Nieman Journalism Lab |
- How did journalists respond to the critique of Season 5 of ‘The Wire’?
- Ushahidi hosts panel discussion on crowdsourced crisis mapping in Syria
- A look at Defense One, Atlantic Media’s new site for the military-industrial complex
How did journalists respond to the critique of Season 5 of ‘The Wire’? Posted: 16 Jul 2013 11:50 AM PDT The academic journal Journalism has posted a new paper by the University of Maryland’s Linda Steiner, Jing Guo, and Raymond McCaffrey and Paul Hills of Rhodes University in South Africa. The subject: how journalists responded to Season 5 of The Wire, which famously critiqued a fictionalized version of The Baltimore Sun:
Some highlights:
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Ushahidi hosts panel discussion on crowdsourced crisis mapping in Syria Posted: 16 Jul 2013 10:17 AM PDT Ushahidi — the crowdsourced mapping technology — has grown from one project in Kenya to more than 100 countries around the world. Today, they hosted a Google Hangout with three organizations utilizing Ushahidi’s technology to track and document the crisis in Syria — Women Under Siege, Syria Tracker, and Syria Deeply. Lauren Wolf is the director of the Women Under Siege project, which has been tracking the use of sexualized violence as a tactic in Syria. Speaking to the presenter from Syria Tracker about keeping data sources confidential and safety, she said:
Here’s the recording of their conversation — check out Twitter and the Hangouts page for more conversation on the topic. |
A look at Defense One, Atlantic Media’s new site for the military-industrial complex Posted: 16 Jul 2013 07:21 AM PDT Defense One, the Atlantic Media site for national security types we first told you about in May, launched this morning. Here’s the intro note from editor Kevin Baron:
A few initial thoughts: — The design and UX don’t try to break ground as its big brother Quartz’s did, with a bold front-page-less, tablet-oriented approach. Defense One is attractive and reflows well on mobile devices, but it looks a lot like…a nice news site circa 2013. — Like Quartz, Defense One is editorially flat. I don’t mean that the content falls flat — I mean that the site’s structure isn’t larded up with blogs and verticals. It does feature what Baron calls channels (including one called “Threats”), but the layout of those channels seems to indicate that they’re more navigation tools than true verticals. That echoes the ongoing blog murder spree at the Times. — Initial advertisers (“sponsors” in Defense One lingo) include PricewaterhouseCoopers, Northrop Grumman, and AT&T, which pitches “Solutions for the warfighter.” Ad sizes are variable on article page sidebars — as small as 250px and as large as 1000px tall — and there’s a giant 940×470 slot at the bottom of each article and the front page. — Comments are hidden by default, but available with a click of a “Show Comments” link. (Quartz has no comments, with its staff still working on the best way to integrate them into the site.) — Defense One launches with a total editorial staff of just three: exec ed Baron, associate editor/senior reporter Stephanie Gaskell, and digital producer/reporter Kedar Pavgi. But it also features a number of “regular contributors,” most notably Marc Ambinder, and I saw several bylines from Government Executive Media Group staff. “Defense One will continue to expand its staff and contributor team in a manner similar to Quartz, the recently launched Atlantic Media international business brand,” the press release says — which would imply pretty steady, incremental growth over time. — Also from the press release: “In addition to its digital presence, there will be an events component and research and print initiatives down the road.” Events will include a Defense One Summit this fall; it also promises “two groundbreaking editorial research projects, including an in-depth report on defense technology and a sweeping analysis on the future of defense, and a comprehensive e-book providing leaders with a compendium of must-read journalism on key defense topics heading into 2014.” Whatever events prospects Quartz has, you can probably double them for Defense One, where the community of readers is even more tightly defined, both by interest and by geography. |
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