on the list published by Anonymous. He refutes the claim, but resigned to distance himself from his party. a post on the Anonymous website about why they are standing against child pornography and pedophilia 



I believe that this is a positive thing because its very beneficial for parents knowing that there are organisations are helping to make the internet safer, but also helps aid the government in order to help regulate the internet. this can be seen as a positive thing that anonymous have done which is different to what anonymous have have done previously for example against Sony.

http://mysticpolitics.com/oppedochat-anonymous-new-campaign-against-internet-pedophiles/

Sunday 5 October 2014

The future of newspapers


The article looks at how the internet has affected the use and circulation of newspapers around the globe. The article talks about how the fall of newspapers are also led to a fall a in advertisements who are not using alternative methods in order to advertise, it also looks at how the closure has and will affect society. The newspaper suggest that the closure of newspapers will let people “get away with murder” which means that the article suggests that without newspapers that people will be able to get away with certain things. The articles says that having a newspaper is not only about the new but it’s about the public being able to have an opinion about certain things and ensuring the public are well aware of what is going on local and national.


I agree that this this is a cause for concern and but panic, the reason for this is because I feel the newspaper can now be seen as a premium product that is brought by those who want or require it. With the internet changing so much and providing news from several services and in real time as has mean that people get there information for free but are also getting to latest information. I feel that although internet is helping the way people do things it is also leading to information becoming more reliable but also less research and dedication is given to stories. This also can lead to information being minimal but also only being able to get a story that partially is told.

Saturday 4 October 2014

Social media being used to lure in criminals?


the story that i read talks about how a "pedophile hunter" lured in Michael Parkes (victim?) who then killed him self but the "hunter" was pretending to be a 12 year old girl on a social networking site. michael thought that he was going to the 12 year olds house when confronted by the "hunter" and his associates who told the local police about the situation . all information that is collected from the messages sent and received is documented and then later posted on social networking sites.

i believe that although this can be seen as a negative situation due to it leading to a death, the idea of what the "hunter" and his associates are doing can be seen as a benefit as they are helping in order to reduce the amount of pedophilia that is taking place but this can also be seen as a warning for other who are considering to the the same thing. Although this also means that the criminals are completely revealed which can mean if the person is not convicted others may attack him after knowing about what he looks like and what he did.Also bigger concerns have rose as there is believe that other may take matter into there own hands and rather then giving information to the police take matter into there own hands but beat them and even possibly kill them.

http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/tv/news/stinson-hunter-expartner-of-man-who-killed-himself-after-paedophile-hunter-sting-warns-social-media-use-could-spark-violent-witch-hunts-9771032.html